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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Willis, Meredith Sue – 1993
Suggesting that all phases of writing, including revision, have a great deal in common across age groups and levels of accomplishment, this book presents 196 specific revision exercises, as well as numerous examples from students and from literature. The first part of the book looks at how the ability to revise develops, and at how people can use…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Student Writing Models
Bannister, Linda – 1998
A multicultural literature course at Loyola Marymount University (California) was designed to complicate ideas of culture with gender issues and explored a common but largely unexplored phenomenon--writers who write outside their own personal backgrounds and identities. The course drew from research on "women's way of knowing" and…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Cultural Context, Ethnicity, Fiction
Michaels, Judith Rowe – 1999
Aimed at junior and senior high school teachers and artists in residence, this book urges teachers and students to read and write poetry "as though their lives depended upon it," and to breathe life into classroom writing traditions that are not hands-on or intense. Each chapter is set in the classroom. Poems by students and teacher…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, High School Students, High Schools, Poetry
Beaufort, Anne – 1992
In writing, as in conversation, there are implicit boundaries which separate various modes of communication, and these boundaries cause exclusion, discomfort, and misunderstanding. The existence of these boundaries results in a number of issues, such as the categorization of texts, the differences between writing for English classes and writing in…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Case Studies, Discourse Communities, Discourse Modes
Smith, Michael W. – 1991
To understand literature, it is necessary for a reader to make connections between the text of the literary work and the text of the reader's life. Student autobiographical writing before reading can be used to enhance students' ability to make such connections. Autobiographical writing helps students apply relevant life experience that might not…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
Moore, Jane – 1991
Using math journals on a weekly basis in second- and third-grade classrooms allows students to proceed at their own rate to converge on an understanding of mathematical concepts using their own experiences. Such journals also provide teachers with a unique diagnostic tool. Students' journal entries regarding telling time and the concept of…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Grade 3, Journal Writing, Mathematics Instruction
Rubin, Andee; Bruce, Bertram – 1990
This report examines a variety of ways that the QUILL program for teaching writing was realized in elementary classrooms. In particular, the report looks at the different ways purposeful writing was achieved using MAILBAG, the electronic mail component of QUILL. The analysis shows that innovations in education should be viewed as objects created…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Educational Innovation, Electronic Mail, Elementary Education
Bodmer, Paul – 1990
Combining freshman composition and introduction to literature courses can make students active participants in what they read. In one course, students were instructed to read a literary work for a class. When the class met, the students were to write the name of the assigned story, the author, and anything they wanted to write about the story.…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Free Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Jacobus, Kristina; And Others – 1990
It does not take a computer expert to teach students how to use word processing software to prewrite, write, revise, and edit a professional-looking paper. Just a small amount of expertise allows students to work independently as long as they have access to a computer and the necessary software. The computer also facilitates interactive learning…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Microcomputers
Welch, William H. – 1985
The situational approach is one effective way of presenting students with technical writing assignments that represent "a close approximation of the writing chores which befall the gainfully employed technical writer in industry." The approach includes elements of both simulation and game playing, with some significant differences. The situational…
Descriptors: Content Area Writing, Feedback, Postsecondary Education, Student Evaluation
Halpern, Jeanne W. – 1988
To explain the nature of the response process in journal writing, a simplified version of the theory of speech genres proposed by Mikhail Bakhtin is applied to excerpts from a journal by a college junior. Bakhtin's model of communication is continually interactive and dialogic, as though all voices from the speaker/writer's past are poised at the…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Communication (Thought Transfer), Dialogs (Literary), Higher Education
Rankin, D. S. – 1988
A hands-on strategy for children to use in determining how sentences and paragraphs work is based on the easily understood notion of topic placement in sentences, with reference to the less easily definable terms of coherence and cohesion. Children can learn that the topic is expected at the beginning of the sentence (followed by a comment) and…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Elementary Education, Paragraphs
Jones, Emory D., Ed. – 1987
This booklet contains a capsule history of the Mississippi Junior College Creative Writing Association (MJCCWA), its constitution, and the following selected student manuscripts from the past ten years of the MJCCWA's journal, "The Junior College Writer": (1) "Chronology of a Hunt" (William Patrick Story); (2) "House of…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Higher Education, Student Journals, Student Writing Models
Sulzby, Elizabeth; And Others – 1988
In order to describe the developmental patterns of writing and rereading from writing of kindergarten children across group and individual contexts, a study asked 123 kindergarten children in Palatine, Illinois, to write and reread stories of their own composition over a school year. Children were asked to write in group classroom conditions at…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten, Kindergarten Children, Primary Education
Julian, Faye D. – 1989
Journal writing can be used as a tool for the assessment of teaching while allowing students to have an active and expressive voice in their learning. Journal writing provides an excellent interactive format in which students can more freely express their understanding or lack of understanding of the subject matter. The entries also frequently…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Speech Communication


