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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
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Medvedeva, Maria; Recuber, Timothy – College Teaching, 2016
An essay's motive or research problem consists of the rhetorical moves illuminating why that essay matters--what puzzling elements of a primary source it resolves, which contradictions in the data it explains, or what gaps in the literature it fills. This article invites college instructors to dedicate some of their classroom time to teaching…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, College English, Writing Skills, Writing (Composition)
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Chick, Nancy L.; Nisselson, Rachel; Claiborne, Lily; Edmonds, Jeff; Yant, Anna Catesby; Hearn, Andrea Bradley – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2016
The authors discuss a scholarship of teaching and learning project conducted in three first-year writing seminars of different disciplines. The goal was to introduce students to academic inquiry, which they define as the process of critically analyzing class materials, engaging with the larger body of knowledge on a topic, using evidence to…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Criticism, Writing Workshops, Writing Instruction
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Adler-Kassner, Linda; Roen, Duane – Academe, 2012
Research, teaching, and service--the traditional tripartite division of academic work. The kind of institution and the nature of institutional priorities have some bearing on the arrangement of the first two parts, but service always comes last. From the authors' shared perspective as faculty members and administrators in writing studies, though,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Faculty
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Coady, Christopher; Nelson, Kathleen – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2013
Although there is a clear body of evidence supporting the idea that undergraduate students benefit from participation in original research projects, many units of study--particularly in the creative arts and humanities--have been slow to embrace curriculum renewal along these lines. In this paper, we detail a pragmatic approach to meeting this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Undergraduate Students, Undergraduate Study
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Catterall, Janice; Ross, Pauline; Aitchison, Claire; Bergin, Shelley – Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 2011
The current higher education climate seems to be demanding increasing levels of written output from doctoral researchers during candidature. In this context this study employed an online questionnaire, individual interviews and focus group discussions to collect information on the challenges and successes of doctoral writing. It was found that…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Writing for Publication, Focus Groups, Writing Instruction
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Kearns, Rosalie Morales – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Creative writing workshops typically feature a gag rule and emphasize purported flaws. This structure limits students' meaningful engagement with each other's work; positions the author as inherently flawed; and positions other participants as authority figures, passing judgment without articulating their aesthetic standards. I propose an…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Creative Writing, Writing Workshops, Writing Instruction
Jukes, Ian – Writing Notebook: Visions for Learning, 1993
Presents an interview with Niki and Alan McCurry, who discuss the uses and features of the "Alaska Writing Program," a computer software product that can be used in writing classrooms. Explains its origins, shows how it centers on the writing process, and discusses ways of using the program in the classroom. (HB)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Computers, English Instruction, Higher Education
Mayo, Wendell, Jr. – 1990
A study was conducted to make students aware of the issue of self, society, and authority in their writing, and to discover which aspects of the writing workshop method are productive and which are not relative to student perceptions of their authority as writers. A university-required junior level composition course was designed in which students…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, College Juniors, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
Phillips, Suzanne M. – 1996
A writing workshop was developed for undergraduate psychology courses to address problems related to writing skills development. Specific problems addressed by the workshop include the lack of attention paid by students to comments written on their papers during grading, students' tendency to look for easy solutions to their writing weaknesses,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Curriculum Enrichment, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Brown, Julie; Brown, Robert – 1991
The "writing workshop" approach to teaching creative writing, virtually unchallenged throughout the United States, has recently come under fire. Two schools of thought, while agreeing that the traditional workshop needs a thorough overhaul, differ in approaches to that overhaul. One approach, using the theories of Harold Bloom, argues…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Literature Appreciation
Garfield, Jo – 1990
At Southerland Institute (a pseudonym), in spite of the teacher's strong statements in favor of encouraging students to think for themselves and to work together, the writing program Southerland's teachers outline is formulaic with its required modes, prescribed five-paragraph-like essay form, and bell-curve grading practices. A new rhetorician…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Nightingale, Peggy – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1991
Cites results of studies showing that students' language skills are not deteriorating. Suggests using class time for writing workshops to give students feedback on work-in-progress. Considers that difficulty with concepts and subject content may come across as poor writing. Notes that additional writing can be helpful without being graded. (DK)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Research, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Phillips, Jerry – 1990
A new "remedial" or marginal group has emerged in teacher certification, known in Texas as Alternate Certification. In the Texas program, university graduates earn a certificate upon completion of a rigid state-mandated program. A group of 25 graduate students and their teacher set out to examine their notions of literacy, its…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Literacy
Bishop, Wendy – 1990
After a brief review of the history of college writing instruction, this book examines the undergraduate creative writing workshop. The book attempts to reweave the currently separate strands of college-level creative writing instruction and composition instruction in the belief that developments in these perhaps artificially separated areas can…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, English Curriculum, Higher Education
Morton, Johnnye L. – 1991
A study examined whether modeling desired teaching strategies would produce future teachers who could confidently go into a new classroom and set up a writing program. Four weeks of class time in a teacher education class at Northeastern University in Oklahoma were used to teach the writing process through the use of a writer's workshop. Results…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Student Teachers, Teacher Effectiveness
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