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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 55 results
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Bunn, Michael – College Composition and Communication, 2013
Teaching reading in terms of its connections to writing can motivate students to read and increase the likelihood that they find success in both activities. It can lead students to value reading as an integral aspect of learning to write. It can help students develop their understanding of writerly strategies and techniques. Drawing on qualitative…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Freshman Composition, Writing Instruction, Reading Instruction
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Ritter, Kelly – College Composition and Communication, 2012
I draw upon Eileen Schell's notions of "maternal pedagogy" and an "ethic of care" to analyze archival material from the National Education Association and Educational Testing Service pilot "lay reader" programs of the 1950s and 1960s. I argue that there are striking similarities between the material and social circumstances of these postwar lay…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Educational Testing, Labor, Writing Teachers
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Kerschbaum, Stephanie L. – College Composition and Communication, 2012
In this essay, the author aims to show how a specific focus on interactionally emergent and rhetorically negotiated elements of a communicative situation can enrich the study of difference in composition research. She develops this argument by first identifying two strategies used by writing researchers when forwarding new understandings of…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Higher Education, Rhetoric, Identification
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Alexander, Kara Poe – College Composition and Communication, 2011
This article examines the "master" and "little" cultural narratives students perform in literacy narratives. Results show that students incorporate the literacy-equals-success master narrative most often, yet they also include in little narratives figures such as the hero, victim, and child prodigy. I consider how these findings can improve…
Descriptors: Integrity, Moral Development, Literacy, Teaching Methods
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Wolfe, Joanna – College Composition and Communication, 2010
Contemporary argument increasingly relies on quantitative information and reasoning, yet our profession neglects to view these means of persuasion as central to rhetorical arts. Such omission ironically serves to privilege quantitative arguments as above "mere rhetoric." Changes are needed to our textbooks, writing assignments, and instructor…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Rhetoric, Student Attitudes, Textbooks
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VanderStaay, Steven L.; Faxon, Beverly A.; Meischen, Jack E.; Kolesnikov, Karlene T.; Ruppel, Andrew D. – College Composition and Communication, 2009
In this article we provide a "portrait" of an exemplary writing teacher and the social construction of authority he established with students in two courses. The portrait demonstrates that teacher authority is most essentially a form of professional authority granted by students who affirm the teacher's expertise, self-confidence, and belief in…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Writing Teachers, Teacher Student Relationship, Classroom Environment
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Alexander, Jonathan; Wallace, David – College Composition and Communication, 2009
This article surveys and analyzes nearly fifteen years of scholarship situating itself at the intersection of LGBT/queer studies and composition/rhetoric studies. The authors argue that paying attention to queerness provides unique opportunities to engage with students in challenging discussions about how the most seemingly personal parts of our …
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Rhetorical Theory, Writing Instruction, Social Attitudes
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Kearns, Rosalie Morales – College Composition and Communication, 2009
Creative writing workshops typically feature a gag rule and emphasize purported flaws. This structure limits students' meaningful engagement with each other's work; positions the author as inherently flawed; and positions other participants as authority figures, passing judgment without articulating their aesthetic standards. I propose an…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Creative Writing, Writing Workshops, Writing Instruction
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Ortmeier-Hooper, Christina – College Composition and Communication, 2008
In this essay, I present three case studies of immigrant, first-year students, as they negotiate their identities as second language writers in mainstream composition classrooms. I argue that such terms as "ESL" and "Generation 1.5" are often problematic for students and mask a wide range of student experiences and expectations. (Contains 9 notes.)
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), English (Second Language), Immigrants, Classroom Environment
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Trainor, Jennifer Seibel – College Composition and Communication, 2008
This article explores the emotioned dimensions of racist discourses at an all-white public high school. I argue that students' racist assertions do not always or even often originate in students' racist attitudes or belief. Instead, racist language functions metaphorically, connecting common racist ideas to nonracist feelings, values, beliefs, and…
Descriptors: Ethnography, High Schools, Whites, Racial Bias
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Fishman, Jenn; Lunsford, Andrea; McGregor, Beth; Otuteye, Mark – College Composition and Communication, 2005
This essay reports on the first two years of the Stanford Study of Writing, a five-year longitudinal study aimed at describing as accurately as possible all the kinds of writing students perform during their college years. Based on an early finding about the importance students attach to their out-of-class or self-sponsored writing and subsequent…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Writing (Composition), College Students, Longitudinal Studies
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Brent, Doug – College Composition and Communication, 2005
Academically oriented first-year seminars can be good venues for teaching many of the concepts important to WAC programs, including extended engagement with a research topic and situated writing. A qualitative study of a first-year seminar program at the University of Calgary highlights faculty members' and students' responses.
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, First Year Seminars, Writing Instruction, College Students
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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
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Cook-Sather, Alison – College Composition and Communication, 2003
Explores the educational process in which college sophomores enrolled in a reading and writing course are engaged. Defines this education as translation: a process of preservation, re-vision, and re-rendering of both texts and selves, prompted by particular course assignments, readings, and forums for interaction. Explores how the metaphor of…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Higher Education, Individual Development, Metaphors
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Kopelson, Karen – College Composition and Communication, 2003
Suggests that the marginalized teacher-subject look to contemporary theoretical notions of the "radical resignification" of power as well as to the neglected rhetorical concept of metis, or "cunning," to engage difference more efficaciously, if more sneakily. Argues that one possible praxis for better negotiating student resistance is the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Rhetoric, Student Attitudes, Teacher Student Relationship
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