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Showing 1 to 15 of 110 results Save | Export
Haneline, Douglas – 1994
Students in a basic writing course at Ferris State University, an open-admissions, career-technical institution, are required to buy "The Family in America," a casebook in the Opposing Viewpoints Series. The book is suitable for a student who is struggling to write on a high school level and does not have the basic educational background…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Student Needs, Writing Improvement
Harris, Joseph – 1985
The role of the reader in how the meaning of a text is formed has been a nearly obsessive concern of recent critical thought. While theories of reader-response or deconstruction may seem to have had little effect on the practice of teaching literature, they do hold much in common with the way many teachers try to teach writing. The works of Roland…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literary Styles, Writing (Composition), Writing Improvement
Beene, LynnDianne – 1996
Good writing is good sentences. It is a simple truth that many in the business of teaching writing have strayed from. Good writing is a first sentence that makes a reader want to read the second sentence, a second sentence that makes a reader want to read the third, and so on. Erika Lindemann suggests that certain types of sentence instruction can…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Punctuation, Sentences
Limaye, Mohan R.; Hightower, Rick – 1983
Noting that accounting reports, including management advisory service (MAS) studies, reports on internal control, and tax memoranda, often appear rather dense and heavy in style--partly because of the legal environment's demand for careful expression and partly because such documents convey very complex information--this paper presents four…
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Communication, Business English, Editing
Yssel, Johan C. – 1995
Although the FCB (Foote, Cone, & Belding) grid was never intended to serve as an educational tool, it can be applied successfully in advertising classes to address the three areas that S. E. Moriarty considers to be the minimum for writing strategy. To demonstrate the superiority of the FCB grid as a pedagogical tool, a study analyzed…
Descriptors: Advertising, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Writing Improvement
Mullin, Joan – 1993
For many years, writing centers have based their pedagogy on "collaboration." Now it is time to reflectively examine whether tutorial collaborations actually correspond to those definitions on which it is generally assumed they are based. Current practices assume that "collaborative" practices include non-authoritative pedagogy…
Descriptors: College Students, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Writing (Composition)
Romano, Tom – 1991
A teacher reports that during the process of writing a novel, he saw the creative link connecting language, image, and detail. He generated details from the images and language that preceded them. The initial envisioning often flickered erratically until he had generated enough language to place himself in a detailed scene. He has found that in…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition)
Lund, Donna – 1991
Each discourse community teaches and uses a particular version of reality. In the field of accounting, the interpretation of reality is an objective one. Such an interpretation is a constraint on writing, as are accounting's reliance on exclusionary language, its need to meet legal and professional requirements, its adherence to stylistic and…
Descriptors: Accountants, Accounting, Business Communication, Discourse Analysis
Schultz, John – 1986
Research from various fields supports the crucial relationship of speech and writing. Experience with the Story Workshop used in composition classes can show how thinking, speaking, listening, reading, writing, recalling, and immediate audience focus can be integrated into every phase of the writing process. Activities must enable students find…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Integrated Activities, Language Arts, Oral Reading
Dumas, Bethany K. – 1993
Many English handbooks and "grammars" fail to offer sound advice to writers about matters of exactness in diction and precision in sentence structure. A gap between linguists and English teachers, the literary bias of most graduate departments of English, and a national obsession with the all-powerful capabilities of common sense, have…
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Linguistics, Secondary Education
Radavich, David A. – 1986
Dramatic texts are an ideal pedagogical tool for clarifying certain aspects of communication such as authorial stance, point of view, role, persona, impersonation, ethos, shared communal values, cultural assumptions, genre expectations, audience, performance, dialogue, and enactment. Using dramatic texts in a composition class can broaden student…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Drama, Higher Education, Literary Devices
Palmer, William S. – 1986
In developing teaching strategies for students who are poor writers but good readers, it is useful to explore the characteristics of good readers and of poor writers, and to consider implications for improving classroom practices. Good readers tend to put into practice four major cognitive strategies when they read: they plan, translate or…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Teaching Methods, Writing Improvement
Miller, Lori Ann – 1989
Writing is an act of self construction. Considering how students process information can improve the quality of instruction in composing courses, but only if quantifiable, verified models of cognitive functions are taken to heart and applied to teaching methods in the classroom. C. G. Jung's model of the four functions (thinking, sensation,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Higher Education
Whitlock, Roger – 1984
To force students--at the very beginning of the writing process--to be aware of audience and to gain insight into their own writing, in-class writing and sharing exercises can be invaluable. For example, students can present to the class their subject for an upcoming paper, with the class responding on paper to such questions as: (1) What do you…
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Student Attitudes, Student Motivation, Writing (Composition)
Gessell, Donna A. – 1997
When writing, few students have any concept that word placement affects the content of their writing. They seldom rework their papers at the sentence level in order to assure that their grammar reflects and enhances their content. Recognizing the relationship of grammar to meaning, composition researchers are reasserting the place of grammar in…
Descriptors: Authors, Classroom Techniques, Grammar, Higher Education
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