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Handforth, Rachel; Taylor, Carol A. – Gender and Education, 2016
This article emerged as the product of a collaboration between two individuals at different stages of our academic careers, one a beginning researcher and the other a senior academic. Written as an experimental "bricolage", the article weaves together two main threads to chart our engagements with feminist research and with writing…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Feminism, Praxis, Collaborative Writing
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Stivers, Jan; Cramer, Sharon F. – Journal of Faculty Development, 2013
Despite the challenges of heavy workloads, family responsibilities, and differences in work styles, two senior faculty members used collaboration to reenergize their scholarly efforts; the results include increased research and publication (three joint articles and a book) as well as a new enjoyment of the research and writing process. This…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Writing for Publication, Guidelines, Academic Discourse
Rocco, Tonette S.; Hatcher, Tim; Creswell, John W. – Jossey-Bass, An Imprint of Wiley, 2011
"The Handbook of Scholarly Writing and Publishing" is a groundbreaking resource that offers emerging and experienced scholars from all disciplines a comprehensive review of the essential elements needed to craft scholarly papers and other writing suitable for submission to academic journals. The authors discuss the components of different types of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Writing for Publication, Book Reviews, Writing Skills
Yong Mei Fung – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 2010
As part of a research study on collaborative writing, this paper discusses defining and facilitating features that occur during face-to-face collaboration, based on the literature and research. The defining features are mutual interaction, negotiations, conflict, and shared expertise. Facilitating features include affective factors, use of L1,…
Descriptors: Conflict, Collaborative Writing, Language Usage, Language Acquisition
Tardy, Christine M. – English Teaching Forum, 2010
As students move from writing personal essays to writing formal academic texts in English, they face several new challenges. Writing tasks in higher education often require students to draw upon outside sources and to adopt the styles and genres of academic discourse. They must conduct research, summarize and paraphrase, cite sources, adopt genre…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Writing Instruction, Academic Discourse, Encyclopedias
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Ruecker, Todd – Composition Studies, 2011
English 1311: Expository English Composition is the first semester course in a two-semester first-year composition (FYC) sequence. Both ENG 1311 and its second-semester counterpart, ENG 1312, are required for all students unless they have transfer credit covering this requirement or place out of one or both of the courses via the College-Level…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Higher Education
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Schim, Stephanie Myers; Briller, Sherylyn; Thurston, Celia; Meert, Kathleen – Death Studies, 2007
In death-averse American society, the field of thanatology is often socially and academically isolating. The purpose of this article is to describe the experiences of a group of death scholars and share insights gained as members of an interdisciplinary team. They discuss the ways in which they have created a special "safe" space for death study…
Descriptors: Work Environment, Death, Scholarship, Academic Discourse