NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 14 results Save | Export
Webb, Adam – Online Submission, 2010
While literacy autobiographies, citizenship autobiographies, and family narratives are common first writing assignments in the freshmen composition classroom, they are usually followed by some kind of research proposal, annotated bibliography, or research essay. While there is nothing wrong with literacy and citizenship autobiographies or family…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Writing Assignments, Writing Exercises, Grading
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ingram, Larry C. – Teaching Sociology, 1979
Discusses in cost/benefit terms an approach to teaching the sociology of religion which involves students in writing their religious autobiographies. Considers the nature of the assignment, level of methodological sophistication, difficulties in grading, and justification of the exercise. Concludes that the biographical approach has wide…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Religion
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Cohen, Michael – Exercise Exchange, 1986
Describes a writing exercise useful for students who have already shown some facility in writing about personal experiences and that emphasizes the narrowing of scope and time in a reminiscence and developing it with detail in order to make it more interesting for others. (HTH)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, High Schools, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Welch, Kathleen E. – 1987
Autobiographical writing can, by its nature as expressive discourse, connect to the residual orality and literacy that students possess before they enter college writing classes, because it crosses more easily between the spoken word and the written word than other forms of writing. Adapting the Ong-Havelock orality-literacy thesis to writing…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Higher Education, Literacy, Peer Evaluation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mackie, Jan – English Education, 1975
Techniques for encouraging personal writing in a non-threatening setting are discussed. (JH)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Autobiographies, Communication (Thought Transfer), Creative Writing
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gold, Suzanne – Lifelong Learning: The Adult Years, 1982
A humanities teacher describes various methods of teaching humanities to the elderly: the reading of autobiographies, group writing exercises, and the taping of a script about students' memories of their pasts. The author encourages the teaching of all subjects to the elderly. (CT)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Students, Audiotape Recordings, Autobiographies
Crawford, Wayne – 1996
Students cannot trace all the sources that inform who they are at a given moment, but all of them can explore a wide range of sources that inform their sense of self, clarify their values and their relationships to the world and others in it. Writing about family fits especially well into a sequence in which students narrate a personal experience,…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Family History, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Bloom, Lynn Z. – 1982
Teaching college writing students to edit the autobiographical writing of others has many advantages. Autobiographical materials, such as diaries, letters, or journals, are physically and psychologically accessible for students, and as editors they would be obliged to keep in mind appropriateness of language, tone, and simplicity or complexity of…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Editing, Higher Education, Motivation Techniques
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Magistrale, Tony – Exercise Exchange, 1986
Explains how students can enhance their writing skills and strategies by examining prose models concurrent with their own writing. (HOD)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Higher Education, Language Styles, Literary Styles
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Koch, Janice – Science and Children, 1990
Discussed is an activity that allows preservice teachers to write about their own relationships with science teachers and their experiences with hands-on science activities in an autobiography. Directions, excerpts from past autobiographies, and the implications are included. (KR)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Autobiographies, College Science, Higher Education
Palmer, W. P. – Online Submission, 1995
For the last five years I have asked students of the Diploma of Teaching and Graduate Diploma of Education to write "an individual science autobiography". They were asked to include their recollections of any science lesson that either encouraged them to do science or nearly put them off altogether. They were also asked if the content of the…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Autobiographies, Teacher Attitudes, Preservice Teacher Education
Bishop, Wendy – Technical Writing Teacher, 1989
Describes how technical writing teachers, by using a system of peer critiques, self evaluation, and portfolio grading, can use process activities (student literacy autobiographies, interviews with professional writers, and writing peer groups) to extend the range of activities in technical writing courses. (MM)
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Class Activities, Grading, Higher Education
Crow, Edith – 1983
By following the "steppingstone" or marker theory of dividing one's life into no more than 12 and no less than 8 significant periods, a student in a writing course can develop a brief response for each phase to articulate multiple experiences. Writing teachers can aid students in realizing that important life experiences are the stuff of…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing, Diaries
National Council of Teachers of English, 2006
This document is a compilation of the four issues in the 23rd volume of "Classroom Notes Plus." Each issue of "Classroom Notes Plus" contains descriptions of original, unpublished teaching practices, and of adapted ideas. The August 2005 (v23 n1) issue includes: Sharing Responses to Literature via Exit Slips (Barb Wagner); Letting Learners Teach…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Teaching Methods, Student Reaction, Peer Teaching