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Abruzzo, Emma; Bartow Jacobs, Katrina – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2022
Purpose: This paper aims to suggest a new way for structuring English teacher preparation within traditional university programs, challenging the age-old use of formal lesson plan reflections and introducing critical narratives as course texts to better understand pre-service teacher experiences. Through this reimagined English methods curriculum,…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, English Teachers, Personal Narratives, Reflection
Andrea M. Vinci – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This dissertation was a study of the efficacy of incorporating a creative writing-based curriculum into English Composition I courses. The goal of this study was to determine whether students learning with this style of curriculum could meet the student learning outcomes and master the core competencies for this course as effectively as students…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Writing (Composition), College Students, English Curriculum
Amy T. Cicchino; Katharine H. Brown; Christopher Basgier; Megan Haskins – Writing Center Journal, 2022
Social justice movements, especially Black Lives Matter, inspired many writing center administrators to reflect on their commitments to antiracism and engage with antiracist professional development with their staff. However, there is continued need to study the impact antiracist professional development has on writing center consultants' ability…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Professionalism, Writing (Composition)
Narelle Lemon; Jacqui Francis; Lisa M. Baker – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
Writing well and being well as academic writers is rarely spoken about, often hidden, and at times evaded. We believe that developing, maintaining, and growing well-being literacy not only engages the act but also allows awareness, reflection, and metacognitive thinking that enable mindful writing for well-being. Well-being literacy, the capacity…
Descriptors: Well Being, Scholarship, Writing (Composition), Literacy
Jenny Bourne; Nathan D. Grawe; Michael Hemesath; Maya Jensen – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The authors of this article introduce a database of scholarship among liberal arts college (LAC) economists. Capturing publications across the life cycle, the data speak to questions unexplored in existing work and point to answers often contrary to popular wisdom. First, limited evidence of a rising tenure bar is found. Moreover, while some claim…
Descriptors: Economics, Professional Occupations, College Faculty, Liberal Arts
Lauren Ila Misiaszek – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Having recently completed my first decade in China's Normal System, in this Point of Departure (PoD) I explore precarity in higher education teaching using four tools: "slipstream," "fugia hacia adelante," "exophony," and autoethnography. This is an exploration in the form of a structured performance of precarities…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Autobiographies, Ethnography, Higher Education
Samantha Deane – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
This paper considers the state of contingent laborers, Ph.D. holders, lovers of robust scholarship, and hopeful academics who toil away in the neoliberal university in the search for the academic good life. The author argues that the academic good life is a fantasy and agrees that the fantasy is cruel, i.e. not attainable or livable, but does…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Universities, Neoliberalism, Teaching Methods
Tetyana Bychkovska; Susan Lawrence – Writing Center Journal, 2024
A large body of literature on writing center pedagogy suggests that serving multilingual student writers requires approaches different from those developed for native English-speaking students, a difference that may pose unique challenges to tutors. To identify and address these challenges, we elicited tutors' perspectives on their work with…
Descriptors: College Students, Writing Instruction, Tutors, Writing (Composition)
Reginald D. Wilkerson; Jill Alexa Perry – Impacting Education: Journal on Transforming Professional Practice, 2024
Recently the notion of Critical Race Theory (CRT) has come under fire by those with a limited knowledge of the theoretical underpinnings surrounding the intersection of education, law, and race in American society. To support those students eager to incorporate CRT as a framework within their research, the authors analyzed the dissertations of…
Descriptors: Critical Race Theory, Doctoral Degrees, Doctoral Dissertations, Doctoral Students
Fredrick Otike; Asmaa Bouaamri – Education for Information, 2024
Scholarly publishing is considered one of the most frustrating endeavors among academicians. For learners, it symbolizes the culmination of studies, whereas for academicians, it signifies promotion and acknowledgment. This paper highlights and discusses some of the breakthroughs and hindrances scholars, especially doctorate students, undergo in…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Writing (Composition), Faculty Publishing, Developing Nations
Marisa Brandt; June Oh; Yukyung Lyla Bae – Composition Studies, 2024
Often, composition instructors struggle to encourage STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) students to see the relevance of writing courses to their personal goals. Students' lack of recognition of the importance of literacy skills can lead to disengagement in required college writing courses compared to their so-called…
Descriptors: STEM Education, College Freshmen, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
Marisa Nodine; Carolyn Hushman; Ashley K. Vaughan; Kira J. Carbonneau – Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
Using a mixed methods design we quantitively examined how case-based instruction (CBI) influenced preservice teachers' (PSTs) cultural responsiveness teacher efficacy development across three classroom case studies. Qualitatively, we examined how PSTs were able to engage in self-insertion when writing about their reactions to the classroom cases.…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Teacher Effectiveness, Culturally Relevant Education, Preservice Teacher Education
Ju Zhan; Qiyu Sun; Lawrence Jun Zhang – Language Teaching Research, 2024
The present study investigated the potential of writing in English as a foreign language (EFL) for language learning by manipulating cognitive task complexity based on related models and hypotheses. English essays written by 59 Chinese postgraduate EFL students from different subject areas were analysed with reference to writing complexity,…
Descriptors: Syntax, Writing (Composition), Difficulty Level, Vocabulary
Carol Johnson; Walcir Cardoso – CALICO Journal, 2024
Writing involves more than attention to form (e.g., orthography, grammar), since it requires attention to text type, content, and genre. However, most students of English as a second language (L2) tend to prioritize linguistic accuracy in their writing, to the detriment of the content of their texts. Automatic speech recognition (ASR) has the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Writing (Composition), Augmentative and Alternative Communication
Shannon McClellan Brooks – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This critical self-reflection is not a success story; rather, it is an effort of decolonial thinking that reckons with the idea, experience, and practice of centerlessness during pandemic-induced online transitions and operations in a graduate writing center (GWC). By tracing the contours of a series of interlocking disruptions the author and her…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Decolonization, Electronic Learning