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Showing 151 to 165 of 515 results
Farmer, Frank – Written Communication, 2005
This article examines the dialectical nature of Mikhail Bakhtin's developmental understanding of language learning. In particular, the author discusses the pedagogically illuminating relationship between literary style and everyday style, especially as the latter emerges from and returns to lived life. Drawing parallels with other related…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Literary Styles, Language Styles, Creative Activities
Williams, Joseph – Written Communication, 2005
Bakhtin claims that students must learn to write lively prose, but they will not until teachers have a grammar of style that links syntax to stylistic qualities such as "lively" and "creative." It is, however, unlikely that such a grammar could be written, because particular rhetorical effects too often depend on context, perceived intention, and…
Descriptors: Teaching Styles, Syntax
Halasek, Kay – Written Communication, 2005
In "Dialogic Origin," Mikhail Bakhtin -- as teacher-researcher and theorist -- presents readers with a remarkable essay on teaching grammar and style to 7th-year students (roughly equivalent to 10th graders in the U.S. educational system). In doing so, Bakhtin employs some of his most notable concepts (among them dialogism and "hero") as informing…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Grammar, Writing Instruction, Language Arts
Bazerman, Charles; Farmer, Frank; Halasek, Kay; Williams, Joseph – Written Communication, 2005
The three authors writing on Bakhtins essay, "Dialogic Origin and Dialogic Pedagogy of Grammar" -- Farmer, Halasek, and Williams -- respond to one another, and Bazerman provides a summative comment in the paragraphs that follow. The responses explore further some of Bakhtins thoughts concerning rhetoric and its relation to stylistics and his use…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Russian, Grammar, Dialogs (Language)
Wolfe, Joanna – Written Communication, 2005
When writers plan a document together, they rely on gestures as well as speech and writing in constructing a common representation of their group document. This case study of a student technical writing group explores how group members used gestures to create a conversational interaction space that they then treated like a physical text that they…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Collaborative Writing, Nonverbal Communication, Group Dynamics
McCarthey, Sarah J.; Garcia, Georgia Earnest – Written Communication, 2005
This study of English language learners, six Mandarin-speaking and five Spanish-speaking elementary students, revealed that students engaged in a variety of writing practices at home and school. A continuum of attitudes, from positive to negative, characterized students' attitudes toward writing in English and their native languages. Students…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Student Attitudes, Family Income, Educational Opportunities
Scott, Tony – Written Communication, 2005
This article presents research from a qualitative study of the way that reflective writing is solicited, taught, composed, and assessed within a state-mandated portfolio curriculum. The research situates reflective texts generated by participating students within the larger goals and bureaucratic processes of the school system. The study finds…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Measures (Individuals), Measurement Techniques
Wilder, Laura – Written Communication, 2005
Fahnestock and Secors "The Rhetoric of Literary Criticism" characterized literary criticism of the 1970s as conservative and self-celebratory. However, although literary theory has since undergone significant change, few rhetorical analyses of recent literary criticism as the preferred genre of a disciplinary discourse community have been…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Discourse Communities, Justice, Literary Criticism
Hull, Glynda A.; Nelson, Mark Evan – Written Communication, 2005
This article reports research that attempts to characterize what is powerful about digital multimodal texts. Building from recent theoretical work on understanding the workings and implications of multimodal communication, the authors call for a continuing empirical investigation into the roles that digital multimodal texts play in real-world…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Story Telling, Computer Assisted Instruction, Multimedia Materials
Witte, Stephen P.; Haas, Christina – Written Communication, 2005
This article traces the historical and conceptual development of what is known as activity theory, from Vygotsky and Luria, to A. N. Leontev, to Engestrm, in order to illustrate what I see as two problems with the activity theoretic approach, especially as manifest in the work of Leontev and Engestrm: what I call the boundary and/or focus problem…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Semiotics, Heuristics
Brandt, Deborah – Written Communication, 2005
This article seeks to explore the influence of the knowledge economy on the status of writing and literacy. It inquires into what happens to writers and their writing when texts serve as the chief commercial products of an organization--when such high-stakes factors as corporate reputation, client base, licensing, competitive advantage, growth,…
Descriptors: Workplace Literacy, Authors, Interviews, Writing Skills
Haswell, Richard H. – Written Communication, 2005
This article documents aspects of the history of support for scholarship by two professional organizations involved with teaching composition at the postsecondary level: the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC). Evidence is found that for the past two decades, the two…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Writing Instruction, Writing (Composition), Postsecondary Education
Fahnestock, Jeanne – Written Communication, 2004
Researchers studying science communication often examine how texts addressed to different audiences contribute to the formation of knowledge on a given issue. This article examines how arguments on scientific issues travel from text to text by considering how certain figures of speech persist from version to version. It uses a specialized genre of…
Descriptors: Researchers, Figurative Language, Audiences, Research Reports
Paul, Danette – Written Communication, 2004
Scientific popularizations are generally considered translations (often dubious ones) of scientific research for a lay audience. This study explores the role popularizations play within scientific discourse, specifically in the development of chaos theory. The methods included a review of the popular and the semipopular books on chaos theory from…
Descriptors: Audiences, Scientific Research, Physics, Scientific and Technical Information
Secor, Marie; Walsh, Lynda – Written Communication, 2004
In 1996, New York University professor of physics Alan Sokal wrote a parody of an academic article he titled "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity." This parody escaped detection by the editors and was published in the journal "Social Text." Sokal outed his own hoax in the academic magazine "Lingua…
Descriptors: Parody, Rhetoric, Scholarship, Postmodernism

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