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Moore, Jessie – Composition Forum, 2012
The following article maps the questions, methods, contexts, and theories presented in published scholarship on writing-related transfer. While not exhaustive, this review attempts to capture representative samples with a focus on recent publications. The article then highlights a multi-institutional research initiative that aims to flesh out the…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Maps, Cartography, Scholarship
Leigh, S. Rebecca – Language Arts, 2012
Drawing and writing in response to picturebook read-alouds, elementary children construct varying "visual hooks" in their sketches as effective visual devices for extending ideas for writing: the bubble hook, the zoom hook, and the group hook. This article reports on a 12-week qualitative study in which children in second grade develop as writers…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Childrens Art, Writing Processes, Grade 2
What Works Clearinghouse, 2012
"Cooperative Integrated Reading and Composition"[R] ("CIRC"[R]) is a reading and writing program for students in grades 2-6. It has three principal elements: story-related activities, direct instruction in reading comprehension, and integrated language arts/writing. Daily lessons provide students with an opportunity to practice…
Descriptors: Direct Instruction, Reading Comprehension, Quasiexperimental Design, Reading Achievement
What Works Clearinghouse, 2012
"The Spalding Method"[R] is a language arts program for grades K-6 that uses explicit, integrated instruction and multisensory techniques to teach spelling, writing, and reading. The program and its textbook, "The Writing Road to Reading," provide 32 weeks of lesson plans. Students work on program materials in spelling,…
Descriptors: Spelling Instruction, Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction, Language Arts
Kubina, Richard M., Jr.; Mason, Linda H.; Vostal, Brooks R.; Taft, Raol J. – Learning Disabilities: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2011
Self-regulated strategy development instruction or SRSD is a method developed for teaching students how and what to think while writing. SRSD instruction for the persuasive writing strategy POW (Pick my idea, Organize notes, Write and Say more) + TREE (Topic sentence, Reasons, Explain reasons, Ending) helps students by teaching them to develop…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Writing Processes, Teacher Behavior, Special Education
DuBrowa, Melissa – Research & Teaching in Developmental Education, 2011
In these austere and uncertain financial times, colleges are caught in a quandary: they need to admit a certain number of students each term in order to make budget, yet many of the students they admit are developmental in nature by virtue of their critical thinking, writing and/or math scores on their entrance exams. Creative colleges are…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Critical Thinking, Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction
Stewart, Thomas J. – Composition Studies, 2011
This article examines Donald M. Murray's ideas about what he considered the essential solitude of all writing and what happens within that solitude. Murray, a pioneer of the process and modern expressivism movements in composition, identified a number of forces that he felt were at work within his mind whenever he wrote; this complicated aloneness…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), Models
Barnard, Ian – Composition Forum, 2011
This article examines the disjunction between, on the one hand, critical theory's critique of the privileging of authorial intent in protocols of textual interpretation, and, on the other hand, continued obeisance to authorial intent in composition textbooks and pedagogy. By unpacking the implications of this disjunction, I show the limitations…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Critical Theory, Textbooks, Writing (Composition)
Hall, Nigel; Sing, Sue – Visible Language, 2011
At first sight the speech mark would seem to be one of the easiest to use of all punctuation marks. After all, all one has to do is take the piece of speech or written language and surround it with the appropriately shaped marks. But, are speech marks as easy to understand and use as suggested above, especially for young children beginning their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Punctuation, Writing Skills, Elementary School Students
McGregor, Joy – School Library Monthly, 2011
Humans synthesize whenever they see links between ideas they have gleaned from other sources. Human brains operate by seeing patterns and trying to make linkages. As students learn about a topic through creating a text-based presentation, they might have varying conceptual understandings of how they can combine their ideas with the information…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Brain, Synthesis, Librarians
Henning, Teresa – English Journal, 2011
To define ethics as a mode of inquiry, it is first important to consider how ethics relates to critical thinking. Put simply, ethical inquiry is one type of inquiry required to think critically. A connection between critical thinking and ethics is only possible, however, when ethics is defined not as a static list of rules but as a "mode of…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Audiences, Critical Thinking
Ross, P. M.; Burgin, Shelley; Aitchison, Claire; Catterall, Janice – Journal of Learning Design, 2011
Academic and scientific literacy experts agree that becoming literate in an academic discipline involves coordinating language learning, and thinking in increasingly sophisticated ways to enable participation in discipline practices of knowledge construction. Despite this knowledge, understanding of writing pedagogies in tertiary science are in…
Descriptors: Expertise, Focus Groups, Intellectual Disciplines, Scientific Literacy
Jacobs, Elliot – English Journal, 2011
Place-based writing affords students an opportunity to write meaningfully about themselves, grounded in a place that they know. Place-based writing is versatile and can be additive--taking just a week or two within a semester of different projects--or transformative, if positioned as the theme for an entire course. If students can learn to write…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Environmental Education, Writing Processes, Writing Exercises
Gilyard, Keith – College Composition and Communication, 2011
In this article, the author shares his notes toward a shared future for National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC). He discusses how activism has been at the heart of both organizations, how language activism in particular has separated NCTE and CCCC--and brought them together, and…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Literacy, Elementary Secondary Education, Writing Instruction
Reading Teacher, 2011
This article describes Pop in a Popper, an effective lesson for teaching students how to choose and use words to give their writing fluency and flair. Pop in a Popper introduces the appositive: a group of words inserted after a noun to modify that noun. In simplest terms, writers pop this group of words into a sentence to tell more about a noun.…
Descriptors: Nouns, Sentences, Writing Skills, Teaching Methods

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