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Cole, SuzAnne C. – 1990
After students' interest in literature has been stirred by journal writing, it is time for them to turn their private journal writing into writing for an audience. Instead of having students write the usual responses to literature, vary their assignments by offering them creative responses, either occasionally or as an individual alternative to…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McCord, Elizabeth A. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Discusses the difficulties with anticipating reader needs and evaluating a text's effectiveness. Reviews current methods of evaluating audience needs such as peer review and audience testing. Describes a reader-focused assignment detailing the class preparation, peer review, reader testing, reader response, and student response to reader…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Audience Response, Business Communication, Business Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Boiarsky, Carolyn – Technical Communication, 1992
Describes an assignment in writing documentation that turns the classroom into a laboratory for usability testing, giving students a clear sense of the reader responding to their text. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Class Activities, Higher Education, Reader Response
Lloyd-Jones, Richard – 1991
Writing is at the heart of education. The business of English teachers is to make people more comfortable in using language, particularly written language. Language serves two broad functions: (1) representing elements of external reality; and (2) defining relationships among the people who use the language. The writer's first need is to use the…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Reader Response
Danis, M. Francine – 1991
Literature instructors become frustrated as they read poorly written student essays. The problem is partly the students' lack of experience: they have not read a lot or written a lot. Literature classes can be more interesting and effective if teachers coordinate two kinds of emphases: allowing for discovery and moving toward productivity. In…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College English, Essays, Higher Education