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Harsell, Dana Michael – Journal of Political Science Education, 2010
In March 2009, a faculty member and four political science students led a forum entitled "Wikis in the Classroom: Student and Faculty Perspective." The discussion centered on a number of benefits and concerns with the use of wikis as an instructional tool within the classroom. Based on student and faculty feedback, this article expands on four…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes, Focus Groups
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Simpson, Michele L. – Journal of Developmental Education, 1993
Urges college educators to define their institutions' academic literacy tasks by assessing the written and oral texts students will encounter, by identifying tasks assigned by professors, by determining how professors perceive their academic domain, and by defining students' perceptions of the tasks they encounter. Suggests ways and benefits of…
Descriptors: Assignments, Data Collection, Higher Education, Listening Skills
Lopate, Phillip; Horvath, Adam; Zavatsky, Bill; Goldman, Julie; Kaplan, Caroline; Poux, Amy Rosenfeld; Padgett, Ron; Kohl, Herbert – Teachers & Writers, 2002
Provides six remembrances by teachers and students of the Teachers and Writers Collaborative on the occasion of its 35th anniversary. Discusses the quality of colleagues and the excitement of teaching. Notes the motivating influence of this teaching on students. (PM)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Student Motivation, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Collaboration
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Atkins, G. Douglas – College English, 1994
Discusses the trials and tribulations of students who struggle with reading and writing assignments centered on the essay form. Argues that students must be shown the artistic merit of the essay form to produce and appreciate essays. Considers how the essay as form provides a spirit to be followed in teaching and in life. (HB)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Essays
Johannessen, Larry R. – 1992
To help improve students' ability to interpret and write about literature, teachers should get rid of old habits. The old habits include giving quizzes to make sure students read assignments, and assigning readings just because particular works are part the literary canon. Once a teacher assigns a novel and gives a quiz, everything the teacher and…
Descriptors: High Schools, Literature Appreciation, Novels, Reader Response
Draper, Virginia – 1991
A writing across the curriculum coordinator considers it part of her job to help faculty assist students to write better. She reminds faculty that she is available to do workshops for teaching assistants, to help design sequenced assignments, and to meet with students to set up effective peer response groups. A sociology professor sought her out…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Change, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
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Mamchur, Carolyn – Language Arts, 1994
Discusses the experiences of a writing teacher as she conducts inservice teacher workshops and writing workshops for students. Notes that, when students are invited to write with passion about those things that they really understand and to which they have an emotional connection, teachers may be surprised at what students can do. (RS)
Descriptors: Inservice Teacher Education, Junior High Schools, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Student Relationship
Wilner, Arlene – 1994
Given the affective dimension of writing in the workplace, assignments based on casebook scenarios have definite advantages in a technical or professional writing course. An English professor surveyed faculty in the Schools of Business and Education at Rider College prior to revising a course in technical writing. A majority of faculty, when asked…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Case Studies, Class Activities, Critical Thinking
Gale, Charlotte – 2001
This paper explains why a comprehensive Writing across the Curriculum (WAC) program at the author/educator's university, the University of the Sciences in Philadelphia (USP), would encounter strong opposition. The paper first points out that the author, as the director of the University's Writing Center, has tried for 7 years to make a WAC program…
Descriptors: College Environment, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics, Professional Education
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Morton, Deborah Balzhiser – English in Texas, 1994
Argues that, when instructors consider only the socially constructed in their classrooms, the intricacies of individuals are lost. Points out that, when teachers think students are completing assignments, the students are actually completing their own understanding of the assignment. Suggests that instructors explain repeatedly what they expect of…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Higher Education, Secondary Education, Student Attitudes
Jamieson, Sandra – 1996
The contact zones in teaching writing are connected in multiple ways. A principal concern is how students learn to write for the disciplines, but the focus is the relationship between composition specialists and their colleagues throughout the disciplines. In the early days of writing across the curriculum (WAC), writing was seen primarily as a…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Instructional Development, Instructional Improvement
Soven, Margot – 1993
Although faculty response to an introductory writing across the curriculum workshop at La Salle University (Pennsylvania) was almost uniformly positive, responses to an advanced workshop were mixed. La Salle's basic workshop is framed by the two dimensions which remain the major theoretical concerns of writing across the curriculum: the function…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Faculty Development, Higher Education, Language Role
Tinberg, Howard – 1991
Strange as it may seem, the classroom is not, by and large, accepted within the composition discipline as a scene for genuine knowledge-making and theory-building. Teachers should go back to the "concrete materials" from which knowledge and theory are made. An example of what can be learned in the classroom comes from an effort to…
Descriptors: Anthropology, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques
Baker, Edith M. – 1996
English or rhetoric and composition faculty must work to collapse disciplinary boundaries in their institutions. The challenge facing English departments is to collapse the "we-they" mentality, to develop productive partnerships with other departments, and to develop a healthy respect for other disciplines. At Yavapai College in Arizona,…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, English Departments, Interdisciplinary Approach, Naturalistic Observation
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Haswell, Janis E. – 1996
Postmodernism claims to shatter the mirage of essentialism by denying the image of a unified self. The result, it asserts, is the freedom to assume a new kind of authority, signified in the image of the "subject position." It assumes, further, that because the writer is capable of multiple selves, he or she will perforce manifest…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Postmodernism, Self Concept
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