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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedDyson, Anne Haas – Language Arts, 1989
Examines children's story-writing processes as they develop over a two-year period, from kindergarten through second grade. Observes that children reflect multiple worlds in their writing, including their ongoing social world, the imaginary world of their story, and the wider, experienced world of people, places, and events. (MM)
Descriptors: Beginning Writing, Case Studies, Emergent Literacy, Peer Relationship
Peer reviewedVipond, Dianne – Exercise Exchange, 1989
Describes an activity in which students write guided-imagery scripts that are related to works of literature. (MM)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Prewriting, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedRaymond, Richard C. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1989
Suggests ways to help students move beyond rewriting to revising, including situational analysis and peer evaluation. Provides a worksheet on generating ideas, guidelines for evaluation, questions for peer evaluation, and a sample research article assignment. (MM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Revision (Written Composition), Student Motivation
Peer reviewedHays, Janice N. – Journal of Basic Writing, 1987
Responds to Myra Kogen's article, "The Conventions of Expository Writing" (JBW; v5 n1). Discusses several misunderstandings about models of intellectual development. Argues that developmental schemes are useful when interpreted cautiously, but risky if used to classify a student's intellectual development. (MM)
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Higher Education, Intellectual Development, Models
Peer reviewedFallon, Dianne – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 1995
Describes experiences with adult students showing that teachers can take a dialogic approach to literacy in any classroom setting. Points out that the focus is on talk, generative themes, and written dialog. (SR)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Literacy, Adult Reading Programs, Dialog Journals
Morice, Dave – Teachers & Writers, 1995
Relates a poet's experiences in graduate school, and the poetry he wrote in the 1970s. Discusses methods and techniques for poetry writing in the classroom. Suggests topics for a series of poetry exercises: moebius strip, poetry sights, shadow poems, poetry chair, chopstick quatrains, poetry shirt, poem wrapping the school, word beads, and a haiku…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Creative Writing, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedAllen, Michael – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1994
Describes the use of an electronic bulletin board in a first-year composition class. Explores power relationships and issues of gender, conflict, and authority while focusing on one young man's role on the bulletin board. (SR)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Computer Mediated Communication, Conflict, Freshman Composition
Peer reviewedGarfinkel, Alan – Hispania, 1992
Suggestions are offered for involving advanced Spanish-language students more directly in watching and making later use of videotapes. Steps include preparing students to watch the videos, writing a survey on the video topic, and creating a computerized class newsletter. (LB)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Newsletters, Second Language Learning, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSteffens, Henry – Social Studies Review, 1991
Explains that students in introductory college history courses were assigned to keep journals and write short, informal pieces on reading assignments. Argues that students found themselves thinking about history in new ways. Includes portions of student writings. Concludes that students grew into active learners, who came to appreciate history as…
Descriptors: Higher Education, History Instruction, Introductory Courses, Student Attitudes
Peer reviewedWerkenthin, Karen – English Journal, 1992
Describes the approach used with high school advanced placement English classes to a nature-writing project based on the work of Henry David Thoreau and Annie Dillard. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Instruction, High Schools, Literature Appreciation
Avrich, Jane – Teachers and Writers, 1992
Describes a successful unit of study on poetry in a fifth grade class that ended with students each writing a sonnet as a final project. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Poetry
Peer reviewedLindstrom, Braden – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1993
Describes a semester-long project for a first-year writing class in which students work collaboratively to research an artist as a person, write an essay as a monologue, and present the monologue as a one-person play to the class. (SR)
Descriptors: Artists, Class Activities, Cooperative Learning, English Instruction
Swayne, Renee – Quarterly of the National Writing Project and the Center for the Study of Writing and Literacy, 1994
Describes the use of "idea books" (journals) with third graders as part of their history/social studies instruction. Discusses entries from units on Christopher Columbus and on George Washington. (SR)
Descriptors: Grade 3, History Instruction, Primary Education, Social Studies
Peer reviewedLesesne, Teri S. – ALAN Review, 1991
Describes the "shrinklit," a rhyming summary of a literary work which serves as an alternative to student book reporting. Suggests that shrinklits are enjoyable because they contain relatively sophisticated humor and are easy for secondary students to mimic. Provides examples of shrinklits written by students. (SG)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Class Activities, Essays, High School Students
Peer reviewedWolk, Stephen – Language Arts, 1994
Suggests that one of the greatest outlets for the middle school voices in one particular classroom is the students' immersion into poetry during writing workshops. Describes a classroom environment that encourages children to express themselves in writing, speech, and action each day. Presents numerous examples of students' poetry. (RS)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Classroom Environment, Junior High Schools, Middle Schools


