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Schmitigal, Linda – 1993
Twenty-two students in a business communications course engaged in a collaborative project with several Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, business enterprises. After the students had acquired introductory skills that would enable them to perform effectively, they were divided into six groups and began working with representatives from local businesses…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
McClure, Michael – 1993
Allowing, or encouraging, students to write fiction has not received much attention from college composition teachers, despite recent attempts to bridge the gaps between composition and the study of literature. Based on experiences with a number of students in a variety of writing courses, a college composition instructor questions assumptions…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Creative Writing, Fiction, Freshman Composition
Parsons, Jim; Smith, Kathy – 1993
Noting that comic books are known and read by a wide variety of students, this paper presents brief descriptions of 30 ways that teachers can use comic books in a wide variety of subjects and grade levels. The ideas for using comic books in the paper are designed to help teachers become aware of what their students are reading and to use what…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Class Activities, Comics (Publications), Content Area Writing
Hourigan, Maureen M. – 1998
A basic writing course instructor attempted to facilitate her students' survival in the academy by demystifying writing conventions while teaching them how to analyze discourses about literacy, especially in relation to cultural and economic forces. Students were asked to design an ideal basic writing course as a final journal assignment.…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Grammar, Higher Education
Greenleaf, Cynthia – 1992
A study examined the integration of computers into the writing practices of a ninth-grade remedial English class in an urban high school in the San Francisco area. Computers and word processors were introduced midway into the school year. The class was observed and recorded daily through the academic year, and all written work collected. Six…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Computer Assisted Instruction, English Instruction, High Schools
Sandman, John; Weiser, Michael – 1992
Writing autobiographies, in which students describe their experiences as writers, show that students already know a great deal about their strengths and weaknesses as writers and about the conditions they need to write successfully. Typical first assignments given to entering college students are often used to diagnose the ability level and…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Educational Experience, Personal Narratives, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
McCarthy, William Bernard – 1992
The principle of empathic learning (involving activities that help students feel what it is to be like someone else) can be used to teach poetry, a material about which students have strong prejudices, and an activity they cannot imagine themselves ever doing or being interested in. First, students are presented with the conception that people…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, Empathy, Figurative Language
Dunn, Dana S. – 1993
At Moravian College, the Communication course is an interdisciplinary introduction to the writing process, designed to help freshmen develop strategies for solving problems at each stage of writing. The course is unique in that it is not meant to be taught exclusively by members of the English department and is taught in close alliance with…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Psychology
Feathers, Karen M. – 1993
Noting that students often have difficulty reading texts for information, this book offers practical, classroom-tested techniques that focus on content while encouraging students to take control of their own learning by expanding their repertoire of reading strategies. The book defines "infotexts" as the books, textbooks, journals,…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Content Area Reading, Information Sources, Learning Activities
Thelin, William H. – Composition Forum, 2005
The issue of social class rarely injects itself into assignments in honors English composition courses. The students take few chances with structure, analysis, voice, or audience invocation. Clearly bright students, they seemed baffled when asked for complication in their thinking or to take a chance with an unconventional structure. It was time…
Descriptors: Honors Curriculum, Writing (Composition), Working Class, Writing Assignments
Stanley, Linda – 1990
A writing across the curriculum program at Queensborough Community College in New York began its work on campus as Writing and Reading in the Technologies (WRIT) and chose to work with the Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology (ECET) department. The program's implementation was two-tiered. In Tier 1, over a period of three years, the WRIT…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Interdisciplinary Approach, Technical Writing, Two Year Colleges
Connelly, Mark – 1990
The duty of conscientious writing teachers is to evaluate the kinds of feedback they are providing students, and to determine if it helps students to present ideas meaningful to them effectively in written discourse. Almost universally, the traditional way of providing feedback on student writing is by the red pencil method, which has made the…
Descriptors: Feedback, High Schools, Teacher Influence, Teacher Role
Hindman, JaneE – 1990
A case study examined one college student's poor performances during timed-writing sessions to develop a method to allow students to maintain the quality and ease in writing they achieve in other writing situations. The student, assigned to write a movie review, volunteered to participate in two 90 minute talk-aloud protocol sessions to examine…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Cues, Higher Education
McLeod, Susan H. – 1997
The most used model for empirical research on the writing process is based on cognitive psychology and does not take into account affective phenomena, although it has long been recognized that affect (that is, the noncognitive aspects of mental activity) plays a large role in writing and learning to write. To understand the complete picture, it is…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Psychology, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
Hunt, Russell A. – 2000
An intensive college English Literature course provided a special learning opportunity through its innovative reading and writing assignments. From the beginning, students learned by individually selecting, finding, and reading texts and writing descriptive reports intended for class sharing and interaction. The final project involved a formal…
Descriptors: College English, Course Descriptions, Educational Assessment, English Literature

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