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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
Raign, Kathryn Rosser – 1992
Many basic writers, who are virtually unable to create a coherent paragraph, are nonetheless capable of presenting orally well-constructed narratives of depth and feeling. Thus, teachers must try to get students to harness the strength of their oral abilities to improve their writing skills, and Kenneth Burke's pentad may provide a key. Burke's…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Techniques, Drama, Higher Education
Jonsberg, Sara Dalmas – 1993
Poststructural theory grapples with the hiddenness and complexity of oppression by questioning Western understandings of the self as a unitary, self-created, autonomous, essentialist entity. Feminist psychologists have shown that autonomy as a measure of maturity implies that women will never "grow up" because women's lives tend to be…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Discourse Communities, Higher Education, Open Enrollment
Kurth, Lita – 1995
Commonly accepted ideas, on the one hand, about how small groups in a writing class should work and, on the other hand, psychological research about what makes a small group work well are not consistent. Social psychologist Clovis Shepherd claims that the "popular notion that the democratic ideal is a group in which all members exert an equal…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cooperation, Democracy, Group Dynamics
McDermott, Michael – 1993
A writing center tutor's experience with a basic composition student named Tonja, while limited to seven tutoring sessions and, in the tutor's words, not amenable to claims of universality, reveals indications of the growth of the student as a writer, and the growth of the tutor as well. Discussions between the writer and the tutor were a learning…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Tutoring
Rubin, Lois – 1991
The traditional basic writing model (giving students manageable writing tasks like narratives and descriptions of familiar places) has been criticized by both Mike Rose and David Bartholomae, among others, for not moving the basic writer far enough toward the goal of academic writing competence. Rose's schemata are reassuring and helpful to basic…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Newsome, Alice – 1991
The emotional transitions basic writers have to make when they enter the academic setting can be overwhelming. Basic writers tend to have a host of problems and obstacles to overcome, not the least of which are their own anxieties. One way to alleviate some of the anxieties and insecurities is through a studio or workshop course staffed with…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Peer Teaching, Student Attitudes
Belanger, Kelly – 1991
An exploratory study examined how gender might be connected with differences in how teachers of basic writing talk about their version of the course which David Bartholomae and Anthony Petrosky describe in their book "Facts, Counterfacts, and Artifact: Theory and Method for a Reading and Writing Course." Subjects, five male and five…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Higher Education, Interviews
Crisco, Virginia – 2002
Ethnographic pedagogy builds a bridge between nontraditional students' home community with the values of the academic community, but the point of "bridging" the two communities seems to be for the student to come over to "our side." This paper proposes an ethnographic pedagogical approach that is reciprocal, bridging both…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Cultural Context, Ethnography, Higher Education
Bleekman, Dell; Tegan, Mary Beth – 1995
One challenge for composition instructors is to determine exactly, or even approximately, what objects and rituals must be observed for students' words to fall with the "true." Another is to successfully communicate these objects and rituals to their students through the various techniques of discipline. The arbitrary nature of…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Design, Discipline, Higher Education
Tichenor, Stuart – 1995
Generally, students in vocational and technical colleges are in writing classes because they must be, not because they want to be. As a rule, students in basic composition classes have been more or less continually exposed to writing classes since middle school where they been asked to keep journals, read articles and short stories, and write…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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
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
Hodson, Kristy K. – 2002
When it comes to "student-centered" teaching, who knows what teachers are talking about? Specifically, the multiple perspectives offered in today's diverse classrooms have rendered such terms slippery and subjective. In a student-centered classroom, to "be" the one who knows what the students are talking about, the writing…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Diversity (Student), Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Boehnlein, James M. – 1995
While placement procedures and lack of writing skills are certainly perplexing, classroom practices and procedures remain the most fundamental of challenges for the developmental writing instructor for good reason: time-on-task methods are the most direct means by which students improve skill levels. One instructor found that this approach to…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Basic Skills, Basic Writing, Higher Education