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Thelin, William H. – College English, 2006
Students in college writing courses need to understand world issues, including the oppressive effects of the global economy. But their teachers need to give them a sense of agency and authority, rather than simply telling them what political positions to take. One example of a writing assignment that might engage as well as inform students…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Interests, Ideology, Change Agents
Cobine, Gary R. – 1995
Although reading and writing exist only in relation to each other, writing plays little or no role in the usual instructional approaches to reading. Mostly, reading is taught as a sequence of discrete skills, which is ineffective since it accommodates the analytic reading style to the exclusion of global, kinesthetic, and auditory styles. Reading…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Journal Writing, Reader Response, Reading Instruction
Inkster, Bob – 1993
This overview of an English course, "Writing for Government, Business, and Industry" (listed as English 339 at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota), emphasizes the essential elements of audience and voice. Composition theorists' assertion that the absence of voice is symptomatic of a profound developmental deficit (suggesting an…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
Tichenor, Stuart – 1995
Generally, students in vocational and technical colleges are in writing classes because they must be, not because they want to be. As a rule, students in basic composition classes have been more or less continually exposed to writing classes since middle school where they been asked to keep journals, read articles and short stories, and write…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
Rice, H. William – 1996
The business communications teacher helps the student learn to write the proposal that wins a promotion or the sales letter that wins new customers. Students poised to enter the business world need language theories as much as students studying literature, for the corporate language culture is as unpredictable and ambiguous as any literary text.…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Higher Education
Crimmel, Hal – 1996
At the State University of New York at Albany, a controversy arose over what type of writing assignment is appropriate in introductory literature classes, particularly those taught by graduate students. Undergraduates applying for the honors division were unable to produce even one literary criticism essay despite 9 hours of literature courses…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Introductory Courses
Geddes, LaDonna McMurray – 1992
Within the education environment, writing journals are being used across the curriculum and for a variety of purposes--they are often recognized as a means for prompting students to apply the perspective of a particular discipline to their own lives or to facilitate their gaining perspective on personal transitions. Successful use of journals in…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Learning Activities
Miller, Richard E. – 1991
The struggle in the composition community regarding the place of personal narrative in academic writing became particularly acute for a class of undergraduate Critical Writing students undertaking ethnographic work. By mid-semester, students had read and produced a series of texts about culture and found themselves reading and writing about…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Ethnography, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Jones, Donald C. – 1998
A writing teacher who teachers first-year college writing proposes a "different" approach to the teaching of academic discourse. It is an approach that includes the production of academic discourse and rhetorical analysis yet enables students to examine and often resolve their resistance against academic discourse. Through a critical…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Young, Michael W. – 1994
In a pilot study based on a project underwritten by the United States Department of Education to add more study of international issues to writing courses, revisions in content to both a first your and an advanced composition course were tested during 1993-94. The method for the classroom procedures was also changed to enhance the greater…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Pilot Projects
Archambeault, Betty – 1991
Contemporary learning theory supports the use of writing as a cognitive tool to enhance retention and assist students to understand abstract mathematical concepts. Using writing activities in the intermediate grade and secondary classroom enhances the learning of mathematics and is a way of making mathematics more reachable to those students who…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Intermediate Grades, Learning Theories, Mathematics Instruction
Moore, Dinty W. – 1992
A short story assignment incorporates creative writing into the syllabus of a freshman composition class, while erasing the misconception that creative writing is something a "regular" student cannot do. Students write a rough draft both of a personal experience essay and of a short story. Based on peer-reviews of both, students choose…
Descriptors: Essays, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Narration
Bolling, Anna L. – 1993
Combining the journal writing process with the concepts of collaboration can produce more focused writing and learning. Through the channel of collaborative situations, such as group journal writing, teachers can capitalize on the benefits achieved from the collaborative process and cultivate thinking and writing skills. A group journal writing…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Collaborative Writing, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Ediger, Marlow – 1994
Pupils should participate in numerous forms and kinds of writing activities involving poetry and should hear, read, and write different forms and kinds of prose. Types of poetry that pupils can write include couplets, triplets, quatrains, limericks, free verse, haiku, and diamante. The ingredients that all types of poetry might have include…
Descriptors: Biographies, Class Activities, Creative Writing, Elementary Education
Roberts, Claudette – 1994
The degree to which process writing deconstructs traditional notions about a fixed final product came to the attention of a high school instructor and her students when they attempted to select their best "essays" for a contest the school was holding. The students in this class found that some of their best writing occurred not in their…
Descriptors: Essays, High Schools, Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing)