Publication Date
In 2025 | 35 |
Since 2024 | 142 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 500 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 1327 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 2658 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Teachers | 562 |
Practitioners | 408 |
Students | 53 |
Researchers | 32 |
Parents | 8 |
Administrators | 7 |
Counselors | 2 |
Policymakers | 2 |
Media Staff | 1 |
Location
Canada | 67 |
Turkey | 54 |
California | 52 |
China | 49 |
Australia | 44 |
United Kingdom | 43 |
Japan | 41 |
New York | 34 |
Pennsylvania | 31 |
Michigan | 28 |
Netherlands | 28 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 2 |
Does not meet standards | 4 |
Malcom, Nancy L. – Teaching Sociology, 2006
This paper outlines a project that provides a framework for engaging students in current events in such a way that they develop and improve critical sociological thinking through regular and structured writing assignments. Though this paper describes a news-analysis project that is similar to many that have been used in sociology classrooms both…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Social Problems, Current Events, Critical Thinking
Snow, Eleanour – Innovate: Journal of Online Education, 2006
The Internet has changed the ways that students think, learn, and write. Students have large amounts of information, largely anonymous and without clear copyright information, literally at their fingertips. Without sufficient guidance, the inappropriate use of this information seems inevitable. Plagiarism among college students is rising, due to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Guides, Educational Technology, Tests
LaMascus, R. Scott – 1995
Television commercials and print ads have proven to be an effective means of introducing composition students to strategies for analysis and writing. They rely heavily on the eye to interpret images quickly according to fairly reliable habits. They are naturally occurring forms of argument and students have substantial intuitive competence with…
Descriptors: Advertising, Higher Education, Mass Media, Persuasive Discourse
Groppe, John D. – 1995
The academic setting for many students is frightening, but it is especially so for students with a strong religious background. For such students, the academic atmosphere is, at best, not neutral but empty of teachers and classes that would encourage them to deepen their religious resources. In a "Point of View" essay in the "Chronicle of Higher…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Religion, Religious Factors
McCallister, Cynthia – 1994
An instructor of an undergraduate literacy methods course included a portfolio as a component of assessment. Based on a review of the literature and the elements of the portfolio assessment program used in the General College Program at the State University of New York College at Fredonia, the instructor adapted the portfolio process for her…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Methods Courses, Portfolios (Background Materials), Program Descriptions
Fredericksen, Elaine – 1996
Composition teachers and researchers recognize the difficulty young writers, especially females, face as they enter postsecondary education and attempt to learn the language of the academy. Addressing academic audiences "takes confidence and authority, qualities that are often challenged in women because of their historical exclusion from and…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Females, Feminism, Freshman Composition
McComiskey, Bruce – 1995
Recent discussions of teaching composition in the context of cultural studies have begun to consider the condition of the writing subject in society, yet these discussions construct student-writer S(s)ubject(ivitie)s at the poles of modernist-identity and postmodern-difference binary opposition that is politically problematic. The identity of the…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Cultural Awareness, Discourse Communities, Higher Education
Cobine, Gary R. – 1996
This digest discusses expressive writing and the expressive mode, which is seen as a recurring stage in a writer's process of writing. The digest suggests that by structuring expressive writing activities and correlating them with particular stages of the writing process, a teacher can draw the natural linguistic activity out of a student. The…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Free Writing, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Ostrom, Hans – 1996
This paper asks what role "play" plays in writing and how it can help a writer, whatever dread, boredom, skill, or ethnicity he/she brings to writing. Some of the ideas in the paper come from Africa, courtesy of Robert Farris Thompson. In his "philosophy of discourse" discussed in the paper, Thompson speaks of the "big…
Descriptors: African Culture, Higher Education, Self Expression, Student Attitudes
Kahn, Elizabeth A.; Johannessen, Larry R. – 1986
A continuing concern of theorists in composition and rhetoric has been the problem of how to design effective writing assignments. With the recent movement in writing assessment from objective tests to writing samples, this problem has become even more important for those who produce "tests" designed to elicit writing samples. A study…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, High Schools, Student Evaluation, Student Needs
Grow, Gerald – 1995
Deliberately writing badly can be an effective way to learn to write better because knowing when writing is bad is an essential element in knowing when it's good. There are distinct advantages to encouraging students to learn the rules by breaking them. Deliberately doing it wrong removes the threat of failure. Students are playing; they are…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Humor, Journalism, Layout (Publications)
Allen, Sheilah – 1989
For the second-, third-, and fourth-year education students (all of them English majors) enrolled in a course about the psycholinguistic basis of the writing process, each 3-hour class involved writing about writing, free writing, discussing readings on writing, trying out writing activities, and reflecting on writing about learning. The course…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Expository Writing, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Beins, Bernard C. – 1991
A study investigated the effect of writing in statistics classes on students' interpretation skills (translating the results of data analysis into verbal interpretations that are accessible to non-statisticians). One hundred twenty-two students in three statistics classes received either low, moderate, or high instructional emphasis in…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Data Interpretation, Educational Research, Higher Education
Adler-Kassner, Linda; Gillen, Shawn – 1993
Two composition instructors assigned literacy autobiographies to their students, in the same way the instructors had received such assignments when they were students in a graduate seminar on literacy. One instructor taught at the University of Minnesota's General College (an open admission college), and the other instructor taught in the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Autobiographies, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
Graham, Jean E. – 1993
Because most undergraduate students have two main interests--personal relationships and getting jobs--first year composition students respond positively to a series of career-based assignments which are both personal and pragmatic. "What Color is Your Parachute? A Practical Manual for Job Hunters and Career Changers," by Richard Nelson…
Descriptors: Career Choice, College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Higher Education