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Kinghorn, Norton D. – 1979
Generative rhetoric is an essential part of any composition program or instruction in written language that begins with the preschool child and continues through the freshman year of college and beyond. Applying the principles of generative rhetoric to selected essays and student performance established the need to maintain the place of generative…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Educational Problems, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Fujii, Gertrude S. – 1979
Teaching in the two-year college, which was once considered to be a stepping-stone to teaching at a four-year college or university, has become a unique profession in itself. In the years ahead, community colleges should be actively involved in cooperating in developing English curricula. Prospective teachers of English at two-year schools need to…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Community Colleges, English Curriculum, English Departments
Tuttle, Frederick B., Jr.; And Others – 1977
This report describes the rationale, implementation, and results of an experimental ninth-grade composition program in which students from three classes worked through activities that use different media to help them communicate effectively in narration, exposition, and critical analysis. Sentence combining was included as a part of the program. A…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Educational Research, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Silva, Dolores; Polk, Tobye P. – 1979
That program development for the preparation of English teachers requires the collaboration of curricularists, educational philosophers and psychologists, and content specialists is the focus of this paper. One orientation to program development is considered in a discussion of social foundations, curriculum theory and development, English…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Cooperative Planning, Curriculum Development, English Curriculum
National Council of Teachers of English, Champaign, IL. – 1968
DELIBERATIONS BEGUN AT A CONVENTION IN 1966 AND REFINED AT THE 1967 "SCHOLAR'S SEMINAR" IN LOUISVILLE, BOTH SPONSORED BY THE CONFERENCE ON COLLEGE COMPOSITION AND COMMUNICATION, RESULTED IN THIS PUBLISHED "STATEMENT" WHICH URGES RESEARCH AND STUDY OF THE "DEEPER ASPECTS OF COMPOSING." THE REPORT BRIEFLY PRESENTS SEVERAL ALTERNATIVE APPROACHES TO…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Course Content, English, English Curriculum
WEBER, JOHN – 1968
TO STUDY THE ENGLISH PROGRAMS AT FIVE MICHIGAN JUNIOR COLLEGES, THE RESEARCHER SPENT A WEEK AT EACH COLLEGE, INTERVIEWING, VISITING CLASSES, AND STUDYING WRITTEN MATERIALS. FIVE CONCLUSIONS RESULTED--(1) REMEDIAL COURSES ARE OF DOUBTFUL SUCCESS. THERE IS WIDESPREAD DISSATISFACTION WITH PLACEMENT TESTS, TEACHING METHODS, AND THE COURSE SEQUENCE.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Instructional Improvement
Boettcher, Kenneth D. – 1968
American River College (Calif.) devised an experimental program in remedial English intended to better prepare entering freshmen. It was given by open-circuit TV simultaneously to high school seniors and junior college freshmen in the hope that, in subsequent years, there would be fewer inadequately prepared freshmen and that more could enroll…
Descriptors: Broadcast Television, Educational Television, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Teichman, Milton – College Composition and Communication, 1967
An experimental, non-credit program of composition was introduced at Marist College in 1964. A description is given of this one-semester program in which the student writes six papers on topics assigned not by his composition advisor but by his course instructors in the six subjects he is studying that semester. The reasons for adopting this…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, English, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Guthrie, Charles Snow – 1976
A survey of 30 Kentucky high school English department heads known to have phase-elective programs indicated that 40% of the high schools had folklore as an offering; 60% believed that an anthology of Kentucky folklore would be valuable. No teacher reported more than nine hours of college or university folklore course work; most had had none. A…
Descriptors: Anthologies, Doctoral Dissertations, Elective Courses, English Curriculum
Nagengast, Susan – 1975
A survey of 225 parents of high school sophomores in a Minnesota community was undertaken in the fall of 1974 to determine parental attitudes about potentially controversial issues in high school English materials. In one sense, the intent of the survey was to determine "community standards." With the exception of objectionable language, parents…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Thomas, D. Wilcox – 1973
Although grammar has its place in secondary education, teachers have been consistently premature in their zeal to impose order and precision on students' understanding of language through grammar. This paper argues that romance demands and deserves a special place in the language curriculum. Romance encompasses the humanistic aspects of language…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Course Descriptions, Course Objectives, Curriculum Development
Rochester Public Schools, Minn. – 1974
This curriculum guide, one of a series designed for use in kindergarten and the elementary grades, has been compiled with the recognition that the basic ingredients of a language arts program--composition, speaking, listening, literature, and problem solving--are interrelated and constantly complement one another and that this entire process is…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Elementary Education, English Curriculum, Kindergarten
Gebhardt, Richard C. – 1974
This paper offers six strategies for teaching literature to unsophisticated students. Unsophisticated students are defined as adult and other part-time learners, as well as full-time students, who are less academically qualified than students in previous years. Strategy one suggests that teachers directly confront difficult literature and help…
Descriptors: Adult Students, College Students, English Curriculum, Higher Education
Arnold, Roslyn M., Ed. – 1974
This volume on reading and teaching the novel contains six articles: "Close Reading: The Novel in the Senior School" by S. E. Lee discusses the advantages of rereading and analytical reading in high school; "Teaching 'The Great Gatsby'" by David Mallick discusses the difficulties of teaching this novel and provides a lesson plan; "The Operation of…
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Instruction, Lesson Plans, Novels
Memphis City School System, TN. – 1972
This guide for the teaching of English is offered on three levels for each grade, seven through twelve. The levels are basic (for pupils needing much practical and individual help), standard (for the majority of pupils), and advanced (for bright or gifted pupils). The guide includes teaching suggestions for composition, grammar, literature,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, English Curriculum, Grammar, Junior High Schools