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Eli Goldblatt – Composition Forum, 2024
The article addresses the multifaceted concept of practice as it relates to writing, drawing parallels to various domains such as sports, music, and professional life. Through reflections on the dichotomy between practice and performance exemplified by Allen Iverson's famous quote, Goldblatt explores how writing is perceived and approached as a…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Writing Attitudes, Writing Research
Donna Poade; Russell M. Crawford – Brock Education: A Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 2024
The emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) in academia has prompted various debates on the uses, threats, and limitations of tools that can create text for numerous academic purposes. Critics argue that these advancements may provide opportunities for cheating and plagiarism and even replace the art of writing entirely. To reclaim the…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Artificial Intelligence, Algorithms, Personal Autonomy
Parsons, Seth A.; Ives, Samantha T.; Fields, R. Stacy; Barksdale, Bonnie; Marine, Jonathan; Rogers, Paul – Reading Teacher, 2023
Students who are engaged writers are likely to produce better writing and to enjoy writing more than students who are disengaged writers. Yet, we are unaware of any existing tool that validly and reliably measures writing engagement. In this article, we describe what writing engagement is and why it is important. Then, we present the Writing…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Writing (Composition), Writing Attitudes, Measures (Individuals)
Rebecca G. Harper – Dimensions of Early Childhood, 2022
As a literacy educator, the author's interest in how students conceptualize writing is one that she devotes a significant amount of time and interest. Understanding how students make sense of reading and writing at an early age can assist educators in designing and implementing literacy engagements that are both high quality and effective. To…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Student Attitudes, Beliefs
Leah Bryars; Bethanie Pletcher – Reading Teacher, 2024
Before ever entering a formal educational setting, children use writing to make themselves known. Yet by the time students reach the fourth grade, only a small minority of students demonstrate writing skills considered competent by national standards. By this time in their school career, many have begun to internalize that they are poor writers…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 4, After School Programs, Books
Calhoon-Dillahunt, Carolyn; Coppola, Shawna; Warrington, Amber; Yagelski, Robert P. – National Council of Teachers of English, 2022
How writing is conceptualized has consequences, especially in educational settings. Yet, despite decades of research and scholarship on writing, writing instruction, and writing assessment, misperceptions about writing and its purpose in schools persist. This position statement is directed primarily toward an external audience of school…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Educational Policy, School Administration, Writing Attitudes
Williams, Amy D. – Composition Forum, 2021
This article reports on an IRB-approved study conducted in a college preparation writing workshop. Using affect theory as a framework for exploring participants' writing experiences, I theorize the phenomenon of affective rupture, a tension between the affect students experience while writing in school and their belief in the value of school-based…
Descriptors: College Preparation, Writing Workshops, Writing Instruction, Writing Attitudes
Muñoz-García, Ana Luisa; Lira, Andrea; Loncón, Elisa – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2022
In this paper, we dialogue about the processes of knowledge construction that work through and disrupt academic regulations. As feminist, Indigenous, and non-Indigenous Latinx scholars, we build on the reflections stemming from our research of Mapuche women's biographies of schooling. We focus on three tensions of knowledge production within and…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Academic Language, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
National Council of Teachers of English, 2023
Writing practitioners, researchers, and scholars are at a juncture where foundational assumptions about the teaching of writing, its place in higher education, and its ability to help foster a truly inclusive democratic society are increasingly contested. Trust in literacy has been eroded over the past decades, coming to an acute crisis in the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Writing Instruction, Writing Attitudes, Writing Teachers
Hall, Anna H.; White, Kelley Mayer – Reading Teacher, 2019
The authors focus on how teachers' attitudes toward writing can affect their instructional decisions. The authors give tips for teachers to self-reflect, explore avenues for mentoring and support, and develop and share with students their individual journey as a writer.
Descriptors: Writing Attitudes, Attitude Change, Writing Instruction, Teacher Student Relationship
Nückles, Matthias; Roelle, Julian; Glogger-Frey, Inga; Waldeyer, Julia; Renkl, Alexander – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
We propose the self-regulation view in writing-to-learn as a promising theoretical perspective that draws on models of self-regulated learning theory and cognitive load theory. According to this theoretical perspective, writing has the potential to scaffold self-regulated learning due to the cognitive offloading written text generally offers as an…
Descriptors: Self Management, Journal Writing, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level
Sword, Helen; Trofimova, Evija; Ballard, Madeleine – Higher Education Research and Development, 2018
This paper aims to start a conversation about a common yet under-examined emotion experienced by academic writers worldwide: frustration. What is frustration, exactly? What are its causes and effects, its symptoms and its cures? Is frustration an impediment to writing or a motivational impetus? Can academic writers vanquish frustration, or must we…
Descriptors: Writing Attitudes, Psychological Patterns, Stress Variables, Neuropsychology
Hashey, Andrew I.; Miller, Katie M.; Foxworth, Lauren L. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2020
Students with disabilities encounter persistent barriers in writing, which manifest within all phases of the writing process. These challenges can involve both higher order processes (e.g., organization, idea development) as well as lower order processes (e.g., legibility, spelling) related to writing. Educators can apply the principles of the…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Self Management, Writing Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness
Soiferman, L. Karen – Online Submission, 2019
This report explores the benefits of having guest speakers, who also teach academic writing to undergraduate students, discuss the writing journey they take when they write. The purpose of the exercise was to continue to explore ways to enrich students' experiences in the writing classroom. When students were asked for their thoughts on whether…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Story Telling, Team Teaching
Eli Goldblatt – College Composition and Communication, 2017
Expressivism lost status and respect in composition and rhetoric during the 1990s, despite attempts by some to defend its insights. Few in the field call themselves expressivists today, and yet we can recognize traces of this movement in work by contemporary scholars and theorists. Indeed, the field itself still retains commitments that echo that…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Writing Research, Writing Instruction