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Thelin, William; Carse, Wendy – CEA Forum, 2007
This article describes a research project in which William "Bill" Thelin, who directs the writing program at the University of Akron, was looking to uncover student reaction to English courses in which the professor carried through with a political agenda. Through the participant-observation method, Bill hoped to glean information that…
Descriptors: Fairy Tales, Participant Observation, Comparative Analysis, Writing Assignments
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Ahrenhoerster, Greg – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2006
Although writing instructors have a clear picture of how well our students can write by the end of a composition course, very rarely do we learn how well the students carry over the skills and strategies we teach them to the essays they write for other courses. I collected essays from other courses to determine how effectively students transfer…
Descriptors: Essays, Assignments, Writing Processes, English Departments
Hunzer, Kathleen M. – 1995
The problems of writer's block and writing apprehension have just started to be examined in conjunction with modern rhetorical theories and practices. One of the variables that can make students more vulnerable to writer's block and writing apprehension is the degree of freedom the student is granted in the writing assignments. Two such freedoms…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Rhetorical Theory
Salzman, James A. – 1996
Unlike many instruments used to measure the attitudes and practices of college composition teachers, the Survey of Attitudes and Practices of Teachers of Freshman Composition (SAPTFC) is based on a generalized theory of teaching at the college level, classifying instruction into three groups: didactic, heuristic, and philetic. In composition…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Error of Measurement, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Beene, LynnDianne – 1995
Arriving college students find themselves unprepared for the demands of academic writing. Despite the sometimes condescending critical attitudes of its literary worth and the pressures of composition specialists to use nonfiction texts as instructional aids, detective fiction, like any fiction, favors the underlying characteristics students…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Fiction, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Gordon, Douglas; Mulligan, Roark – 1997
Christopher Newport College, begun as a colony of the College of William and Mary, was born in the 1960s out of the fervor to open the doors of higher education to more people. It enrolls between 500-600 students in freshman writing courses each semester. Changes to the freshman composition program were undertaken, beginning in 1994, with a shift…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Curriculum Development, Evaluation Methods, Freshman Composition
Patterson, Kathleen A. – 1994
The first, and perhaps the most obvious, way to incorporate disability studies into the composition curriculum is to alter the way instructors teach canonical texts. The standard literary approaches to disability are genre studies, which consider disability to be an element of the gothic or the grotesque, and rhetorical studies, which analyze its…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Curriculum Development, Disabilities, Freshman Composition
Gorelick, Risa P. – 1995
Much has been written on the ethics of teaching syllabi that pursue a particular social agenda. Depending on the commentator, these syllabi have been characterized as transformative, socially responsible, political, politically correct, unethical and immoral. Throughout this literature, however, the assumption is that the teacher presenting the…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Curriculum Evaluation, Ethics, Freshman Composition
Pytlik, Betty P. – 1992
The phenomenon of the graduate assistant grew out of the turn of the century need for larger teaching staffs. A debate was formed that still influences the way teachers are prepared for today's freshman composition courses. This debate arose from philosophical and methodological differences in English departments, which at that time emphasized a…
Descriptors: College English, Educational History, English Departments, English Teacher Education
Lindemann, Erika – 1992
To determine whether imaginative literature should be used in freshman composition courses, teachers must first determine what the purpose of a first-year writing course is. Historically, reading and writing about literature entered the curriculum when faculty became concerned with establishing English departments. Prior to this, instruction in…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College English, College Freshmen, Course Content
Pelham, Fran O'Byrne – 1993
Although the freshman research paper is the most institutionalized single writing assignment in the academy, the body of knowledge about it is neither extensive nor reflective. This paper explores the complex processes involved in a freshman writing student's inquiry and composing processes as he/she enacts a research assignment. It asks how a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, College Freshmen, Freshman Composition
Agnew, Eleanor – 1993
Anecdotal testimony indicates that grade deflation is encouraged in many colleges and universities, especially in freshman writing courses. As a result, grading down has become a point of pride for some writing instructors. Instead of earning reputations as good, caring, committed teachers whose students do well because the teachers have worked…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Grade Inflation, Grading
Hartnett, Carolyn G. – 1998
English nominalizations turn verbs and adjectives into nouns systematically, but their meanings can change unpredictably. In the United States, college composition handbooks urge students to avoid using nominalizations, but elsewhere secondary students learn to write them responsibly and to recognize being manipulated when reading them.…
Descriptors: Classification, Form Classes (Languages), Freshman Composition, Grammatical Acceptability
Hart, Robert L. – 1991
A study investigated whether there was a positive relationship between collaborative learning techniques and the improvement of writing skills of college freshmen over a single semester. Two English Composition II classes of approximately 20 student each were randomly selected for the study. Over the course of one semester, one class received…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, College English, College Freshmen, Conventional Instruction
Porter, Felicia Lincoln – 1991
The discourse of writing center conferences was studied to determine whether it is potentially different from classroom discourse. The question was what happens to communication between teacher and student when the setting and roles are somewhat altered. The writing center setting was chosen because the focus is on face-to-face conversation that…
Descriptors: Agenda Setting, Conflict Resolution, Discourse Analysis, Freshman Composition
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