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Toussant, Molly – National Writing Project (NJ3), 2007
Fifth grade teacher Molly Toussant realized with chagrin that she habitually mouthed her precepts about teaching writing in the same rote way she had recited the Apostles' Creed in Sunday school, and that her students had no idea why they had to write "like every day." So she wrote this explication in which she shows, with many examples, how her…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Position Papers, Grade 5, Audiences
Salmani-Nodoushan, Mohammad Ali – Online Submission, 2007
The present paper underscores the importance of the cognitive orientation of EFL students in their success in writing courses. A few suggestions are made as to how EFL teachers can put their students on the right cognitive path in their writings.
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Writing (Composition), Cognitive Processes
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Kenman, Leon F. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2007
The importance of tone and style to communication is attested by the longevity of the popularity of "Elements of Style," published originally in 1918, with the fourth edition published in 2000 (Strunk, 1918; Strunk & White, 2000). Communicators in business and academia at all levels need to send messages that are understood pleasantly and…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Textbooks, Native Speakers, English (Second Language)
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Lowenthal, David – Visible Language, 1980
In the rewriting of a book, the author combined various stages of revision in each draft--adding new material, reshaping thoughts, striving for coherent expression, and polishing prose simultaneously instead of serially. (HOD)
Descriptors: Coherence, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes
Atkins, G. Douglas – ADE Bulletin, 1990
Discusses the recent resurgence of interest in the essay. Distinguishes essays from other forms of writing. Considers some of the implications of the resurgence of the essay for critical writing. Describes one of several possible forms for the critical essay. (RS)
Descriptors: Essays, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes
Zebroski, James Thomas – Writing Instructor, 1989
Argues that the potentially powerful concept of writing as a social activity might become an instrument for the reproduction of existing social relations. Summarizes Lev Vygotsky's ideas about "self." Argues that the increasing interest in the social dimensions of writing can cultivate strategies for scholars and teachers to resist…
Descriptors: Marxian Analysis, Psychology, Writing (Composition)
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Watkins, Ron – English Journal, 2004
A retired professor considers a semicolon as a nuisance as we can never get to the good part. He states his preferences for a comma and a colon over a semicolon.
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Punctuation, English Teachers
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Simmons, John – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2007
A movement in late 20th-century rhetorical theory asked teachers to encourage writing on personal topics as well as formal, impersonal ones. Thus, to traditional writing goals (pleasing, persuading, and instructing) the exorcism of often deep emotions was added. This movement forced teachers to read and evaluate student writing in a more…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Theory, Writing (Composition), Self Disclosure (Individuals), Antisocial Behavior
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Cherland, Meredith – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2008
How do we become the people we are? Humanist common sense proposes that people are born with a rational "self." But poststructural theory proposes a subjectivity formed in interaction with cultural discourses. Poststructural theory offers teachers fresh ways to teach critical literacy and thinking and provides students with ways to resist ideas…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Discourse Analysis, Fantasy, Novels
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Dyehouse, Jeremiah; Pennell, Michael; Shamoon, Linda K. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Reflecting the digital turn in composition studies, multimedia writing courses have become commonplace in many writing programs. Yet these technology-rich courses take on new significance when located within a rhetorically based writing major, especially as a core course. This article explores a developing writing and rhetoric major through…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Course Content, Writing Instruction, Multimedia Instruction
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Lynch-Biniek, Amy – CEA Forum, 2007
The author has been tutoring and teaching writing for fifteen years, but has discovered that few people outside of academia know what it is that she does. Despite the rise in composition graduate programs and the improving market for composition specialists, even within the university, faculty from other disciplines frequently have vague notions…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Writing Teachers, Academic Discourse
Thompson, Ian – Mathematics Teaching Incorporating Micromath, 2007
The aim of this series of four articles is to look critically, and in some detail, at the primary strategy approach to written calculation, as set out on pages 5 to 16 of the "Guidance paper" "Calculation." The underlying principle of that approach is that children should use mental methods whenever they are appropriate, whereas for calculations…
Descriptors: Computation, Number Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Cognitive Processes
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Majumdar, Saikat – College English, 2007
Much of the current North American academic crisis of publishing, tenure, and promotion is both the cause and the effect of this fetishization dominant in the humanities: that of the grand narrative of knowledge-production, respectably bound with a spine. Short works will get one only so far, no matter how many of them one produces, or how well.…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, North Americans, Novels, Tenure
Jacoby, Russell – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
In this article, the author discusses the writing style of conservative writers. Here, the author describes conservatism and conservative writers as excellent and facile thinkers. He added that conservatives are best at puncturing liberal, especially academic, balderdash. Apart from that, they uphold a minimal government but maximum government…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Authors, Writing (Composition), Thinking Skills
McGann, Patrick – 1994
Although a Ph.D. candidate feels pressured to take sides in the discursive war in academe between social-epistemics and expressionists, he finds it difficult to do so. W. Ross Winterowd, a "spokesperson" for social-epistemic rhetoric, makes distinctions between the two camps, maintaining a discursive dichotomy between what he calls the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetorical Theory, Writing (Composition)
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