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Tatum, Alfred W. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2015
This commentary discusses the legacy of Walter Dean Myers in relationship to advancing writing as an intellectual tool of protection for black male teens. Multiple implications are provided for teachers who want to engage black male teens to write fearlessly to extend the legacy of Walter Dean Myers.
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), African Americans, Males
Ledesma, Alberto – Harvard Educational Review, 2015
In this reflective essay, Alberto Ledesma explores how being undocumented can produce a particular form of writer's block. He argues that there is a pattern of predictable silences and obfuscations inherent in all undocumented immigrant autobiographies that cannot be easily negotiated when undocumented students are asked to write about "their…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Essays, Writing (Composition), Autobiographies
National Council of Teachers of English, 2015
The Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) represents teachers and researchers of composition and communication in all possible genres, media, contexts, and exigencies; for the purpose of these guidelines, "writers" and "writing" will be all-encompassing, and the term "researcher" will refer to…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Ethics, Research Methodology, Communications
Miller, Tom – English Teaching Forum, 2012
This article presents contemporary commentary on the previously published articles "Writing for the Reader: A Problem-Solution Approach" and "Motivating Learners at South Korean Universities." Having been out of the field of English as a foreign language for several years, the author was surprised and pleased when he was asked to write some…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Reading Writing Relationship
Birkenstein, Cathy – College English, 2010
It is hard to think of a writer whose work has been more prominently upheld as an example of bad academic writing than the philosopher and literary theorist Judith Butler. In 1998, Butler was awarded first prize in the annual Bad Writing Contest established by the journal "Philosophy and Literature," and early in 1999, was lampooned in an…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Authors, Humanities, Persuasive Discourse
Corley, Liam – College English, 2012
From September 2008 to July 2009, the author traded academic robes for the Army Combat Uniform issued to US Navy personnel deploying to Afghanistan. Along with using the ceramic and Kevlar body armor he learned to don at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, he metaphorically defended himself from the disruption to his personal and professional life that…
Descriptors: Military Service, Foreign Countries, Authors, College English
Handler, Daniel – School Library Journal, 2009
This article presents an interview with National Book Award-winner Judy Blundell. For nearly 20 years, Blundell has toiled in anonymity, turning out more than 100 mysteries, romances, and media tie-ins under various pen names, such as Jude Watson. But in mid-November, the writer-for-hire was suddenly shoved into the spotlight. That's when "What I…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Awards, Authors, Writing (Composition)
Graham, Steve – Exceptional Children, 2010
Over the years, the author has drawn on a variety of friends, both fictional and real, to help him make specific points when writing professional papers and books for teachers, administrators, and researchers. This included Snoopy and other Peanut characters to describe how struggling writers compose; Calvin and his imaginary tiger Hobbes to…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Special Education, Journal Articles, Authors
Mastrangelo, Lisa – College English, 2010
Americans are obsessed with heroes, and they seemingly create them from anyone and everyone, anywhere and everywhere. This predilection is also clear in American histories. Their belief in heroes shows their connection to their society and culture, their willingness to follow someone in their social settings, and their belief that good people who…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Social Influences, Social Attitudes
Bizzaro, Patrick – College English, 2009
One of the most important contributions of writer-teacher Wendy Bishop was to argue for the interconnectedness of creative writing and composition studies. By doing so, Bishop insisted on the importance of studying what writers do when they write. Because her pedagogy was driven by reports of individuals from a culture that had seldom been heard…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Research Methodology, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
Grobman, Laurie – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article initiates scholarly discussions of "undergraduate research," an educational movement and comprehensive curricular innovation, in composition and rhetoric. I argue that by viewing undergraduate research production and authorship along a continuum of scholarly authority, student scholars obtain "authorship" and "authority" through…
Descriptors: Student Research, Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition), Authors
Ward, Barbara A. – Journal of Children's Literature, 2008
David Wiesner's 2007 Caldecott Medal-winning "Flotsam" blends the events of everyday life with the surreal. As he often does in his picture books, Wiesner plays with size and scale, opening "Flotsam" with a full-page illustration of a sand crab and the enormous eye behind it before pulling back on the second page to reveal the creature's actual…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Picture Books, Illustrations, Childrens Literature
A Thousand Writers Writing: Seeking Change through the Radical Practice of Writing as a Way of Being
Yagelski, Robert P. – English Education, 2009
In this frankly utopian essay, Robert Yagelski's theme is the transformative power of writing as an act in and of itself. He makes us reevaluate our motivation and point for teaching writing in schools and asks us to consider an agenda that will quite frankly scare teachers as he explains why we need an ontology of writing. (Contains 6 notes.)
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), Emotional Experience, Group Activities
Dobson, Meaghan Hanrahan; Gillespie, Joanne S.; Fogle, Andy – English Journal, 2009
Three English teachers share their ideas on how their work as a writer helped them as a teacher. One teacher has found that the desire for meaningful response to her own writing has led her to evaluate her students similarly. A second teacher discusses how personal experience translates into teaching how to convey rejection in a useful and tactful…
Descriptors: English Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness, Writing (Composition), Authors
Serafini, Frank – Journal of Children's Literature, 2008
In this article, the author relates the creative process involved in the way he writes and illustrate picturebooks. His understanding of the analysis and creative processes focusing on picturebooks is informed from two distinct, yet complementary, perspectives. First, the author is an Associate Professor of Literacy Education and Children's…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Creativity, Literacy Education, Authors