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Parker, Daniel E. – 1982
In the name of responsible argument, persuasive rhetoric need not eschew all the devices used by propaganda. Emotion is not only inevitable in discourse, it is the necessary base for action. Educators should not consider propaganda evil for the very reason they consider poetry good: its emotional power. This kind of thinking creates a specious…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, English Instruction, Expressive Language, Language Usage
Sloan, Glenna – 2000
Poetry provides language that is most likely to amaze, astonish, and delight reader and hearer. And children, before school spoils it for them, seem to have a natural affinity for poetry and verse. This paper discusses the ways in which children respond to poetry. The paper notes that relatively little research has been done to determine how…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Expressive Language, Graduate Study, Higher Education
Rhodes, Keith – 1994
It is difficult for an instructor to designate his philosophy in teaching composition when it is derived from a background in cultural studies at one school and from an "expressivist" program at another school. Furthermore, in naming his approach, he must take into account the influence of his feminist instructors as well as his own…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Educational Objectives, Epistemology, Expressive Language
Crampton, Patricia – Horn Book Magazine, 1984
Summarizes historical and contemporary examples of stories for children that contain a "magic element" or "oral sorcery" that complements the basic structure of beginning, consistent sequence of events, and full stop ending. (CRH)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Diachronic Linguistics, Expressive Language, Folk Culture
McCleary, William J. – 1985
A number of questions have been raised about James Kinneavy's theory of expressive discourse, among them the problem of how so many different genres, from the personal essay to the declaration of independence, can be lumped under one aim, self-expression. Another is why self-expression is the only one of the aims to be divided into two general…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Educational Theories, Expressive Language
Murray, Donald M. – 1985
Writing in the first person is not usually tolerated in academic writing under the illusion that the third person insures some kind of objectivity. But writing in the first person is honest, permitting the reader to know that what is being said is a matter of opinion. It is a direct way of speaking about what a writer sees or feels or thinks, and…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Expressive Language, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wolf, Maryanne – Annals of Dyslexia, 1999
Originally given as a speech, this paper describes the double-deficit hypothesis of reading disabilities, which proposes that developmental dyslexia is due to deficits in the phonological system and in processes underlying naming speed. The paper also reports on an innovative reading fluency intervention program based on the double-deficit…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Dyslexia, Elementary Secondary Education, Etiology
Albert, Sandor – 1991
The dangers of translation are discussed when the translator does not try to create textual equivalence, but settles for formal correspondence (i.e., with simple transcoding at a linguistic level) during the process of translating. Difficulties of explaining, commenting, or summarizing rather than translating are also discussed. Pedagogical and…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Context Clues, Expressive Language, Foreign Countries
Kiefer, Barbara – 1984
Observations of children's responses to picture books in three first-to-fourth-grade classrooms over a two-year period helped to form a descriptive framework for children's responses to picture books. Field notes, transcripts, and other data revealed that when children talked about picture books, they used the lexicon of the expert. They seemed…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Child Language, Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary Education
Hensley, Carl Wayne – 1984
As the United States entered the nineteenth century, it did so under the influence of the Second Great Awakening. This was the second wave of revivalism to sweep the nation, and it originated in the frontier as the Great Western Revival. One pertinent characteristic of the revival was its rhetoric, a rhetoric that was a prime expression of a…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Expressive Language, Influences
Short, Edmund C. – 1984
It is the role of schools and colleges to teach certain truths that can enhance the quality of one's life in society. Yet often these truths are not learned at school because many students do not accept them as truths, because they are not actually included in the curriculum, or because they are mistaught. These truths revolve around eight…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education, Epistemology
Armstrong, Cherryl – 1986
Poets' working drafts and their comments on their processes indicate overwhelmingly that they, like experienced writers of other genres, are extensive revisers. The biggest difficulty with the term "revising" is that it designates both the changes made to a text and the mental processes and attitudes that underlie these changes. Even the…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Discourse Analysis, Expressive Language, Language Research
Brooks, Gordon P. – 1992
This paper presents a state-of-the-art examination of the literature addressing humor in leadership. A theoretical rationale is developed for the importance of humor as functional communication, especially as it relates to leadership. Research from several disciplines relevant to the use of humor in leadership is organized and synthesized.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Comedy, Communication Skills, Expressive Language
Woolever, Kristin R. – 1986
The entire process of legal writing would be shorter and more effective if writers would give as much attention to the politics of the rhetorical situation as they do to legal research. To do that requires the following considerations: (1) understanding the three dramatic elements in the rhetorical situation (audience, purpose, tone); (2)…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Communication Skills, Connected Discourse, Context Clues
Morgan, Wendy R. – 1986
If young readers (adolescents) are introduced to a range of story structures and less structured texts (or "deviant narratives"), it may encourage the development of more diverse and accommodating schemata and the capacity to make inferences about the link between discourse units. It is, after all, a basic principle of recent narrative…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Discourse Analysis, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Expressive Language