NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Kinder, Rose Marie – 1990
In presenting courses to students, teachers should acknowledge opposition to their educational choices. Discussions of the bases and possible consequences of choices may--and should--lead students to ask for more freedom and more options. Students understand that teachers must evaluate them, so if teachers offer as much leeway as they can,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Course Objectives, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
Ellis, Carol – 2002
One intention that an instructor had for her new course called "Writing and Healing: Women's Journal Writing" was to make apparent the power of self-written text to transform the writer. She asked her students--women studying women writing their lives and women writing their own lives--to write three pages a day and to focus on change.…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Classroom Communication, Course Objectives, Discourse Communities
Bizzell, Patricia – 1994
Beginning with the premise that writing cannot be separated from the subject written about, composition teachers should address themselves to what their students are learning in the process of writing. Some writing courses introduce students to great books but those books are usually written only by white men. Others open students to multicultural…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College Curriculum, Course Content, Course Objectives
Hicks, Jennifer – 1990
At Massachusetts Bay Community College a course was designed to create a transition from the process-based basic writing course to the traditional required freshman English course. WTG 100 was designed as an inquiry into academic writing, where students would learn about the various discourse conventions and expectations they would encounter as…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Course Content, Course Objectives, Curriculum Development
Bradshaw, Julie; Hinton, Leone – Online Submission, 2004
This paper analyses and evaluates the use of an asynchronous online discussion list introduced to an established distance education print based course on recreational drug use and abuse. This discussion list was established in order to be able to meet a course objective of challenging assumptions and attitudes about drug use, which was difficult…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Education Courses, Course Objectives, Distance Education