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Hardymon, Betsy L. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1991
Examines several pieces of writing (class assignments as well as writing done outside of school) by the author's 10-year-old daughter. Notes the different kinds of learning promoted in them, and maintains that school writing assignments should be as "real" as possible. (SR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Student Writing Models, Writing (Composition), Writing Assignments
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Krest, Margie – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1988
Distinguishes between monitoring and evaluating student writing, discusses the rationale for monitoring, demonstrates monitoring procedures, and summarizes major considerations to remember when monitoring writing. (JAD)
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Student Writing Models
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Kline, Nancy – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1989
Cites essays by Joan Didion, John Berryman, and Martin Luther King in arguing that the essay, no matter how serious, can be considered as a fiction and a playful, exploratory and deeply interesting rhetorical game. Describes how these works were used to teach students that the essay is a living document calling for interaction. (SG)
Descriptors: Essays, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
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Moss, R. Kay – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1989
Questions the required use of over-sized pencils as writing implements in kindergarten. Evaluates eight writing samples written with eight tools of different sizes and shapes. Reports no noticeable differences in the conventionality (form) of the letters, in directionality, or in spelling. (KEH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Handwriting, Kindergarten, Language Arts
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Fox, Roy F. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Reviews briefly how imagery is integral to knowing and thinking, and how perception and reason do indeed reside under the same blanket. Details two college writing assignments that require writers to engage in "imaginal processes" in proportion to their verbal process. (SR)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagery, Imagination, Perception
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Gibson, Michelle – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1992
Defines portfolios in terms of their uses in university writing courses. Summarizes teachers' experiences in implementing portfolios in departments that have not adopted portfolios. Reviews common complaints and questions writing teachers have about portfolios. Describes and gives examples of student portfolios. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Portfolios (Background Materials), Student Writing Models, Writing Evaluation
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Carino, Peter – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Examines the writing assignments and instruction in 30 introductory literature textbooks. Finds three types of writing assignments: the "ever popular" critical paper, the expressive paper, and the literary paper. Presents excerpts of student papers to demonstrate that writing on expressive and literary topics can help students see the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Introductory Courses, Student Writing Models, Textbook Research
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Rankin, Libby – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1990
Suggests that awkwardness in writing (like good writing) is an interactive nexus of writer, text, and reader and is a matter of subjective judgment. Argues that awkwardness in student writing is a positive sign of a writer's grappling with language complexity. Concludes that awkwardness is rhetorically motivated and therefore complex but…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetorical Invention, Student Evaluation, Student Writing Models
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MacCurdy, Marian – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Discusses the dilemmas and the benefits, both academic and personal, involved in the personal essay writing class. Notes that students often pick painful topics to write about, and looks at research in trauma theory and cognitive psychology for information to help students move from a narrative that skims the top of their experience to images that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Personal Narratives, Personal Writing, Student Writing Models
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Quate, Stephanie – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1991
Describes the beginning and growth of "WriteNow," a school publication which provides a forum for all classroom writing (from creative writing to a well-crafted physics essay) by students of all levels (from basic to honors). (SR)
Descriptors: High Schools, Program Descriptions, School Publications, Student Writing Models
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Grow, Gerald – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1987
Argues for using and creating negative examples to teach writing. Includes ideas for the following areas: (1) the worst grammar; (2) terrible leads; (3) the worst possible article; (4) the awful two-page spread; and (5) rules for breaking the rules. (MS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Negative Practice, Student Writing Models
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Yagelski, Robert P. – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1989
Argues that writing students can be their own best critics, if teachers allow them to be. Describes a class in which students were assigned to write and discuss commentaries of their work. Explains that the procedure helps student and teacher alike to identify writing problems. (SG)
Descriptors: Essays, Group Discussion, High Schools, Opinion Papers
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Allen, Michael – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Describes the use of an electronic bulletin board in a first-year composition class. Explores power relationships and issues of gender, conflict, and authority while focusing on one young man's role on the bulletin board. (SR)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Computer Mediated Communication, Conflict, Freshman Composition
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Fox, Dana L.; Vogel, Mark – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Argues that writing teachers must create an organic curriculum with the language of home and community at its core. Suggests that writing teachers help students examine language features, dialects, and language attitudes in their communities. Notes that such student inquiry influences class discussions and can reshape attitudes toward students'…
Descriptors: Dialects, Higher Education, Language Attitudes, Student Attitudes
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Wyandotte, Annette – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1996
Discusses teaching argument using participatory action research (PAR), a recent phrase for the old idea of learning by practice. Describes the use of hypothetical cases that provide a context-rich series of overlapping issues, which involve students as principals, and which are addressed and resolved through reading, analysis of various arguments,…
Descriptors: Case Method (Teaching Technique), Class Activities, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
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