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Peer reviewedOtte, George – WPA: Writing Program Administration, 1989
Discusses the results of a survey of freshmen composition instructors which focused on how well developmental instruction meshed with instruction in the composition core. Concludes that basic writing courses should give priority to the development of thought. Provides a sample teacher questionnaire. (MM)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, School Surveys
Peer reviewedSeabury, Marcia Bundy – College Composition and Communication, 1989
Argues the benefits of introducing S. I. Hayakawa's "abstraction ladder" to students. Discusses its implications for developing good writing and thinking skills and ways to use it with students. (RAE)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHendry, Carolyn EW – Exercise Exchange, 1995
Presents an exercise in descriptive writing that shows how to take a subjective statement and support or deny it using a common body of factual observations. (PA)
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Freshman Composition, High Schools, Higher Education
Perdue, Virginia – Writing Instructor, 1992
Suggests writing instructors reconsider the way they represent to students the nature and function of thesis statements, particularly in their first-year rhetorics. Notes that the conventions of disputation and argument are increasingly challenged by the growing value various disciplines are placing on uncertainty, mediation, and exploration in…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
Peer reviewedKrahe, Valerie Ann – Adult Learning, 1993
Discusses David Kolb's four learning styles as they relate to adult learners. The four styles are the converger; the diverger; the assimilator; and the accommodator. Looks at the learning styles as they pertain to a first-year composition course. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Students, Cognitive Style, Freshman Composition
Wershoven, Carol – Writing Instructor, 1991
Notes that personal writing continues to proliferate, especially in freshman composition and basic writing courses. Argues that overemphasis on personal writing, on finding a "voice," may become exclusionary rather than liberating. Argues that it is crucial to teach students how to read, react to, and write about anything beyond the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Peer reviewedSommers, Nancy – College English, 1993
Relates autobiographically the author's experiences learning to write as an inventor, in the process exemplifying personal writing as a mode to be fostered in composition courses. Argues for a presentation of writing as a constant discovery and construction of knowledge rather than an accumulation of facts. (HB)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, English Curriculum, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Peer reviewedStarkey, David – Writing on the Edge, 1993
Describes the reaction of first-year composition students to a classroom performance of John Cage's 4'33" [his most (in)famous piece] and discusses the role of silence in the composing process. (NH)
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Student Reaction
Peer reviewedLarsen, Dave M., Jr. – Exercise Exchange, 1999
Describes a three-part exercise used in a first semester freshman composition class, intended to show students the world of details in even the most ordinary, everyday objects by having students write about a plastic coffee mug. (SR)
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Writing Exercises
Jones, Donald C. – Composition Studies, 2000
Shows how academic discourse can be taught as a site of conflict to be examined by first-year writing students. Shows that the articulation of personal experiences and beliefs by students can be the starting point for significant learning. Concludes that educators should consider their audience of first-year students and engage them in the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Case Studies, Conflict, Freshman Composition
Peer reviewedLovoy, Thomas – College Teaching, 2004
English teachers, as well as teachers within other disciplines, often boil down abstract principles to easily explainable bullet points. Students often pick up and retain these points but fail to grasp the broader contexts that make them relevant. It is therefore sometimes helpful to revisit some of the more common of these "rules of thumb" to…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), English Teachers, Freshman Composition, Writing Instruction
One, Optimism – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2005
This essay frames the connections between punk principles and writing theory in order to re-form what the author emphasizes in his own composition classroom, in particular the do-it-yourself ethic, a sense of passion and fearlessness, the agency to attack institutions, and the seeking of pleasure. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Freshman Composition, Classroom Techniques, Writing Teachers
Wilson, James – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2003
Describing the Harlem Riot of 1935, black author and poet Claude McKay wrote, "On Tuesday the crowds went crazy like the remnants of a defeated, abandoned, and hungry army. Their rioting was the gesture of despair of a bewildered, baffled, and disillusioned people". By nearly all accounts, the riot marks the historical end of the Harlem…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Research Methodology, Community Colleges, Literature
Pagano, Neil; Bernhardt, Stephen A.; Reynolds, Dudley; Williams, Mark; McCurrie, Matthew Kilian – College Composition and Communication, 2008
In a FIPSE-funded assessment project, a group of diverse institutions collaborated on developing a common, course-embedded approach to assessing student writing in our first-year writing programs. The results of this assessment project, the processes we developed to assess authentic student writing, and individual institutional perspectives are…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Program Effectiveness, Freshman Composition, Performance Based Assessment
Smith, Cheryl C. – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2008
How are the internet and its online spaces for open exchange changing reading and writing practices, and how can we capitalize on these changes in composition instruction? This article traces the author's experiment with blogging in her first-year writing class and considers how and why blogs help students negotiate the unfamiliar demands of…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Freshman Composition, Writing (Composition), Electronic Publishing

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