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Showing 106 to 120 of 172 results Save | Export
Vesterman, William – 1989
Intended for college students, this book of readings, exercises, and advice focuses on issues of special relevance to college students and the general tasks of writing in college. The book is divided into eight sections, each of which contains a "classic" essay, a student essay, and a how-to essay, as well as 8 to 10 other essays on the…
Descriptors: College Students, Expository Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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McMackin, Mary; Siegel, Barbara – Reading Online, 2001
Describes an inquiry-based approach to researching in the intermediate grades. Presents detailed minilessons intended to provide students with strategies for writing effective research reports. Notes that hyperlinks in the article carry readers to examples of these strategies and to student applications. (RS)
Descriptors: Inquiry, Intermediate Grades, Research Reports, Student Research
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Bangert-Drowns, Robert L.; Hurley, Marlene M.; Wilkinson, Barbara – Review of Educational Research, 2004
Since the early 1970s, many educators have touted writing as a means of enhancing learning. Several reasons have been suggested for this purported enhancement: that writing is a form of learning, that writing approximates human speech, that writing supports learning strategies. Alternatively, some researchers have cautioned that the educative…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Academic Achievement, Meta Analysis, Metacognition
LaMascus, R. Scott – 1995
Television commercials and print ads have proven to be an effective means of introducing composition students to strategies for analysis and writing. They rely heavily on the eye to interpret images quickly according to fairly reliable habits. They are naturally occurring forms of argument and students have substantial intuitive competence with…
Descriptors: Advertising, Higher Education, Mass Media, Persuasive Discourse
Fredericksen, Elaine – 1996
Composition teachers and researchers recognize the difficulty young writers, especially females, face as they enter postsecondary education and attempt to learn the language of the academy. Addressing academic audiences "takes confidence and authority, qualities that are often challenged in women because of their historical exclusion from and…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Females, Feminism, Freshman Composition
Ostrom, Hans – 1996
This paper asks what role "play" plays in writing and how it can help a writer, whatever dread, boredom, skill, or ethnicity he/she brings to writing. Some of the ideas in the paper come from Africa, courtesy of Robert Farris Thompson. In his "philosophy of discourse" discussed in the paper, Thompson speaks of the "big…
Descriptors: African Culture, Higher Education, Self Expression, Student Attitudes
Grow, Gerald – 1995
Deliberately writing badly can be an effective way to learn to write better because knowing when writing is bad is an essential element in knowing when it's good. There are distinct advantages to encouraging students to learn the rules by breaking them. Deliberately doing it wrong removes the threat of failure. Students are playing; they are…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Humor, Journalism, Layout (Publications)
Haynes, Jared – 1993
This bibliography offers detailed summaries of five articles (published between 1983 and 1993) that provide practical and theoretical advice on designing writing assignments that can serve as more than just evaluation tools. The articles summarized in the bibliography confirm common sense but also dispel some common misconceptions about student…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Cognitive Development, Critical Thinking, Higher Education
Echle, Joe – Bread Loaf News, 1991
Getting students to react to literature and write more than a good "topic" sentence is a perennial dilemma for teachers. A course at the Bread Loaf School of English, Middlebury College, Vermont, that incorporated improvisation with the writing process used role playing to solve real life situations, physical and verbal warm-up exercises to…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Grade 9, Improvisation, Junior High Schools
Luckett, Sharon – 1991
Effective writing is nearly impossible without engagement with the material. The informal journal may be the only place in the composition class which clearly respects and encourages students' individuality, and which cannot be accused of trying to force them into an academic straitjacket of a sometimes loose, sometimes tight, fit. At the same…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Folk Culture, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Beins, Bernard C. – 2001
When students study the discipline of statistics, a domain that can be remote and abstract for them, it is critical that they understand what the numbers mean and how those numbers help people arrive at decisions. This paper presents different approaches that help students learn how researchers actually work with statistics and shows how students…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Psychology
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Stetson, Maura – English Journal, 1996
Suggests a number of teaching strategies that can be used for the development of authentic voices (instead of institutional, depersonalized voices) in student writing. Focuses on the importance of students' choosing their own topic, developing audience awareness, and making connections between their own lives and literature. (TB)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Creative Writing, Literary Criticism, Secondary Education
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Baker, Tracey – Journal of Business and Technical Communication, 1991
Discusses a course on shared-document writing in which students indicate that they value the time allowed to coordinate groups and to understand and complete assignments. Asserts that structuring the course necessitates assigning work relating to a single topic and providing choices, including a voice in group formation and evaluation. (PRA)
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Cooperative Learning, Group Activities, Higher Education
Mathena, Traci Johnson – American Educator, 2000
Middle school teacher describes a framework that gives inexperienced, anxious writers the confidence to write. The process, called doing prompts, stems from analyzing prompts or writing assignments that outline the topic for a piece of writing. The process involves analyzing the prompt being called for, completing a graphic organizer, composing…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Graphic Organizers, Middle School Students, Middle Schools
Grayson, Sandra M. – 1996
Most college students are not accustomed to writing about, reading, analyzing, or discussing 19th-century Black literature, especially slave narratives. As many educators try to include more Black literature in their curriculums, there is a growing need to develop successful methods to approach the texts so that students are prepared to write…
Descriptors: Black Literature, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation, Nineteenth Century Literature
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