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Birol, Gülnur; Han, Andrea; Welsh, Ashley; Fox, Joanne – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2013
We designed and implemented a first-year seminar in science course at the University of British Columbia to allow students to develop and improve their scientific writing and argumentation skills. To evaluate the efficacy of the course, we examined the progression that students made between the beginning and the end of the course as assessed by…
Descriptors: Student Writing Models, College Science, Writing Skills, Persuasive Discourse
Colley, Binta M.; Bilics, Andrea R.; Lerch, Carol M. – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2012
The ability to think critically is an important trait of all members of society. With today's multinational, multicultural, complex issues, citizens must be able to sift through large amounts of various data to make intelligent decisions. Thinking critically must be a focus of higher education in order to provide the intellectual training for its…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Critical Thinking, Fundamental Concepts, Reflection
Johnston, Jim – Voices from the Middle, 2011
In the summer of 2009, this author devised a Saturday program with an emphasis on writing for publication targeting three students as his nucleus. One of the students, Mariano, was the only one of the three to accept the invitation. This was a strong indication of his passion for writing. Thus, three weeks before school began, the author and…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Reading Skills, Student Writing Models, Writing for Publication
Goodman, Barbara A. – English Journal, 2011
Shakespeare molded language to meet his needs. Can students learn from his example? In this article, the author suggests studying Shakespeare's creative use of functional shift, spelling, and vocabulary to help students develop greater control of their own writing. The author is advocating that teachers approach Shakespeare as descriptive…
Descriptors: Drama, English Literature, Language Usage, Student Writing Models
Sardone, Nancy B. – English Journal, 2012
This article describes the assignments the author created to engage preservice teachers in designing instructional materials that befit today's students to help them overcome hurdles sometimes present when learning classic literature. Secondary and middle school English teachers may find these assignments useful as well so their students, too,…
Descriptors: Instructional Materials, Assignments, Classics (Literature), English Instruction
Hutchins, Holly M.; Bierema, Laura – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2013
Examining media artifacts as a learning method has received little attention in human resource development (HRD) despite it being a predominate form of information and influence in popular culture. As Giroux (2002) opines, media functions as a form of public pedagogy by offering situations and contexts through which viewers can vicariously…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Adult Learning, Human Resources, Popular Culture
Barnard, Ian – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This essay interrogates the concept of "clarity" that has become an imperative of effective student writing. I show that clarity is neither axiomatic nor transparent, and that the clear/unclear binary that informs the identification of clarity as a goal of effective student writing is itself unstable precisely because of the ideological baggage…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Rhetoric, Student Writing Models, Jargon
McDermott, Morna; Shelton, Nancy Rankie; Mogge, Stephen G. – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2012
To address anti-immigration sentiments revealed by preservice educators, the authors conducted a workshop using a "critical-aesthetic praxis." The purpose of the workshop was to create a praxis (Freire, 1970;1998) of critical aesthetics (Carey, 1998) in which preservice teachers engaged in a series of aesthetically grounded experiences…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Immigrants, Praxis, Critical Theory
Bintz, William P. – English Journal, 2012
This article describes an instructional lesson the author developed to help students use parody to read and write original poetry. The author begins this article with an introduction to parody and a rationale for using it as an instructional strategy. Then, he describes materials and procedures he used and he shares samples of student writing. He…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Poetry, Graduate Students, Parody
Moor, Kelly S.; Jensen-Hart, Staci; Hooper, Richard I. – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2012
Concerns about social work students' writing are well documented, but the cost of specialized writing programs leaves budget-stressed programs confronting a problem they may feel they have few means to address. However, a valuable resource is already available: faculty expertise in social work writing. The challenge is helping faculty realize…
Descriptors: Expertise, Social Work, Writing Skills, Writing Strategies
Quesenberry, Le Gene; Phillips, Jamie; Woodburne, Paul; Yang, Chin – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2012
The purpose of this study was to assess whether flagged "values intensive" courses within a public university's general education curriculum impacted on students' abilities to reason ethically. The major research question to be explored was, "what effect does taking a values intensive course have on students' ethical reasoning ability, when…
Descriptors: General Education, Student Attitudes, Ethics, College Students
Chen, Ying-Chih – Teaching Science, 2013
Writing for an audience different from teachers motivates students to translate their existing knowledge into audience-appropriate language, in which students explain, elaborate, and integrate their understanding of science concepts using more than just the technical language of the subject. Several studies also have found that students can…
Descriptors: Student Writing Models, Student Motivation, Persuasive Discourse, Science Activities
Isakovic, Adrienne A.; McNaught, Allan – Open Praxis, 2013
This exploratory study seeks to examine how the use of student-written blogs support student learning through the student perspective. The blogs were introduced to provide support in four distinct areas: as a medium for facilitating learning; as a medium for interactivity; as a medium for metacognitive thought and reflection; and as a learning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Blended Learning, Web 2.0 Technologies, Electronic Publishing
Pemberton, Michael A. – Writing Center Journal, 2010
"The Function of Talk in the Writing Conference: A Study of Tutorial Conversation" is, the author thinks, an excellent example of what a well-designed analytical study of conversational narratives can reveal. People in this field have long made the claim--anecdotally, for the most part--that writing center tutors occupy a liminal space between…
Descriptors: Tutors, Tutoring, Writing (Composition), Conferences (Gatherings)
Sigmar, Lucia S.; Hynes, Geraldine E. – Administrative Issues Journal: Education, Practice, and Research, 2012
This study analyzes the writing performance levels of 352 students to determine the extent to which business students are achieving written communication competency and whether differences exist among the business majors. Although most students met or exceeded expectations in format and content on a common writing task, students were weakest in…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Student Writing Models, Competence, Majors (Students)

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