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Showing 361 to 375 of 421 results Save | Export
Starks, Gretchen – 1989
A study was conducted at a rural community college to explore the process by which adult women who had returned to college decided whether to persist or drop out. In-depth interviews were conducted with 17 women who had been identified as exceptional in that they either persisted and graduated even though they had been initially identified as…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Adult Students, Community Colleges, Dropouts
Rabianski-Carriuolo, Nancy – 1984
Acknowledging that basic skills instructors must deal with the affective characteristics of developmental students, this paper describes factors to consider for creating an environment in which developmental students can improve their learning skills. The first section of the paper discusses ways to meet emotional needs when planning a pretest for…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Basic Skills, Classroom Environment, Developmental Studies Programs
Cornwell, Steve; McKay, Tonia – 1999
A study investigated the utility of a measure for assessing the writing apprehension of Japanese students of English as a second language. The Daly-Miller questionnaire, designed to measure writing apprehension, was translated into Japanese and administered to 687 first- and second-year students of English at a Japanese junior college. Results…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, High Schools, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wilcox, Kimberly J.; Jensen, Murray S. – Research and Teaching in Developmental Education, 2000
Examines the effectiveness of two writing-to-learn formats in helping developmental students master biological information and in decreasing writing anxiety. Objective measures showed a small but significant decrease in writing anxiety over the quarter, unrelated to writing format. Writing format also had little effect on content knowledge, based…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Course Evaluation, Developmental Studies Programs, Higher Education
Miritello, Mary – Composition Chronicle: Newsletter for Writing Teachers, 1996
Traditionally, teachers of writing have considered it their challenge to prepare students for the workplace. But in growing numbers, students are entering classrooms from the workplace. New trends in the way Americans define themselves as workers and life-long learners call for a redefinition of the role of writing in the academic world. Some…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Higher Education
Song, Minjong – 1997
This study investigated the effect of dialogue journal writing on the writing quality, reading comprehension, and writing apprehension of college freshmen studying English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) in a Korean university. Subjects were 207 students in four intact reading sections of a freshman English reading course. For a 10-week period,…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Classroom Techniques, College Freshmen, College Students
Nugent, Susan Monroe – 1993
Many women in two-year colleges are returning to education after having been away from a school setting for an extended period of time. In a community college writing class, written comments to a teacher on the first day of class indicated that women were considerably less self-confident than the men, with several revealing fear of expressing…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Females, Learning Processes, Learning Theories
Walsh, S. M. – 1990
There is a natural tension between experimentally designed studies and case studies, which differ in that they are not concerned with the interaction of variables in the quantitative and statistical sense. This paper describes a study that was not experimentally designed, but its major findings were generalizable to the overall population of…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Case Studies, College Freshmen, Correlation
Schwertman, Kathryn; Corey, Melinda – 1989
An ethnographic study examined ways in which the writing behaviors of adult literacy students in a classroom setting were either similar to or different from current theories of language acquisition. Three students were selected from an adult literacy class at the Fordham Library Center in the Bronx. The research plan had a three-pronged approach:…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Adult Students, Behavior Patterns
Tighe, Mary Ann – 1987
In an effort to reduce student writing apprehension, an informal, in-class study was conducted in a lower-level college writing course at an Alabama university. The 16 students in this course took a Writing Apprehension Test (WAT--pretest) on the first day of class. Throughout the course, all writing was based on student experiences and came from…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, College English, College Freshmen, Higher Education
Deutsch, Lucille – 1988
More than half of the entering freshmen at Rio Grande College in Ohio are required to take developmental English. In addition to having grammar, reading, and writing difficulties to overcome, most of these students have negative attitudes toward writing. In an effort to improve students' writing skills and attitudes, word processing instruction…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Community Colleges, Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction
Oestereicher, M. H. – 1985
The potential contribution of mentoring to educationally disadvantaged students was examined at Brooklyn College. The students were part of a program called "SEEK," which admits low income students regardless of their high school grades and which provides counseling, tutoring, and remediation. A major goal of the mentoring project was to…
Descriptors: College Students, Economically Disadvantaged, Educationally Disadvantaged, Helping Relationship
Stacks, Don W.; And Others – 1983
A study provided the initial test of a multidimensional instrument based on the idea that syntactic language choice might predict writing apprehension. The test measured six factors: (1) blank page paralysis, (2) general affect toward writing, (3) positive/negative business affect, (4) alternative modes, (5) attitude toward writing competence, and…
Descriptors: Business Communication, College Students, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Truscott, John – Language Learning, 1996
Argues that grammar correction in second-language writing classes should be abandoned because it is ineffective, harmful, and unhelpful in any interesting sense for theoretical and practical reasons. The article also considers and rejects a number of arguments previously offered in favor of grammar correction. (122 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Error Correction, Grammar, Language Processing, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
MacGregor, Jean – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1993
Self-evaluation is unfamiliar to most college students. Teachers can use varied approaches to support students in overcoming unfamiliarity with self-evaluation, lack of confidence in describing learning, writing difficulties, evaluation difficulties, discomfort discussing academic problems, cultural bias against self-evaluation, emotional…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Classroom Techniques, College Students, Culture Conflict
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