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Warnock, John – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1998
Presents examples of writing to show that glory provides a better pretext for writing teachers to think about the motives for writing than those that are set forth in textbooks. Notes that these examples are of ordinary glory, glory as it appears in the writing of students and teachers and judges in writing workshops. (RS)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Usage, Student Writing Models, Writing Attitudes
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Gorrell, Nancy – English Journal, 2000
Argues that any curriculum of peace must have at its core the teaching (not preaching) of empathy. Recommends ecphrastic poetry (poetic response to works of art) as a teaching tool for empathy, and discusses how the author uses one particular poem written in response to a World War II photograph to stimulate student writing response and…
Descriptors: Empathy, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Peace
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Daiute, Colette – Language Arts, 1998
Argues that children's points of view shape knowledge in the classroom and are central to the development of children's writing and learning. Finds points of view by referring to examples of talk and writing; explains how cultural and personal factors come into play; and proposes that points of view become an explicit aspect of instruction,…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Elementary Education, Language Arts, Multicultural Education
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Bergland, Bob – Business Communication Quarterly, 1997
Describes how one teacher of a business writing course uses a car recall notice to address business writing principles of purpose, readers, information, organization, and style in relation to a specific example; and then has students revise it into the type of letter they would like to receive as car owners. Includes two examples of such…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Higher Education, Student Writing Models
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Arnold, Jane – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Describes how a weekly focused journal writing assessment (in which students note any use of language they find interesting, puzzling, amusing, or annoying as well as their response to it) enhances composition students' awareness of how language is used and where. Offers several different advantages of such journal writing. (SR)
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Language Usage
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Bingen, Mark J. – English Journal, 2000
Describes a very successful writing assignment the author uses with his high school English students, in which students write about a letter of the alphabet. Notes that this assignment grants freedom for exploration and voice, the raw material for shaping and can be used to teach everything from the writing of poetry to essays for college…
Descriptors: English Instruction, High Schools, Language Arts, Student Writing Models
Cesmat, Brandon – Teachers & Writers, 2000
Relates how the author teaches elementary and secondary school students to write nexus poems--poems that use a nexus, or bridge, to persuade the reader, or to show the reader the link between where something originates and where people use it. (SR)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Poetry, Student Writing Models
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Weber, Alan – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2000
Notes the relationship between thinking and playfulness. Demonstrates that playful language is a valuable way for adolescents from varied cultural backgrounds to express their thinking. Explores in depth four approaches to writing that encourage linguistic play: choosing playful topics; emphasizing characteristics of linguistic play; selecting…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Humor, Play, Secondary Education
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Brewbaker, James M.; Hyland, Dawnelle J. – ALAN Review, 1999
Discusses the creation of "Becoming One with the Lights," a new kind of poetry anthology for classroom teachers, teenagers, and parents. Considers how poetry by adolescents is an untapped resource for classroom use. Suggests the development of an anthology including young adult poems clustered thematically with published adult poets. (SC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Anthologies, Curriculum Enrichment, Poetry
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Green, Wendy – Higher Education Research and Development, 2007
This paper investigates the approaches taken to essay writing by five Asian international students at an Australian university. Analysis of their in-depth interviews reveals links between their perceptions of learning, their perceptions of essay writing, their motivation for completing the task, and their awareness of the structural conventions of…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Foreign Countries, Foreign Students, Discovery Processes
Miller, Richard E. – 1991
The struggle in the composition community regarding the place of personal narrative in academic writing became particularly acute for a class of undergraduate Critical Writing students undertaking ethnographic work. By mid-semester, students had read and produced a series of texts about culture and found themselves reading and writing about…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Ethnography, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
Manito, Inc., Chambersburg, PA. – 1993
A project was designed to teach writing skills to adult basic education students in prison through the publication of a bimonthly newspaper. The target audience was any inmate in the Franklin County and Adams County Prisons in Pennsylvania; there were no restrictions on admittance to the program or to class size. Participation was voluntary and…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Correctional Education, Creative Writing, Newspapers
Scheurer, Erika – 1991
The collaborative student essay invites exploration of various points of view in multiple voices. The co-written essay brings out language's heteroglossic richness, as shown by the students' collaborative writing experiences in a college writing class. Students worked within the frames of two assignments: (1) an analysis of a text or trend; and…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Essays, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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Davis, James E. – NALLD Journal, 1975
Because students can express orally what they find difficult to communicate on paper, Davis worked out a system employing the language lab as a way of directing verbal communication to written for his writing course. Tape recorders aided students in compositon, organization, revision, and proofreading. (SC)
Descriptors: Essays, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Language Instruction
Montgomery-Fate, Tom – 1990
For one of a series of related assignments, students were to ride a Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) bus or commuter train through the heart of Chicago, to experience the contrasts among the people there, and to write about what was learned. The students were to take an analytical view: What does this collection of images tell the student about the…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Experiential Learning, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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