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Showing 46 to 60 of 189 results Save | Export
Dryden, Phyllis – 1991
In 1866, Alexander Bain proposed that by evaluating unity, coherence, and emphasis (which he brought together under the acronym "CUE"), students could judge the effectiveness of their written paragraphs. One hundred twenty-five years later, the proposition is still central to composition instruction. A review of modern writing textbooks…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Theories, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Cullum, Charles – 1991
A study developed an objective approach to measuring the effects of collaborative learning techniques, and assessed the impact of collaborative learning on reducing writing problems for developmental students. One-hundred two developmental English students participated in an experimental writing class that used only collaborative learning…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Writing Difficulties
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
Delbridge, John R. – 1997
Students who write the least in initial prewriting are often passionate and philosophical talkers--during unplanned conversations they will freely "compose" stories. This realization led one educator to consider using interviewing as a discovery technique. From the perspective of qualitative research methods, interviews are seen as…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Interviews
Martin, Rodney – 2001
Grammar, historically, has been taught in a manner that leaves young learners wondering why they need to learn it. The problem has been partly that teachers have not been provided the insights needed to move the teaching of language conventions and grammar from the position of "textbook exercise" to that of "tools of the trade"…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Editing, Elementary Education, Grammar
Elkins, Hope; Buckingham, Tom; Cochran, Lynn – 2003
This preliminary study, focusing only on writing analysis, is part of a larger longitudinal study that will be used to develop an effective instrument to predict college retention. The methodology arose from a psychological model created by John Bean (2001) to ascertain "academic fit" in the college setting and a psycholinguistic model developed…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Students, Higher Education, Language Usage
Dickinson, Patricia F. – 1992
An instructor of a composition and computers writing course (designed for economically and culturally disadvantaged students) at the State University of New York at Buffalo, developed electronic conferences which combine the capabilities of the computer with the conference approach. The instructor reads students' papers while sitting at the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Evaluation Methods, Feedback, Higher Education
Hildebrand, Gaell M. – 1996
This paper uses three nuances of "informs." Firstly, it argues that writing forms (or shapes) science and science learning through the textual practices that are available to interpret and allowable to produce. These writing genres shape science discourse and must be challenged because available texts construct science as a rational…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Foreign Countries, Learning Strategies, Science Education
Noble, Michael – 1997
Perhaps writing is equated with process. But, there are too many complicating factors that make it difficult to evaluate the success or failure of prewriting and drafting assignments--the process and the value of each step is different for each individual. By teaching students to recognize the cultural contingencies of textuality, the status of…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creative Expression, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Ostrom, Hans – 1992
Studying the life of Langston Hughes in the context of how to teach freshman composition can shed light on two sometimes conflicting pedagogies, the expressivist and the social-constructionist. A discouraging period of fierce criticism, illness, depression, and financial woes coincided with Hughes' 39th birthday, which his biographer Arnold…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Authors, Black Literature, College Freshmen
Langstraat, Lisa R. – 1992
A feminist composition classroom concentrates on undermining the Platonic view of invention as the private act of an atomistic individual and replacing it with inventional strategies that heighten students' awareness of the social, political, and economic factors which make writing and reading a gendered activity. These alternate strategies allow…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, College Instruction, Feminism, Higher Education
Schunk, Dale H.; Swartz, Carl W. – 1992
A study investigated the influence of goal setting and progress feedback on self-efficacy and writing achievement among gifted children. Thirty-three fourth graders who previously had been identified as academically gifted in language arts received writing strategy instruction over 20 sessions and were given a goal of learning to use the strategy…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Feedback, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades
Narain, Mona – 1991
Writing teachers need to recognize the special circumstances of culturally displaced students. A specific category of such students are those from the Asian subcontinent, who are not exactly non-native speakers of English, but who do speak non-standard American English. These students occupy a subaltern (marginal) position: they can neither be…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, English (Second Language), Foreign Students, Higher Education
Wenner, Barbara – 1991
Students work most productively when they feel free to move back and forth from ignoring audience to addressing it. Students should consider audience as they begin a writing task. Then they should get away from it all and simply write. If they find an audience inhibiting, they should feel free to ignore the idea of audience altogether or alter…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audience Awareness, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Salvatore, Anne – 1991
Topic knowledge, discourse knowledge, and contextual awareness are now considered crucial for "good writing" by many writing researchers. It is time for writing instructors to stop conducting composition classes as though substantive knowledge is a far lesser issue than "rhetorical skill." Composition teachers can offer…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Learning Motivation
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