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Miller, Richard E. – College English, 1994
Discusses the possibility of constructing a writing classroom in which unsolicited oppositional discourse might be allowed to flourish. Describes one student essay about gay-bashing and the huge response of college composition professionals to its public discussion. Argues that teachers can provide a space where cultures can meet and grapple. (HB)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Educational Trends, English Curriculum

Leonard, Harris K. – College English, 1975
Student-drawn comic strip versions of classical works stimulated discussion and appreciation. (JH)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Comics (Publications), Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction

Foulke, Robert; Hartman, Joan E. – College English, 1976
Argues the need for professors and departments of English to reach a new consensus on goals for teaching literature. (JH)
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, English Departments, English Instruction, Higher Education

Schwalm, David E. – College English, 1985
Presents insights that the Oral Proficiency Testing Program of the Foreign Service Institute can give writing teachers and focuses specifically on how these insights can help them to identify and articulate appropriate objectives for basic writing courses and to develop curricula appropriate to those objectives. (EL)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, College English, English Instruction, Higher Education

McCormick, Kathleen – College English, 1985
Argues that different kinds of response statements, focusing on issues from cultural, historical, phenomenological, and structuralist approaches to reading texts, can be assigned to help students learn about more demanding kinds of information and, hence, can make students stronger, more informed, and more self-conscious readers of literature. (EL)
Descriptors: College English, Cultural Context, Educational Theories, English Instruction

Bleich, David – College English, 1976
Descriptors: Books, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis

Harp, Richard L. – College English, 1976
Describes an integrated interdisciplinary humanities course. (JH)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Higher Education

Johnson, Barbara; Garber, Marjorie – College English, 1987
Offers a psychoanalytically based reading of Conrad's "The Secret Sharer" and points out the similarities between analysis of a text and analysis of a patient in a psychoanalysis session. (JC)
Descriptors: College English, Content Analysis, English Instruction, Literary Criticism

McCarron, William E. – College English, 1980
Analyzes three concerns to which English teachers must attend during the next decade: writing about technology in simpler, more direct terms; using popular literature as a steppingstone to more meaningful literature; and reintegrating literature and composition study. (JT)
Descriptors: Educational Needs, Educational Planning, Educational Trends, English Instruction

Henry, Jim – College English, 1994
Examines the writings of graduate students in a seminar to reveal a complex discursive scene. Provides a narratological analysis of student authorship. Raises questions about writing across the curriculum theory and suggests new possibilities for research and teaching. (HB)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Educational Philosophy
Elbow, Peter – College English, 1968
This article proposes to teach writing from the hypothesis that true writing and good prose are only end products rather than the primary objectives. The author suggests that producing an effect in a reader and revealing the self in words are prior achievements in the process of learning to write well. Criteria for judging writing are based…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Descriptive Writing, English, English Instruction

Loughlin, Richard L. – College English, 1965
Presented in this article is a list of practical suggestions designed to aid college teachers of English in instructing disadvantaged students more effectively. (AF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College English, College Language Programs, Disadvantaged Youth

Smith, D. B. – College English, 1986
Offers five axioms that express a philosophy of technical English and describe a perception of language use that is considerably different from that of literary English. Concludes that the study of English should include much more than just the study of literature. (SRT)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, English for Science and Technology, English Instruction, Expository Writing

College English, 1985
Presents comments and responses on three "College English" articles: Robert Connor's "Journals in Composition Studies," Dennis Rygiel's "On the Neglect of Twentieth-Century Nonfiction," and C. H. Knoblauch and Lil Brannon's "Writing as Learning through the Curriculum." (RBW)
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Classroom Techniques, College English, Content Area Writing

McCloskey, Susan – College English, 1984
Describes the use of scene work, informal presentations of dramatic passages, to explore aspects of plays that readers are likely to overlook. Finds that this scene work increases the pertinence of students' comments in class and the ambitiousness of their written work. (MM)
Descriptors: Class Activities, College English, Critical Reading, Drama