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Chen, Chi-Fen Emily; Cheng, Wei-Yuan Eugene – Language Learning & Technology, 2008
Automated writing evaluation (AWE) software is designed to provide instant computer-generated scores for a submitted essay along with diagnostic feedback. Most studies on AWE have been conducted on psychometric evaluations of its validity; however, studies on how effectively AWE is used in writing classes as a pedagogical tool are limited. This…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Writing Evaluation, Instructional Effectiveness, Foreign Countries
Quible, Zane K. – Delta Pi Epsilon Journal, 2008
This article is based on results of a quasi-experimental study in which the efficacy of the strategies approach for reviewing grammar and punctuation concepts was assessed in a business communication course. The control group studied rules-based review materials; the treatment group studied strategies-based review materials. On the three sets of…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Business Communication, Punctuation, Academic Achievement
Cuthbert, Denise; Spark, Ceridwen – Studies in Higher Education, 2008
This article addresses an under-researched area of graduate studies: the role of writing groups in developing the research and publication potential of university graduates. Drawing on focus group discussions with participants from a pilot program conducted in the Arts Faculty at Monash University in Australia, the authors investigate the outcomes…
Descriptors: Writing for Publication, Pilot Projects, Focus Groups, Graduate Students
Ruhlemann, Christoph – Applied Linguistics, 2008
Owing to analyses of large spoken corpora the linguistic knowledge of conversation has grown in recent years exponentially. Up until now little of this knowledge has trickled down to the EFL classroom. One of the reasons, this paper argues, is the failure in the relevant literature to spell out clearly how teaching conversational grammar affects…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Speech, Oral Language, English (Second Language)
Cathers, Karen; Schniedewind, Nancy – Multicultural Education, 2008
Young people have the potential to be creative and skilled storytellers, actors, and writers. They also can become profoundly insightful about the way diversity affects themselves and others, as well as actively challenge bias. "Act It Out" encourages these potentials in students. Augmenting the writing program that many teachers already use, it…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Grade 3, Writing (Composition), Student Diversity
Cheng, An – English for Specific Purposes, 2008
The interaction between learner characteristics, including learners' histories and goals of learning, and learners' analysis and production of target genres remains a topic of continuing interest in the genre-based literacy framework. This case study documented an L2 graduate student's individualized engagement with genre in both her reading and…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Familiarity, Writing Instruction, Second Language Learning
Iida, Atsushi – Assessing Writing, 2008
Japanese poetry, haiku, has been widely accepted in western countries. While previous studies have reported on the applicability of haiku poetry to teaching practices in a variety of contexts, few researchers have discussed assessment which is one of the most important factors in language teaching. The aim of this study is to produce assessment…
Descriptors: Rating Scales, Poetry, Teaching Methods, English (Second Language)
Zhao, Cecilia Guanfang; Llosa, Lorena – Assessing Writing, 2008
Despite the debate among writing researchers about its viability as a pedagogical tool in writing instruction [e.g., Helms-Park, R., & Stapleton, P. (2003). "Questioning the importance of individualized voice in undergraduate L2 argumentative writing: An empirical study with pedagogical implications." "Journal of Second Language Writing," 12 (3),…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Second Language Instruction, Writing Tests, Writing Instruction
Cheng, An – Applied Linguistics, 2008
Some researchers believe that the ESP genre-based framework of writing instruction is effective in teaching discipline-specific English EAP writing to L2 learners, especially to advanced L2 graduate students. However, studies examining students' genre-based learning in such a framework are still underrepresented in current ESP genre-based…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, English for Academic Purposes, Guidelines, Engineering
Millward, Jody – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2008
In 2005, supported by a Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) Research Initiative Grant and Two-Year College English Association (TYCA) volunteers, the TYCA Research Initiative Committee distributed the first national survey of two-year college writing programs. This online survey explored two-year college programs, praxis,…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Writing Across the Curriculum, College English, College Programs
Lin, Grace Hui Chin; Chien, Paul Shih Chieh – Online Submission, 2009
Copious researches argue the effectiveness of peer-correction in writing courses (e.g., Connor & Asenavage, 1994). Also, Coit (2004) mentions using peer feedback for correcting articles through a student-centered environment is a beneficial pedagogy to extend learners' academic-style writing practice. Therefore, this study focused on…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Foreign Countries, Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction
Lynch-Biniek, Amy – ProQuest LLC, 2009
In this dissertation, I argue that curricular choices in Composition are overdetermined by the academic labor system and its negative effect on the status of composition theory. Despite the growth of disciplinary knowledge, composition programs are still staffed largely with underpaid and under supported faculty and graduate students, many of whom…
Descriptors: Expertise, Academic Discourse, Graduate Students, Educational Change
Danielewicz, Jane; Elbow, Peter – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Contract grading has achieved some prominence in our field as a practice associated with critical pedagogy. In this context we describe a hybrid grading contract where students earn a course grade of B based not on our evaluation of their writing quality but solely on their completion of the specified activities. The contract lists activities…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Critical Theory, Grading, Instructional Improvement
Bernard-Donals, Michael – College Composition and Communication, 2009
In this essay, the author explains how teaching assistant (TA) unions work to the benefit not only of the graduate students who are their members but also of the writing programs that employ them. While university administrations understand unions to be bothersome at best and forces of evil at their worst, unions are essential to the maintenance…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Unions, Teaching Assistants, Graduate Study
Johnsen, Heidi L.; Pacht, Michelle; van Slyck, Phyllis; Tsao, Ting Man – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2009
In this essay, the authors argue that only by sharing their mistakes and uncertainty can they fully reflect on their own process as teachers, only by understanding their process can they begin to identify the many factors that contribute to classroom messes in the first place, and only by acknowledging the perpetual messiness of their practice can…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Collegiality, Reflective Teaching, Community Colleges

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