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Wilder, Laura; Wolfe, Joanna – Research in the Teaching of English, 2009
The ethics and efficacy of explicitly teaching disciplinary discourse conventions to undergraduate students has been hotly debated. This quasi-experimental study seeks to contribute to these debates by focusing on the conventional special "topoi" of literary analysis--conventions that previous Writing in the Disciplines (WID) research indicates…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Brown, Bryan A.; Ryoo, Kihyun; Rodriguez, Jamie – International Journal of Science Education, 2010
This study examines the impact of "Disaggregate Instruction" on students' science learning. "Disaggregate Instruction" is the idea that science teaching and learning can be separated into conceptual and discursive components. Using randomly assigned experimental and control groups, 49 fifth-grade students received web-based…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Botany, Scientific Literacy
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
Ybarra, Raul – 1992
College students, when writing essays in writing courses, are generally called upon to show that they have an ability to organize the essay according to an established pattern which includes an introduction, the body of the text, and a conclusion. This pattern of discourse, called "Essayist Literacy," is most favored by mainstream…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Classroom Communication, Classroom Research, Discourse Modes
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Harris, Debra; Susman, Susan D. – Journal of Legal Education, 1999
Describes the planning, implementation, and results of an experiment at Brooklyn Law School (New York) to teach legal writing skills by a simulation activity which integrates client interviewing skills with the process of composing the client-advice letter. Experience with this approach over three years is recounted. (DB)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Law Schools
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Newkirk, Thomas – Rhetoric Review, 1991
Discusses Barrett Wendell's theory of discourse, including a critique of his definitions and an assessment of his discourse scheme. Challenges the image of Wendell as a technocrat who never rose above a consideration of style to examine more significant rhetorical issues. (MG)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Rhetorical Criticism
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Berger, Linda L. – Journal of Legal Education, 1999
Reviews research on the "new rhetoric" and written composition, applying these principles to legal discourse writing in the law school curriculum. Notes that the new rhetoric posits that writing is a process of constructing thought and describes selected teaching practices within the reader-writer loop, including reading and writing…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, Higher Education, Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions)
McCormack, Robin – 2002
This text tries to explain what students need to learn to read and write in tertiary academic settings in Australia and to suggest some ways of teaching them. An introduction maps out what this text contains and summarizes the main features of the approach used to teach adults how to read and write academic discourse. The next section describes…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Adult Education, Adult Students, Developed Nations