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Showing 1 to 15 of 121 results
Dryer, Dylan B. – College Composition and Communication, 2012
While reading a series of undergraduate essay drafts, ten newly appointed graduate teaching assistants consistently projected their own anxieties about academic writing onto the authors of the papers, with two exceptions: the students were imagined neither to have the teachers' compositional agency nor to feel their ambivalence about the academic…
Descriptors: Conferences (Gatherings), Writing (Composition), Teaching Assistants, Undergraduate Students
Sullivan, Patrick; Zhang, Yufeng; Zheng, Fenglan – College Composition and Communication, 2012
This article is a pragmatic, classroom-focused conversation about the teaching of writing among three teachers living in the United States and China, separated by many thousands of miles and many centuries of tradition and culture. Our focus here is on classroom concerns: actual student writing, assignment design, and assessment. We seek to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Writing Instruction, College Instruction, Writing Teachers
Cole, Daniel – College Composition and Communication, 2011
This essay describes my design and implementation of a composition course focused on the Native American rhetorical device of survivance at work in debates on Indian removal and U.S.-Indian relations in general. Using a contact zone approach, I found that the course improved writing and thinking skills by pushing students out of their ideological…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, American Indians, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
Marinara, Martha; Alexander, Jonathan; Banks, William P.; Blackmon, Samantha – College Composition and Communication, 2009
The article describes and analyzes the exclusion of LGBT content in composition courses by reporting on a study of how queerness is (and is not) incorporated into first-year writing courses. The authors critically examine the presence or absence of LGBT issues in first-year composition readers; offer analyses of how some first-year readers handle…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Textbooks, Homosexuality, Gender Differences
Jordan, Jay – College Composition and Communication, 2009
As English spreads as an international language, it evolves through diverse users' writing and speaking. However, traditional views of ESL users focus on their distance from fairly static notions of English-language competence. This research uses a grounded theory approach to describe a range of competencies that emerge in ESL users' interactions…
Descriptors: English, Language Role, Official Languages, Grounded Theory
Powell, Pegeen Reichert – College Composition and Communication, 2009
In this article, the author offers a brief overview of retention scholarship and argues that there are several reasons composition studies professionals should pay attention to this area of research. She then considers how the problem of retention reframes and qualifies the issue of access to higher education, an issue that is central to the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, School Holding Power, Teacher Student Relationship, Human Capital
Wardle, Elizabeth – College Composition and Communication, 2009
The goal of teaching students to write for the university assumes that in first-year composition students can be taught ways of writing (genre and genre knowledge) that they can then transfer to the writing they do in other courses across the university. This goal and its underlying assumption are problematic for a number of reasons illustrated…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Writing (Composition), Educational Objectives
Nowacek, Rebecca S. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This essay explores the challenges facing students and teachers in the interdisciplinary classroom. Based on observations of a team-taught interdisciplinary class and drawing on cultural historical activity theory, I argue that the psychological double binds that result from the clash of different disciplinary activity systems constitute both the…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Team Teaching, College Freshmen, General Education
Lunsford, Andrea A.; Lunsford, Karen J. – College Composition and Communication, 2008
This essay reports on a study of first-year student writing. Based on a stratified national sample, the study attempts to replicate research conducted twenty-two years ago and to chart the changes that have taken place in student writing since then. The findings suggest that papers are longer, employ different genres, and contain new error…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Writing (Composition), Grammar, Error Patterns
Campbell, Kermit E. – College Composition and Communication, 2007
This article offers a critical perspective on the default mode of freshman composition instruction, that is, its traditionally middle-class and white racial orientation. Although middle-classness and whiteness have been topics of critical interest among compositionists in recent years, perhaps the most effective challenge to this hegemony in…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Language Arts, Writing Instruction, Freshman Composition
Ritter, Kelly – College Composition and Communication, 2005
Using sample student analyses of online paper mill Web sites, student survey responses, and existing scholarship on plagiarism, authorship, and intellectual property, this article examines how the consumerist rhetoric of the online paper mills construes academic writing as a commodity for sale, and why such rhetoric appeals to students in…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Rhetoric, Intellectual Property, Writing (Composition)
Barber-Fendley, Kimber; Hamel, Chris – College Composition and Communication, 2004
We argue against the metaphor of the "level playing field" and its natural coercive power; in so doing, we call for an end to the invisibility that the debate over accommodations has imposed on learning disabilities in the past decade. A literature review of LD in composition shows how this invisibility has manifested itself in our field through…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Freshman Composition, Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), College Freshmen
Sommers, Nancy; Saltz, Laura – College Composition and Communication, 2004
Why do some students prosper as college writers, moving forward with their writing, while others lose interest? In this essay we explore some of the paradoxes of writing development by focusing on the central role the freshman year plays in this development. We argue that students who make the greatest gains as writers throughout college (1)…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Writing (Composition), Academic Discourse, Student Attitudes
Peer reviewedCanagarajah, A. Suresh – College Composition and Communication, 1997
Explores the culture of a summer writing course (at the University of Texas) for first-year ethnic minority students that is designed to help induct them gradually into the academic culture and improve retention rate. Observes and records behavior and discourses of the class's African American students. Focuses on learning strategies displayed in…
Descriptors: Black Students, College Freshmen, Coping, Cultural Context
Peer reviewedNoreen, Robert G. – College Composition and Communication, 1977
Concludes that a combination of a writing sample and an objective test should be used to place students in freshman composition courses. (DD)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, English Departments, Higher Education, State Surveys

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