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Showing 136 to 150 of 189 results Save | Export
Mohr, Eric S. – 1990
Writing teachers should employ a pragmatic-eclectic approach to help freshman students become acquainted with as many writing models as possible. To privilege one model over the many others is to ignore the student's need for self- and world-discovery. The composition classroom has become the current center of critical reading and thinking skills,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Audience Awareness, Critical Thinking, Freshman Composition
Corbett, Jan – 1998
The emptiness and nothingness associated with writer's block is often described as a kind of death, a place where there is nothing to decide, nothing about which to express an opinion. However, for students who enter the writing classroom from a different culture, the problem may not be lack of ideas, but conflicting ideas. Some of these students…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cultural Differences, Culture Conflict, Expository Writing
Jeney, C. J. – 1996
Students are advised to enroll in WAC 101--a writing across the curriculum "Stretch" course--based upon SAT scores. Two types of "at risk" English composition students usually comprise a WAC 101 Stretch class. The first type are the familiar students who are underprepared for college writing courses, while the second are…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, High Risk Students, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Nino-Murcia, Mercedes – 1991
Ways to develop "creative automaticity" for writing in a foreign language are examined. The paper focuses on transactional writing (i.e., writing with the purpose of transferring precise information by such means as telex messages, business letters, memoranda, and short reports), and its main features of clarity and conventionality. It is noted…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Business Correspondence, Creativity, Editing
Agee, Jane M. – 1993
Many freshmen come to English courses thinking that they generally dislike poetry and that in particular they dislike writing critical essays about poetry. Two strategies which are effective in helping students overcome their own negative perceptions are to allow students to: (1) engage in transactional reader response; and (2) explore poetry…
Descriptors: College English, College Freshmen, Creative Writing, Freshman Composition
White, Fred D. – 1991
The cognitive skills associated with the writing of fiction and poetry are equally important in analytical and evaluative writing. Excluding them from freshman composition in particular discourages the students from developing a genuine mastery of critical writing skills. Teachers of college freshmen should not define "creative" as the…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creative Writing, Expository Writing, Freshman Composition
Otte, George – 1991
Lev Vygotsky and others have shown that "that which is within" is partly the product of socialization--a welter of competing claims, roles and voices. Teachers should aim, however, to achieve negotiation rather than suppression, transformation, or accommodation among these competing elements. With this in mind, 20 minority students at…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Minority Groups
Morton, Johnnye L. – 1991
A study examined whether modeling desired teaching strategies would produce future teachers who could confidently go into a new classroom and set up a writing program. Four weeks of class time in a teacher education class at Northeastern University in Oklahoma were used to teach the writing process through the use of a writer's workshop. Results…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Student Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness
Higgins, Lorraine; And Others – 1990
Critical reflection plays an integral part in independent problem-solving and self-regulated learning. Metacognition, which is knowledge of a task and of the thinker's own cognitive processes, and monitoring, the ability to assess and adapt thinking when problems become apparent, are elements of reflective thinking. Research shows that experienced…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, College English, Cooperation, Critical Thinking
Blair, Regina B.; Ormsbee, Christine; Brandes, Joyce – 2002
Students with mild disabilities often have difficulties with organization and written performance. These students can be helped by a combination of effective instructional strategies, compensatory strategies, and technological tools. Planning and organizing tools can encourage activities such as concept mapping, story webbing, brainstorming,…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Junior High Schools, Learning Disabilities
Ware, Mark E.; Davis, Stephen F. – 1997
Recent years have witnessed an increased emphasis on the professional development of undergraduate psychology students. One major thrust of this professional development has been on research that results in a convention presentation or journal publication. Research leading to journal publication is becoming a requirement for admission to many…
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Experimental Curriculum, Higher Education
Glau, Gregory R. – 1998
Currently the overall philosophy of many basic writing programs is one of inclusion rather than exclusion. First-year students are seen as part of the writing community, instead of continuing the mindset where students were sent off to "take this remedial class and then you'll be ready for English 101." At Arizona State University (ASU)…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Computer Uses in Education, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Schneider, Jenifer Jasinski – 1997
A study examined the situated and idiosyncratic writing strategies of a stratified purposeful sampling of five second and third grade children and the interplay between their strategy use and the multi-layered instructional contexts created by their teacher. Over a period of one school year, qualitative data (field notes, interviews, tape…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Childrens Writing, Classroom Environment, Grade 2
Tichenor, Stuart – 2001
This paper asserts that all the praise currently being lavished upon computer technology in the writing classroom should be tempered with realistic criticism. In addition to making research easier for students, the Internet makes plagiarism very easy. The author stresses that this plagiarism problem is not limited to the composition classroom, and…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Critical Thinking, Educational Technology, Higher Education
Price, Carol; Holman, Linda – 1996
Due to existing demographic trends, language minority students comprise an increasing proportion of students in the Southwest and in urban areas. For these language minority students, the lack of strong writing skills impedes academic performance at the university level and then later in the workplace. To test writing attitudes, a study involved…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, English (Second Language), Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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