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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

Audience
Teachers5
Showing 31 to 45 of 247 results
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Rosinski, Paula; Peeples, Tim – Composition Studies, 2012
Following a brief introduction to problem-based learning (PBL) as one type of highly-engaged pedagogy, this article examines how PBL activities in a first-year writing class and an upper-level professional writing and rhetoric class led students to develop rhetorical subjectivities. We conclude that highly engaged pedagogies, like PBL, that…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Teaching Methods, Freshman Composition, Praxis
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Oleksiak, Timothy – Composition Studies, 2012
This article explores the relationship between teacher authority and flaming in asynchronous online communication. Teachers who rely on what I call stabilization and universal applicability--two concepts emerging from a liberal democratic theory--may actually be preventing a full and robust understanding of the complexities of 21st-century…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Democracy, Rhetoric, Ideology
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Knoblauch, A. Abby – Composition Studies, 2012
This article differentiates three primary ways scholars in Composition and Rhetoric talk about embodiment as it relates to knowledge production and writing in the academy: embodied language, embodied knowledge, and embodied rhetoric. While these categories overlap and inform each other, clarifying the definitions themselves is important as there…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Rhetoric, Definitions, Scholarship
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Shepherd, Ryan; Goggin, Peter – Composition Studies, 2012
For many writing faculty, electronic or digital literacies may not play an overtly significant role in their course designs and teaching practices, but these literacies still play a significant role in how students write. Whether or not writing teachers want to accept it, functional computer literacies are an important aspect of teaching writing.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Writing Teachers, Functional Literacy, Literacy
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White-Farnham, Jamie – Composition Studies, 2012
WRT 302: Writing Culture is an upper-level elective in the Department of Writing and Rhetoric at the University of Rhode Island (URI). As part of a group of four 300-level courses, Writing 302 draws many junior and senior majors in Writing and Rhetoric, English, and other majors who are looking to add creativity and experience with design to their…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Perrault, Sarah – Composition Studies, 2012
UWP 011: Popular Science & Technology Writing is a sophomore-level course designed as an introduction to rhetoric of science at UC Davis, a science-focused land-grant university. The course fulfills the general education requirements for written literacy and for topical breadth in arts and humanities. The catalog describes the course as…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Scientific Literacy, Humanities, Reading Ability
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Rice, Jeff – Composition Studies, 2011
Walter Ong tells us that the noetic--the rhetorical characteristics of feeling, sensation, and intuition applied to a given communicative situation or act--stems from the oral tradition. The noetic contrasts with the print legacy of argument in which "teaching something is the same as 'proving' it'" ("Ramus" 156). Ong's sense of the noetic…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Oral Tradition, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Anson, Chris M. – Composition Studies, 2011
This article describes analyses of three contexts (civic, business, and military) in which understandings of intellectual property differ from those taught in the schools. In each of these contexts, it is possible to document specific examples of unattributed material that would be considered to violate most academic plagiarism policies. Yet in…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Intellectual Property, Deception, Writing (Composition)
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Stewart, Thomas J. – Composition Studies, 2011
This article examines Donald M. Murray's ideas about what he considered the essential solitude of all writing and what happens within that solitude. Murray, a pioneer of the process and modern expressivism movements in composition, identified a number of forces that he felt were at work within his mind whenever he wrote; this complicated aloneness…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition), Models
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Van Ittersum, Derek – Composition Studies, 2011
This essay presents a model of reflective use of writing technologies, one that provides a means of more fully exploiting the possibilities of these tools for transforming writing activity. Derived from the work of computer designer Douglas Engelbart, the "bootstrapping" model of reflective use extends current arguments in the field regarding the…
Descriptors: Expertise, Educational Technology, Reflective Teaching, Internet
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Peckham, Rachel – Composition Studies, 2011
This article takes up the "special strangeness" of grading practices in the graduate creative writing workshop, based on the author's research, personal experience, and interviews with the faculty of her doctoral creative writing program. Using a structure of notes, the author attempts to make sense of the way grades are understood by both teacher…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Grade Inflation, Creative Writing, Writing Workshops
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Ching, Kory Lawson – Composition Studies, 2011
The instructor-led peer conference, a lesser-known approach to peer response involving both students and teachers, affords significant opportunities for collaborative learning and apprenticeship in the teaching of composition. This article uses sociocultural theories of learning to examine video-recorded episodes from two instructor-led peer…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Learning Theories, Teacher Role, Apprenticeships
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Fishman, Jenn; Reiff, Mary Jo – Composition Studies, 2011
Since Fall 2004, the Undergraduate Catalog at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville has listed a two-part "Communicating through Writing" (WC) requirement, which includes two first-year composition courses and an upper-division course in one of thirty-five majors. Most students fulfill the former by enrolling in English 101 and 102, a two-semester…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Expository Writing, Research Methodology, Writing Processes
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Ritter, Kelly – Composition Studies, 2011
The feminized labor of composition studies is usually seen as being in service of, or subservient to, literary studies, ignoring composition's disaffective position against other fields, specifically creative writing. Viewing composition studies' complex labor histories in tandem with the meteoric rise of creative writing allows for a new way of…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Women Administrators, College Faculty, Writing Instruction
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Cucciarre, Christine Peters; Morris, Deborah E.; Nickoson, Lee; Owens, Kim Hensley; Sheridan, Mary P. – Composition Studies, 2011
This article focuses on five women's experiences "making it" as rhetoricians with children. Expanding the definition of success Michelle Ballif, Diane Davis and Roxanne Mountford set forth in "Women's Ways of Making It in Rhetoric and Composition," the article offers suggestions for moving toward more family-friendly academic structures, not least…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Consolidated Schools, Females, Organizational Change
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