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Whitlock, Roger – 1984
To force students--at the very beginning of the writing process--to be aware of audience and to gain insight into their own writing, in-class writing and sharing exercises can be invaluable. For example, students can present to the class their subject for an upcoming paper, with the class responding on paper to such questions as: (1) What do you…
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Student Attitudes, Student Motivation, Writing (Composition)
Robitaille, Marilyn M. – 1987
Designed to combine the science and the art of teaching composition, this series of assignments encourages junior high and high school writing students to explore tone, original visual images, point of view, and other literary techniques. One assignment asks students to write a number of paragraphs alternately using sarcasm, humor, melancholy, and…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing, Instructional Innovation, Prewriting
Jenseth, Richard – 1984
The expressive reading journal aims to break through student passivity by asking students to write extensively and expressively about what they read, each time they read, and to make discoveries and take possession of what they read. This type of journal in the academic course depends for its usefulness on the nature of expressive language, the…
Descriptors: Prewriting, Reading Improvement, Student Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Ronald, Katharine; Roskelly, Hephzibah – 1985
The fact that students have not learned to listen may be the reason some of them cannot write. Listening is an active process requiring the same skills of prediction, hypothesizing, checking, revising, and generalization that reading and writing demand. The following three exercises were designed to make students conscious of themselves as active…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Listening, Listening Habits, Listening Skills
Clinton, DeWitt – 1983
Inventive activities in the creative writing classroom can generate a great deal of excitement for the writing of poetry. Such activities might begin with improvising ways in which poetry can be written in alternative media, such as haiku on clay tablets that can be glazed and fired, then macramed together into wind chimes. Another activity,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creative Activities, Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education
Wahlquist, Elizabeth – 1988
As a tool for composition classes, practice in letter writing can help create a community of discourse. Many issues can be touched on in a discussion on the role of letters in society: the value of letters to historians and biographers; note passing in elementary and secondary school; personal use; letter columns in the newspapers and magazines;…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Letters (Correspondence)
Martin, Bob – 1983
By incorporating letters to the editor and other reader participation columns in print media into the content-focus of the course, composition teachers can bring to life the student's rhetorical situation, especially with respect to audience and purpose. Such reader-writing is especially effective when students analyze the texts for clues to the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Letters (Correspondence)
Whale, Kathleen B. – 1985
Extending an earlier Donald Graves study by including students over seven years of age, this study identified relationships among the nature of writing tasks assigned by teachers and the written responses of elementary school students to those tasks. One class each at the third, fifth, and seventh grade levels provided eighteen sets of writing…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Processing, Student Reaction, Writing Exercises
Beene, LynnDianne – 1995
Arriving college students find themselves unprepared for the demands of academic writing. Despite the sometimes condescending critical attitudes of its literary worth and the pressures of composition specialists to use nonfiction texts as instructional aids, detective fiction, like any fiction, favors the underlying characteristics students…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Fiction, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Vavra, Edward A. – 1985
Designed for students who have grammatical problems, the syntactic approach presented in this paper helps explain the process of revision, and should be used only after a student has written a draft. The paper suggests that the students' hypothetical objective can be to understand how every word in any sentence is syntactically connected to the…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Sentence Structure
Condravy, Joan; McIlvaine, Robert – 1985
The Basics Skills English 100 course at Slippery Rock University, having changed from a traditional approach to an approach that reflects knowledge gained through research about the needs of basic writers, shows the progress basic writers can make in a summer program. Thirty students met six times a week for five weeks in one-and-a-half hour…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Higher Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Evaluation
Danis, M. Francine – 1988
In a composition course, interview assignments have four key virtues: (1) they are interesting in themselves; (2) they ease students into the demands of working with other people's ideas; (3) they offer a rationale for improving rhetorical skills; and (4) they allow students to experience adult, responsible roles in a social context. In addition,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Morenberg, Max – 1992
Has the new emphasis on process versus product led instructors to teach that the writing process is everything and the product, the finished paper, of no import? This is a lesson that not even the most orthodox believer in writing process methodology would support. The process and the product are, in fact, mutually linked, rather than mutually…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing), Process Education, Sentence Combining
Crisp, Sally Chandler – 1986
"Aerobic writing" is a writing center strategy designed to keep students in writing "shape." Like aerobic exercise, aerobic writing is sustained for a certain length of time and done on a regular basis at prescribed time intervals. The program requires students to write at least two times a week for approximately an hour each time. Students write,…
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Teaching Methods
Groth, Nancy; And Others – 1986
On the basis of a National Humanities project proposed by the English department of a St. Louis, Missouri high school, many different approaches to drawing students into writing about and understanding literature were developed. One of three such techniques is a sequence of writing-reading-writing that offers the possibility of both enhancing the…
Descriptors: High Schools, Literature Appreciation, Reader Response, Reading Comprehension