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Crovitz, Darren – English Journal, 2011
This article discusses how amusing mistakes can make for serious language instruction. The notion that close analysis of language errors can yield insight into how one thinks and learns seems fundamentally obvious. Yet until relatively recently, language errors were primarily treated as indicators of learner deficiency rather than opportunities to…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Correction, Teacher Responsibility, Cognitive Processes

Smith-Meyer, Judith; Barry, Arlene L. – English Journal, 1994
Gives two anecdotes by practicing teachers of their experiences with basic writers. Provides thick descriptions of two different basic writing students' attempts to write stories. Gives insight into the writing processes of basic writers. (HB)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Case Studies, English Curriculum, English Instruction

Collins, Kathleen M.; Collins, James L. – English Journal, 1996
Reviews an instructional strategy for remedial writers which consists of four steps: identifying a strategy worth teaching; introducing the strategy by modeling it; helping students to try it out with workshop-style teaching guidance; and then, helping students to work toward independent mastery. (TB)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Techniques, Remedial Programs, Secondary Education

Fleischer, Cathy – English Journal, 1990
Describes the effects on the teacher and students of a collaborative teaching/research project in which the basic-writing students researched their own writing with the teacher. Notes that the basic writers became more interested in their own writing and learning. (RS)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Secondary Education, Student Attitudes, Student Research

Hagemann, Julie Ann – English Journal, 2003
Suggests that the best writing curriculum for second language students is one that balances content and form, that calls for an attention to writing process and to written product, and that draws on knowledge from both teacher and student. Describes the "focus on form" approach the author uses in her mainstream basic writing class, as well as some…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Curriculum Development, English (Second Language), Grammar

Shafer, Gregory – English Journal, 2000
Relates how the author came into a generally contentious classroom of eleventh-grade developmental English students and how it became a place of cooperative reading and writing and critiquing through a democratic approach and a three-week project in which students wrote a fictional story via letter writing. Notes student's involvement and…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Environment, Grade 11, High Schools

Sullivan, Anne McCrary – English Journal, 1991
Describes an approach to teaching standard English to basic students that puts them at ease. Discusses "linguistic drift," the changes that take place in language over time. Describes a daily one-minute-drill listening exercise in standard English that is effective and leaves most of classtime to explore rich verbal experiences. (PRA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Class Activities, English Instruction, Language Styles

Burke, Jim – English Journal, 1992
Describes the process and positive results of restructuring a basic English classroom which contained foreign students, special education students, and students with disciplinary problems. Shows how journal writing and writing workshops helped these students. (PRA)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Curriculum Development, English (Second Language), English Instruction

Hagemann, Julie – English Journal, 2001
Discusses how and why a pedagogy of overt comparison between students' home language (vernacular dialects of English) and school language (standard English) helps students learn the more global features of academic writing and the more sentenced-level features of Standard English. Outlines a pedagogy of overt comparison. Notes it motivates…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Basic Writing, Bidialectalism, Bilingualism