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Paulson, Peter – 1978
Seven methods for helping students find theme topics are presented in this document. The methods include the following: setting up a library browsing table of records, books, and criticism related to the work of literature that is being studied; permitting students to choose topics based on observation of the surrounding community or reactions to…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing, English Instruction, Expository Writing
Wolff, Aline – 1975
There is a logical sequence in the steps of a freshman English course, the goal of which is the comprehension of the writing process and a readiness to move forward with that process. Students must first learn prewriting--an outpouring on paper of every thought connected with a given topic. This is followed by selecting ideas, formulating a…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education
Sieben, J. Kenneth – 1974
Students should be encouraged and taught how to write more effectively. This may be accomplished by involving them in two types of writing--the journal and the essay. The student is encouraged to record in his journal what he did and thought during the day, regardless of the trivialities. The journal is never evaluated by the instructor unless the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing, English Instruction
Rose, Mike – 1979
An examination of the written products and writing situations of a university reveals that virtually all of these writing tasks call for exposition, which further breaks down into the five components of seriation, classification, synthesis, compare/contrast, and analysis. These five components of expositional discourse form a set of…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Curriculum Guides, Descriptive Writing, English Curriculum
Sodowsky, R. E.; Witte, S. P. – 1982
In an effort to examine the hierarchical relations in the development of discourse topics, the narrative-descriptive essays of 55 university freshmen were analyzed in terms of L. Lautamatti's five sentence types. In type 1, the initial element is in the position of the grammatical subject, and is the topical subject. In type 2, the topical and…
Descriptors: Classification, Cohesion (Written Composition), College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing
Guinn, Dorothy Margaret – 1980
Essays in which 40 freshman composition students described unusual or extraordinary persons were analyzed for the charcteristic choices that males and females made and for the typical ways men and women were described. The analysis yielded seven findings with social implications. Both males and females tended to choose males as objects for…
Descriptors: Characterization, College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing, Discourse Analysis
Sears, Priscilla – 1979
An 11-step process may be used by freshman composition students to help them write effective prose in a series of clear steps. The steps are: (1) select a topic (for the first assignment, usually a place about which students have strong feelings and vivid remembrances), (2) individually brainstorm the topic, (3) categorize the details that have…
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Freshmen, Communication Problems, Descriptive Writing