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Kelder, Richard – 1986
By engaging in philosophical discussion in their writing, freshman composition students can discover that writing is a mediating tool between the self and the objective world, a means to examine the nature of reality and their thinking processes. Introducing philosophical issues opens the door for the investigation of difficult and abstract topics…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Philosophy
Sheridan, Daniel – 1990
This paper describes a writing assignment given in an introductory literature class at an open-admissions university. In what can be called "the paper of many parts," students write six short pieces in which they do different things with a poem. The paper begins and ends with response statements: an initial one and one at the end that…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Higher Education, Interviews, Literature Appreciation
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
Demerly, Ed – 1986
In order to have freshman composition students review and strengthen their research and documentation skills, they are asked to write 700 to 1,000-word papers synthesizing from sources such as anthologies, journals, government documents, films, biographies, almanacs, and interviews. Three assignments require the students to gather information…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Research Papers (Students)
Soderston, Candace – 1984
Technical writers involved in an institutional writing project need some way of viewing the raw material globally before writing. In this way they can build a framework which can be used for different types of information. This is accomplished through a task analysis meeting that highlights the following preparatory steps prior to writing: (1)…
Descriptors: Group Dynamics, Organizational Communication, Prewriting, Revision (Written Composition)
Stewig, John Warren – 1985
Noting that too many children leave elementary school without developing the ability to use words imaginatively, this paper presents a teaching approach that uses literature to foster invention in children's writing. The approach described is part of a total composition program that structures writing experiences in which children observe…
Descriptors: Child Language, Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Expressive Language
Bertch, Julie – 1985
The Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) movement has gone from valuable but less effective individual efforts to organized, district- and campus-supported projects based on goals for improved student learning in every area and every program. On the college level, WAC takes two forms: a more traditional, formally structured approach from faculty…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Content Area Writing, Curriculum Development, Two Year Colleges
Butler, Andrea; Turbill, Jan – 1984
Integrated approaches to the teaching of reading and writing being used in classrooms in Australia and New Zealand are described in this booklet. The first part of the booklet presents theoretical background on how children learn to talk and the reading and writing processes. The second and third parts of the booklet describe ways of putting…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Integrated Curriculum, Interdisciplinary Approach, Reading Instruction
Rager, John J. – 1986
The writing process depends heavily on linguistic, psycho-perceptual, and psycho-motor abilities. If a student has a significant weakness in one of these major trait clusters, then thinking will suffer and he or she may experience great difficulty in writing. The process of writing can be broken down into four main phases, which can be labeled…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Models, Remedial Instruction, Revision (Written Composition)
Gibbons, Virginia; Leibman, Suzanne – 1984
Four techniques are suggested for tutoring students of English as a second language in writing: taking a "writing history" of the student's experiences, failures, and successes at writing by asking open-ended questions in a non-judgmental way during an informal interview; brainstorming about a given writing topic, with the tutor taking close notes…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Teacher Student Relationship, Teaching Methods
McNeil, Lynda D. – 1988
Disclosing interpretation as a meaning-making process of the active mind to students in all humanities courses, and especially in literature classes, is possible in numerous, phased writing assignments with built-in exercises in recursive and reflective thinking. The exercises are written down in each student's log (journal), a process which…
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Curriculum, Higher Education, Journal Writing
Crowhurst, Marion – 1988
Existing evidence suggests that students do less well in writing argument than they do in writing narrative reports, and the reasons for the poorer performance are complex and interactive. In some ways argument is more cognitively demanding than narrative, but lack of experience in persuasive writing, and the interrelated nature of the writing…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Elementary Secondary Education, Narration, Persuasive Discourse
Dixon, John; Stratta, Leslie – 1984
There are several distinct reasons for writing as a participant-observer. In general, the choice lies among four broad kinds of writing that differ according to role, purpose, and audience. Diary writing can record and clarify for the student what went on, possibly with a privileged reader in mind who will have a sympathetic understanding. The log…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Independent Study, Personal Writing, Secondary Education
Markle, Sandra – Instructor, 1983
This science column includes background information, discussion questions, science activities, writing activities, and a bibliography on a different topic each month. The titles of the five installments included in this compilation are: (1) "Chameleons and Other Quick-Change Artists"; (2) "Niagara Falls and Other Super…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education, Elementary School Science, Learning Activities
Henson, Leigh – 1982
Intended for use with students in lower division technical writing courses, this list of over 800 suggested composition subjects is drawn from surveys of technical writing teachers as well as from teachers of science and technology. The suggested subjects pertain to 16 types of papers commonly presented in textbooks and articles dealing with…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research Reports, School Surveys, Teaching Guides
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