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Guill, J. Michael – American Biology Teacher, 2006
Students benefit in several important ways when a substantive writing assignment is included in a general biology course. Properly designed and implemented, written assignments can enhance mastery of basic information, as well as prompt students to exercise and develop the fundamental skills of planning, research, synthesis, composition, and…
Descriptors: Biology, Introductory Courses, Critical Thinking, Student Attitudes
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Rethlefsen, Ann Lyle – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2006
In this article, the author describes some of the teaching methods she uses to teach how different American Indian groups lived in different regions of the North American continent. Her lessons include a number of projects: (1) Practicing symbolic writing; (2) Creating a personal timeline; (3) Studying winter counts and creating a personalized…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, North Americans, Tribes, American Indians
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Blue, Tim – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2006
This article describes a combination of a research essay and a creative writing assignment that encourages rigorous academic research while allowing students to get "outside the box" of traditional academic research papers. This assignment has five steps. The first two steps offer the chance to introduce academic research along with summary and…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Creative Writing, Research Papers (Students), Research Skills
Reiss, Donna – 1995
The letter format, whether on paper or on computers, fosters student collaboration and a virtual community. Letters have real audiences, even when those audiences are fictional, as in epistolary novels and imaginative writing assignments. Most adult, non-traditional students (such as those at Tidewater Community College in Virginia) know that…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail, Higher Education
Smith, Thomas J. – 1994
The use of reflective SEED and I-Search papers in a higher education classroom at North Carolina's Ramseur College has allowed both undergraduate and graduate education students to reflect on their knowledge and experiences, gain meaning from these higher educational experiences, and make connections between their learning and the "real…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Education Courses, Educational Objectives, Group Activities
Johnson, J. Paul – 1992
According to a recent article by Richard Fulkerson, there is some consensus among those who teach writing about what makes writing good. Apparently, a growing number of writing instructors' aims constitute what Fulkerson calls "rhetorical axiology." Rhetorical axiology is a belief system in which teachers value highly "overall…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cooperation, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education
Duckart, Tracy D. – 1995
For many students, grammar represents a baffling set of capricious rules wielded by "sadistic" English teachers for the sole purpose of making their lives miserable. To combat this misconception and to dispel the mystery and empower students with the ability to use the conventions of standard written English, a series of student…
Descriptors: Class Activities, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Freshman Composition
Heilker, Paul – 1996
Calling for a radical reexamination of the traditional foundation of composition instruction--the thesis/support form, this book argues that the essay, with its informality, conversational tone, meditative mood, and integration of form and content, is better suited to developmental, epistemological, ideological, and feminist rhetorical…
Descriptors: Authors, Class Activities, Essays, Higher Education
Peery, Rebecca – 1996
A study determined the effect of shared writing activities on reading comprehension. The subjects, 40 second- and third-grade students from a suburban school in Mercer County, West Virginia, completed the Reading Comprehension Subtest of the Comprehension Test of Basic Skills (CTBS) for grade 2 as a pretest. A control group of 20 students were…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Grade 3, Primary Education, Reading Comprehension
Kelton, Saul – 1997
The goal of teaching philosophy is to develop philosophically literate students and to ensure that students develop philosophical literacy by design and not by chance. Perhaps the best method for teaching philosophy to beginning students is the public model, in which the practice of defending positions in the public arena forces students to become…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Course Objectives, Essay Tests, Evaluation Methods
Magee, Bronagh E. – 1993
Use of group story writing in second language classes is discussed, and specific instructional techniques are outlined. In this activity, students sit in a circle and each begins to write a story. The story beginning is passed to the next student, who adds a portion and passes the story on. This pattern continues until stories are completed and…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Cooperative Learning, Creativity
Jamieson, Sandra – 1996
The contact zones in teaching writing are connected in multiple ways. A principal concern is how students learn to write for the disciplines, but the focus is the relationship between composition specialists and their colleagues throughout the disciplines. In the early days of writing across the curriculum (WAC), writing was seen primarily as a…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Higher Education, Instructional Development, Instructional Improvement
Weeden, Scott R. – 1996
According to author David Roochnik, the "tragedy of logos" refers to the condition of having a "logos" (meaning a view of the rational structure of the world) and colliding with its limits and limitations. The tragedy of logos arises when some event or experience shows that things are otherwise, because tragedy entails the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Networks
Tichenor, Stuart – 1995
The technical writing teacher discovers two things about his/her students: they do not like to write and they do not like to read. They are not in the class because they are motivated, but because they must be there as part of a technical or vocational degree. One of the most common complaints about the class is, "I don't need to know how to…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Instructional Innovation
Dursky, Janice – 1993
This paper focuses on ways to include collaborative learning experiences in reading/writing courses as a method of addressing the demands for improving the communication skills of college students. It includes suggestions drawn from methods used in a college developmental reading class (which can, however, be modified for other types of classes),…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Communication Skills, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education
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