NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 6 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Sandberg, Kate – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2001
Argues that the college reading and learning discourse community should enlarge its support and perspective by listening to and learning from other academic communities. Explains why college composition is the perfect place to start; examines its history, associations and professional journals; discusses genre theory as an example of composition's…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes, Higher Education
Otte, George – 1992
When composition educators talk about either "theory" or "practice," they are not referring to a monolithic and unified field, but instead to any number of competing, ideologically charged metacommentaries. The "problem with practice" refers to its own socially complex and temporally diffuse nature. Applications of…
Descriptors: Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
Walters, Keith – 1994
Examining two very different contexts, a non-pastoral Quaker meeting and an AIDS hospice, offers insight into the complex nature of writing and literacy in spiritual contexts. Such a program is unapologetically comparative, seeking not the "right" view of spirituality but rather a view of how spirituality is expressed through language.…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Comparative Analysis, Cultural Context, Discourse Communities
Harris, Joseph – 1992
Intellectuals lament the disappearance of community, a nostalgia for the small town that has supposedly given way to the anonymous crowds of the city. Likewise, scholars have talked about "discourse communities" in romantic terms, referring to a place where all share the same values. However, a more urban view of social life, in which…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes
Devitt, Amy J. – 1992
The concept of genre should not be limited to literary genres, but should be expanded to include all types of texts, including those traditionally considered to be nonliterary. Essentially, many things about writing work the way they do because of genre, and a better understanding of genre can give us a better understanding of writing, reading and…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes, Higher Education
Batie, Ralph – 1992
Beliefs about distinct differences between expressive and academic discourse unnecessarily complicate the teaching of writing. A composition pedagogy which fails to attend to the complications arising from the rhetorical aspect of language leads to the promotion of reasoning as separable from context. Reasoning then becomes a skill to be learned…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College English, Critical Thinking, Discourse Communities