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Endres, Kathleen L.; Schierhorn, Ann B. – 1992
A study examined whether expected behavior from teachers coincides with how women and men really teach their magazine-writing classes. Subjects, 120 of 198 members of the Magazine Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, responded to a 25-item questionnaire concerning their teaching techniques. Results…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Higher Education, Periodicals, Sex Differences
Freedman, Sarah Warshauer; Hechinger, Fred – 1992
Recent research creates a better understanding of how writing is best learned, taught, and used for learning in school and life. Research done by Anne Haas Dyson and Carol Stack has indicated that many low-income African American children may bring resources to school that are often overlooked. Matthew Downey moves from Dyson's findings about how…
Descriptors: Black Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Limited English Speaking, Portfolios (Background Materials)
Lynch, Tony; MacGrath, Ian – Edinburgh Working Papers in Linguistics, 1991
This paper first puts forward a number of reasons why postgraduate students need to be able to present bibliographic information in a form that satisfies academic conventions. Possible sources of information for the student are then enumerated; global principles of bibliographic presentation (completeness, clarity and convenience, consistency,…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, English for Academic Purposes, Foreign Countries, Graduate Students
Devitt, Amy J. – 1992
The concept of genre should not be limited to literary genres, but should be expanded to include all types of texts, including those traditionally considered to be nonliterary. Essentially, many things about writing work the way they do because of genre, and a better understanding of genre can give us a better understanding of writing, reading and…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes, Higher Education
Ybarra, Raul – 1992
College students, when writing essays in writing courses, are generally called upon to show that they have an ability to organize the essay according to an established pattern which includes an introduction, the body of the text, and a conclusion. This pattern of discourse, called "Essayist Literacy," is most favored by mainstream…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Classroom Communication, Classroom Research, Discourse Modes
Fey, Marion H. – 1992
A composition instructor inquired into the effect of computer conferencing in two composition courses taught entirely through computer-mediated instruction and infused with the pedagogy of feminist collaboration. The instructor encouraged the naming of self and the developing of relationship. The instructor prepared a composition curriculum,…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Computer Networks, Computers, Course Content
Graham, Kathryn – 1992
The polarity of gender is perhaps the most important shaping force in the nineties in the growth and change of education and educational theory. Many critics have argued that there is a masculine bias at the heart of most academic disciplines and methodologies. Feminist approaches, conversely, are viewed as intuitive, expressive, and unscientific.…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Feminism, Higher Education, Models
Roen, Duane H.; McNenny, Geraldine – 1992
Negative attitudes toward collaborative writing are common, especially in the humanities, and some people view it as a form of plagiarism or cheating. Plagiarism, or the borrowing of ideas from other writers, can be both conscious and unconscious, and can stem from a variety of motives. Even single-authored works are products of many minds,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Collaborative Writing, Community Role, Discourse Modes
Stevens, Robert J.; Durkin, Scott – 1992
Two studies evaluated the use of the Student Team Reading (STR) and Student Team Writing (STW) program in urban middle schools. The first study investigated the use of STR in 20 experimental sixth-grade classes in three schools matched with 39 classes in three control schools. The second study investigated the use of STR and STW in sixth, seventh,…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Instructional Effectiveness, Junior High Schools, Middle Schools
Mandelbaum, Paul – 1992
A magazine writer and university instructor used interview samples, editors' comments, and other materials from his own article-then-in-progress for the "New York Times Magazine" in a university-level class in magazine writing. Students, who were creating their own in-depth magazine articles, could see the same principles and techniques…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journalism Education, Periodicals, Process Approach (Writing)
Parmeter, Sarah-Hope – 1991
A number of teachers have for some years been creating lesbian and gay-inclusive college-level composition courses. Teachers who create such courses do so because it is intrinsic to their notion of good teaching, which includes the goal of fostering students' personal relationships with the written word. Many of these teachers often speak of…
Descriptors: College English, College Faculty, Course Content, Higher Education
Chappell, Virginia A. – 1994
"Farewll to Manzanar" (Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston and James Houston), autobiographical account of the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, might be used in a writing class to help students think deliberately about race and ethnicity. Writing about the book and researching the history surrounding it could serve to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Japanese Americans, Multicultural Education, Personal Narratives
Claywell, Gina – 1994
Traditional histories of American college composition instruction in the 19th and 20th centuries examine primarily the textbooks used in those courses, then draw conclusions based on the content of those textbooks about the activities and attitudes expressed in the classroom. The canon of composition historiography is lacking in several ways: the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Ethnography, Higher Education, Interviews
Agnew, Eleanor – 1994
Nonnative English speaking students have usually felt intense pressure and loss of self-esteem in the typical English classroom in the United States. This is a direct result of America's longstanding distrust of foreigners, and the condescension with which the educational system has sometimes treated nonnative speakers. According to C. B. Stein,…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Cultural Awareness, English (Second Language), Higher Education
Hill, Jeff – 1994
Students can be motivated to write and be guided through the writing process without giving them the impression that they are doing it again until they get it right. To motivate students, make it known as specifically as possible what kind of written assignment will be required and how it will be graded. Then guide the students towards the goal by…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education
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