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Showing 31 to 45 of 189 results Save | Export
DiLella, Carol Ann – 1992
This paper presents "popcorn story frames"--holistic outlines that facilitate comprehension when reading and writing stories, useful for outlining stories read and for creating outlines for original student stories--that are particularly useful for elementary and intermediate school students. "Popcorn" pops in a horizontal…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Intermediate Grades, Literature Appreciation, Primary Education
Dobler, Judith – 1991
To become writers, students must see themselves as writers and be treated as writers by their teachers. Students need to find the motivation to go beyond formulas, to grapple with messy, often inchoate ideas, to find their own particular angle of vision. What rhetoricians call "invention" or "discovery" is difficult to pin…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetorical Invention, Student Motivation, Writing (Composition)
Hill, Michael – 1991
Freewriting, according to Peter Elbow, is based on an equal affirmation of the student's experience, and his or her right to ground behaviors and writing in those experiences. Insofar as the term "free" in freewriting can be linked to a notion that expression is an event which occurs between a socially and culturally autonomous subject…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cultural Influences, Discourse Modes, Free Writing
Haven, Richard P. – 1990
A course in speech writing (preparing speeches for delivery by another person) is critical to the development of public speaking skills for college students. Unlike the traditional public speaking course, speech writing classes emphasize the preparation of the content of a speech over the delivery of the message. Students develop the ability to…
Descriptors: Course Content, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse, Rhetorical Invention
Schindler, Kirsten – 2002
Individuals mostly write texts which are directed to other persons, the readers. Even though individuals cannot rely on immediate reactions, as in spoken dialogue, they are nevertheless able to communicate successfully with them. A writing experiment focused on the role of the addressee in the writing process. Writers grouped in pairs were asked…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Collaborative Writing, Graduate Students, Higher Education
Woods, Claire; Homer, David – 1997
This paper describes, reflects on, and analyzes the process of engaging student writers in a creative-critical writing workshop in which they not only work toward presenting a portfolio of original work, but are engaged in performance, dramatic intervention, and creative challenges to texts. The paper explains how students are invited to meet…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Critical Thinking, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Pettersson, Rune – 1993
This paper addresses the difficulty involved in creating easily understood information. The act of communicating is not complete until the message has been both received and understood by the audience. Messages must always be comprehensible, otherwise they will have no effect. The readability, legibility, and reading value of a graphic message is…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Communication (Thought Transfer), Comprehension, Costs
Portalupi, JoAnn – 1995
For one instructor, her work in autobiography began with an interest in understanding how her past has influenced her present work of teaching. Autobiography is an interpretive act and both a reunion and a release from the past. While there is commitment to truth in writing an autobiographical text, the autobiographer necessarily engages in the…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Creative Writing, Educational Background, Literary Devices
Wingate, Molly – 1990
John Reiff's conceptual framework regarding conflicting views of peace provides insight into interpersonal communication which can be successfully applied to conflicts in writing conferences and has already been used at the Colorado College Writing Center. First, a tutor or writer using the "Peace through Strength" frame of reference…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Models
McGlinn, James E.; McGlinn, Jeanne M. – 1990
Creative problem-solving can be used successfully in the writing classroom, for the problem-solving process involves three distinctive stages of thinking activity that remarkably parallel the prewriting steps in the composing process. Similar stages include: (1) data generation and preparation to write; (2) data manipulation and incubation; and…
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Prewriting
Beaupre, Barbara – 2000
The assumption for many college professors is that academic discourse is a hallmark of the educated, a form of communication accepted and expected both academically and professionally. Typically, academic discourse entails the conventions of a particular discipline's writing form. A writing center tutor and administrator must find ways to teach…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Student Needs, Tutors
Sadoshima, Saori – 1997
A study investigated the extent to which children consider writing strategies in relation to types of writing. Data were evolved by interviewing 48 fifth-grade children on their processes of evaluating other children's papers. Each child was asked to read paired texts, judge their comparative quality, and explain the basis of their judgments. They…
Descriptors: Definitions, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Interviews
Collins, James L.; Collins, Kathleen M. – 1994
Writing processes and writing skills are highly compatible, but only if "writing skills" are defined as genuinely helpful learning strategies rather than prescriptive techniques or isolated forms and rules. Increased skill is a product of meaningful practice, not prescriptive instructions or isolated drills. In the present context, the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Learning Disabilities, Skill Development
Calderonello, Alice; Shaller, Deborah – 1998
In an extended conversation two female writing instructors discuss the kind of discourse available in the academy, the way educators are trained to deploy its conventions, and the different ways that voices are authorized. They cite Harraway as an academic writer who bridges the various post-structuralist discourses without ever losing sight of…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Language Role, Metaphors
Roberts, Claudette – 1994
The degree to which process writing deconstructs traditional notions about a fixed final product came to the attention of a high school instructor and her students when they attempted to select their best "essays" for a contest the school was holding. The students in this class found that some of their best writing occurred not in their…
Descriptors: Essays, High Schools, Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing)
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