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Koski, Mary – Educational Leadership, 1993
Change began in Saint Charles (Illinois) School District with a few teachers implementing new ideas in their own classrooms. Organized change began as principals and other administrators encouraged teachers to learn and grow. While teachers were developing process writing and whole-language programs, district embraced systemic change by entrusting…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Integrated Curriculum
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Evans, Karen S. – Language Arts, 1995
Offers one teacher's account of a year of process approach to writing instruction in her fifth-grade class. Focuses on the importance of not getting caught within a narrow vision when reflecting on classroom practice. Notes the crucial role students need to play in instructional decision making. (SR)
Descriptors: Grade 5, Instructional Effectiveness, Intermediate Grades, Process Approach (Writing)
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Swain, Sherry Seale – PTA Today, 1992
This article describes the process approach to writing instruction, examining the literature-based approach to reading and the whole-language learning approach. In whole-language classrooms, reading, writing, listening, and thinking are interwoven. The article offers ways for parents to support such approaches at home and school. (SM)
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Elementary Education, Family Involvement, Literacy
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Dreher, Mariam Jean – Early Child Development and Care, 1990
Early childhood education majors enrolled in a reading methods course completed a questionnaire on teaching writing. In general, the students supported a process approach to teaching writing, believed that such an approach could be easily implemented in a classroom, and intended to use a process approach themselves. (PCB)
Descriptors: Education Majors, Emergent Literacy, Higher Education, Preservice Teacher Education
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Temple, Charles; And Others – Reading Teacher, 1994
Describes the "Global Method" of Celestin Freinet, a French educator whose teaching methods (similar to language experience, writing process approach, and whole language) are used by teachers in Europe. Offers excerpts of Freinet's ideas on democratic pedagogy, having children write their own books, teaching writing, moral civic…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
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Richardson, Paul – Educational Review, 1991
Assesses the debate between the process writing/whole language approach to literacy education and genre-based writing instruction. Explains that the former stresses ownership and voice and the latter identifies and linguistically describes the genres used in school and proposes a curriculum model for teaching writing. (SK)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Language Usage, Literacy Education
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Stasz, Bird B.; And Others – Journal of Reading, 1991
Describes a two-year literacy project: an innovative adult basic skills class designed and orchestrated by the students themselves, where Head Start mothers and college-student volunteer tutors worked together. Attributes the project's enormous success to combining the whole-language approach with oral history and the writing process, resulting in…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Adult Students, Basic Skills
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Stahl, Steven A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1996
This study examined reading instruction and its effects in schools with two different philosophical stances (process and traditional approaches to reading). Observations of six classes, three using traditional and three using process approaches, indicated that there were far more similarities than differences. Differences in school philosophy made…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Basal Reading, Elementary School Students, Grade 1