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Vidovic, Justin – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This ethnographic study examines the role of spirituality in the composition teaching process and in Paolo Freire's dialogic education specifically. Work to acquire some aspects of spiritual "Discourse," as the term is defined by James Gee, is needed in order to make this spiritual foundation visible and practicable. Through a series of…
Descriptors: Religious Factors, Teaching Methods, Ethnography, Critical Theory
Wilson, Douglas A.; Davis, Deborah; Dondlinger, Mary Jo; Li, Jessica; Warren, Scott J. – Online Submission, 2010
Forced to cope with a growing population of students under-prepared for college writing, a large community college in northern Texas engaged in a transformative redesign of its developmental writing sequence, streamlining two courses, various student support services, and technology applications to boost student success, retention, and…
Descriptors: Student Writing Models, Writing (Composition), Academic Discourse, Community Colleges
O'Brien-Moran, Michael; Soiferman, L. Karen – Online Submission, 2010
This study involved a one-time survey of first-year undergraduate students at a Canadian University to determine their expectations when beginning a writing intensive course (i.e., the so-called "W" course, which is required of all first-year undergraduates at the University of Manitoba.) In this study, we focused on the University's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Freshmen, Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition)
Flores, Nelson – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2010
In "A New World: Redefining the Legacy of Min-Zhan Lu"(JBW 27.2, Fall 2008), Brian Ray revisits the controversy that emerged in the early 1990s in response to critiques of the iconic Mina Shaughnessy made by Min-Zhan Lu. He offers a reading of the debate that focuses on common ground between the two sides through a metaphor of linguistic charity…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Figurative Language, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition)
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Storch, Neomy – International Journal of English Studies, 2010
Recently we have witnessed a large growth in research on written corrective feedback (WCF). However, the question posed here is: are researchers and L2 writing teachers now any wiser about the efficacy of WCF? I begin with a summary of early studies and some of their major shortcomings. I then examine more recent studies and conclude that,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Error Correction, Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction
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Yang, Yu-Fen – Educational Technology & Society, 2010
This study investigates how college students solve their cognitive conflicts when receiving peers' suggestions and corrections in online text revision. A sample of 45 undergraduate students were recruited to read their peer writers' texts, edit peer writers' errors, evaluate peer editors' corrections and suggestions, and finally rewrite their own…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Metalinguistics, Grammar, Prior Learning
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Nurmukhamedov, Ulugbek; Kim, Soo Hyon – ELT Journal, 2010
Both research and practice have shown that while some comments on L2 writing lead to substantive revision, others go unattended, failing to achieve their anticipated instructional effect. It is therefore crucial to determine how learners perceive different commentary types, so that teachers can enhance the efficacy of their feedback. The present…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, Writing Instruction, Editing, Quality Control
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Leddy, Diana – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2010
Integrating writing into the social studies curriculum ought to be easy. After all, within any rich unit of study, there are endless possibilities for students to record, synthesize, and respond to new content with written words. Learning is enhanced by multiple opportunities to write, and what better way to teach composition than in the vivid…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Social Studies, Teaching Methods, Units of Study
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Baxter, Marsha – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2010
How might songs, like John Lennon's "Imagine" or Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the wind", offer ways to explore alternative ways of being in the world, to challenge the status quo? How might these songs become springboards for original pieces that capture students' ideas about world issues? In this article, I observe what happens…
Descriptors: Musicians, Grade 5, Elementary School Students, Social Justice
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Horner, Bruce; Lu, Min-Zhan – College English, 2010
The constitution of "rhetoric and composition" as a discipline is the subject of a long-standing and ongoing debate that grapples with what each of the terms might be said to signify in relation to the other, and why. Given the multiple meanings of rhetoric and composition, as well as the vexed history of institutional relationships…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Applied Linguistics, Definitions, Writing (Composition)
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Raymond, Richard C. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2010
As a teacher of technical writing, the author applauds the emphasis on the strategies of research and on documented, problem-solving writing across the curriculum and on bringing writing-for-the-workplace into the first-year writing classroom. However, as a teacher of literature, he rejects the notion that responding to literature has no practical…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Technical Writing, Research, Problem Solving
Rankins-Robertson, Sherry; Cahill, Lisa; Roen, Duane; Glau, Gregory R. – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2010
Narrow definitions of academic writing often do not serve students well because they ignore the rhetorically situated and social bases for writing and the potential role of writing to span the personal, professional, and civic areas of students' lives. Broadening school-sponsored writing to include writing about family can help students to see the…
Descriptors: Educational Opportunities, Academic Discourse, Writing (Composition), Family (Sociological Unit)
VanHaitsma, Pamela – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2010
This article recuperates the notion of "strategic value," but to new ends: rather than arguing whether or not basic writing should continue, this case study looks to one institution where it does, asking what value the category "basic writer" holds for teachers at this site. On the one hand, they confirm the existing…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Basic Writing, Case Studies, Universities
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Engbers, Susanna Kelly – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2010
Each semester the author asks her first-year composition students to write a profile essay. The assignment, based on one in "St Martin's Guide to Writing," requires that students develop a thesis ("dominant impression" or "angle") about a place that they visit. The author is convinced that this essay is one of the most valuable and challenging…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Profiles, Theses, Essays
Turner, Kristen Hawley – Phi Delta Kappan, 2010
Digitalk, the language that teenagers use when writing texts and other electronic communications, is not deficient. It is just a different language used in special contexts. However, some students have difficulty with Standard English and mistakenly use the conventions of digitalk in academic writing. By helping students to be aware of those…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Writing Instruction, English Instruction, Adolescents
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