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Murnan, Reagan; Cornell, Heidi – Journal of Special Education Technology, 2023
High levels of self-regulation and attentional management are essential to skilled writing. Many students with disabilities struggle with the demands of expressing their ideas through writing. The act of high-quality composition requires close attention and management of the entire writing process: planning, composing, and revising. Many students…
Descriptors: Self Management, Attention, Writing Skills, Students with Disabilities
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Muhammad Imran; Norah Almusharraf – Contemporary Educational Technology, 2023
This study examines the role of ChatGPT as a writing assistant in academia through a systematic literature review of the 30 most relevant articles. Since its release in November 2022, ChatGPT has become the most debated topic among scholars and is also being used by many users from different fields. Many articles, reviews, blogs, and opinion…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Higher Education, Writing (Composition)
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Rebecca M. Giles – AILACTE Journal, 2024
Writing is a vital part of the teaching and learning process. The view of learning to write as a developmental and evolving process is well-established in professional literature, and close observation of an emergent writer as they compose text can contribute to an understanding of their writing acquisition. A multiple case study, which focused on…
Descriptors: Beginning Writing, Emergent Literacy, Childrens Writing, Writing Instruction
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Labaree, David F. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
At least in the United States, the presentation of scholarship is highly formulaic. The emblematic product of this professional domain--the academic journal article--is less a lump of clay waiting to be moulded than a set of fired jars waiting to be filled. Not only are the jars unyielding to the touch, but even their number and order are fixed.…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Journal Articles, Writing for Publication, Models
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Bruyère, Justine; Pendergrass, Emily – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2020
This paper aims to differentiate between writing and authoring. In order to teach young authors, we believe transforming our thinking and our language surrounding the act of writing is necessary. This paper works in opposition to top-down, scripted, and pre-set curriculum guides. Instead, this process centered, inquiry-based view of authoring…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Skills, Writing Processes, Authors
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Burbules, Nicholas C. – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
This essay explores three practices commonly discussed in relation to each other: slow writing, slow reading and slow philosophy. These have close connections, and all of these are joined by practices of philosophical teaching and dialogue, which can also be carried out in a 'slow' manner. 'Slow' here means careful, deliberate and…
Descriptors: Reading Rate, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Reading Processes
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Taylor, Michael – Teaching History, 2020
Michael Taylor begins his piece by reminding us that writing great history essays is hard. He compares the process to running a marathon, and his central thesis is that, just as the best training for running a marathon is not running marathons, so the way to encourage students to produce great essays is not writing more and more essays. Instead…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), History Instruction, Essays, Writing Processes
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Lucia, Brent – Composition Forum, 2021
The writing process has helped define students as autonomous writers within the composition classroom. Yet, our writing identities are not stable and shift throughout the writing process. I argue that composition instructors should enhance students' awareness to their own dynamic, writing subjectivities through a more expansive view of rhetorical…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Invention, Writing Processes, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Thurlow, Steven – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2021
This paper investigates how eight academic research supervisors working in a Faculty of Arts at a research-intensive Australian university understand the notion of creativity in doctoral writing; both in relation to what it is and where it is found. This question was investigated qualitatively through interviews focusing on reader reception to…
Descriptors: Creativity, Doctoral Programs, Creative Writing, College Faculty
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Krashen, Stephen – Foreign Language Annals, 2021
The lack of citations of previous research is the result of serious problems all readers of scholarly publications have: (1) articles are unnecessarily long; (2) they are written in unnecessarily complex prose; and (3) journal subscriptions and books are very expensive. The solution: Short, clearly written scholarly papers, published in…
Descriptors: Writing for Publication, Citation Analysis, Citations (References), Scholarship
Eickholdt, Lisa; Vitale-Reilly, Patty – Stenhouse Publishers, 2021
Ask teachers about their biggest challenges in elementary and middle school, and many will cite the teaching of writing. It is often difficult for students find the joy, discovery, and satisfaction writing can yield. Published programs abound, focusing on the study of genres, and students learn to emulate professional writers. What Lisa Eickholdt…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Clubs, Cooperative Learning, Elementary School Teachers
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Indrie Setya Lestari; Gayatri Nurnaningrum; Indri Andriani Astuti; Hengki Anggra Hermawan; Tiana Dara Lugina; Lulu Laela Amalia – International Journal of Language Education, 2025
This study investigates how PBL enhances students' critical thinking abilities as they compose narrative texts based on indigenous narratives in an English as a Foreign Language (EFL) classroom. The research conducted among 35 ninth-grade students (divided into seven groups) in a public junior high school in Bandung, Indonesia, using qualitative…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Marie Mangold – Foreign Language Annals, 2025
One of the critiques of proficiency as defined by scales, such as that of ACTFL, is its lack of grounding in linguistic realities. Measures of complexity, accuracy, and fluency provide a route in which proficiency can be quantitatively measured by identifying linguistic correlates (see Brown et al., 2017; Long et al., 2012). This project aimed to…
Descriptors: Spanish, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Language Proficiency
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Miller Dyce, Cherrel; Ford, Jesse R.; Propst, Brandy S. – Multicultural Perspectives, 2022
This article first contextualizes the authors' perspectives and purpose to aid the reader in situating the narratives of three Black scholars. Their stories are woven together to help other Black scholars navigate and detox from the trauma of academic writing in higher education. Collectively, the authors, via a co-constructed dialogic space,…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Trauma, Inclusion, College Faculty
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Simsek, Erhan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The split between analytic philosophy (AP) and Continental philosophy (CP) has mainly preoccupied scholars of philosophy so far, but in fact, it has broader pedagogical implications. This article argues that conventions of argumentative writing, as taught in colleges today, have their roots in analytic philosophy and its assumptions regarding ways…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Writing (Composition), Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods
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