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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 166 to 180 of 515 results
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Ceccarelli, Leah – Written Communication, 2004
This article undertakes a close rhetorical reading of the speeches given by Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Francis Collins, and Craig Venter on June 26, 2000, at the White House ceremony announcing the completion of the Human Genome Project. Specifically, it looks at the metaphors used by each speaker to describe the activity of genomic scientists.…
Descriptors: Genetics, Figurative Language, Rhetoric
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Li, Alan L. – Written Communication, 2004
Chinese characters are often viewed as a premodern or incomplete form of literacy. Authors with an autonomous view of literacy view Chinese as a concrete, homeostatic language inadequate for use in abstract thought and movement toward mass literacy. Even those with an ideological model framework propose that the intrinsic nature of Chinese…
Descriptors: Written Language, Romanization, Chinese, Literacy
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Varghese, Susheela Abraham; Abraham, Sunita Anne – Written Communication, 2004
Drawing on existing work on popularizations, this investigation of book-length scholarly essays by practicing scientists across three disciplines reveals a hybrid genre that is neither popularization nor research report. The study utilizes both textual analysis and personal commentary from the writer-researchers to achieve a three-way comparison…
Descriptors: Essays, Audiences, Research Reports, Literary Genres
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Soffer, Oren – Written Communication, 2004
Following the scientific revolution, the modern perception of discourse assumed that text can and should reflect, in a literal way, objective reality as observed in the real world. This perception is radically different from a traditional religious perception of discourse in general and from the Jewish perception in particular. The Jewish…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Jews, Discourse Analysis, Journalism
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Shi, Ling – Written Communication, 2004
This study examines how first language and the type of writing task affect undergraduates' word usage from source readings in their English writing. Of 87 participating university undergraduates, 39 were native English speakers from a 1st-year writing course in a North American university, whereas 48 were 3rd-year Chinese students learning English…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Native Speakers, Transfer of Training, Writing (Composition)
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Brown, Robert – Written Communication, 2004
The personal statement written for graduate school admission has been a genre virtually ignored by rhetoricians but one that deserves attention. Not only a document of pragmatic importance for applicants, the personal statement is an indicator of disciplinary socialization. The discipline studied here is clinical psychology. Combining quantitative…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Graduate Students, Higher Education, College Admission
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Fisher, Maisha T – Written Communication, 2004
In this article, the author builds on McHenry and Heaths study of the "literate" and the "literary" and McHenry's research on "forgotten readers" by examining the often undocumented literacy traditions and practices of men and women of African descent. First, the author traces the legacy of blended traditions of both written and spoken words in…
Descriptors: Poetry, Language Arts, Literacy, African Americans
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Coffin, Caroline – Written Communication, 2004
Historians generally agree that causality is central to historical writing. The fact that many school history students have difficulty handling and expressing causal relations is therefore of concern. That is, whereas historians tend to favor impersonal, abstract structures as providing suitable explanations for historical events and states of…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Historians, History Instruction, Content Area Writing
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Liddicoat, Anthony J. – Written Communication, 2004
This article investigates one aspect of scientific style in French: the use of tenses. It investigates the claims made in the literature that the verb system of scientific French is a temporal. The frequency of tensed finite forms in 10 French language journal articles on biological sciences is examined. The rhetorical function of past and future…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, French, Biological Sciences, Morphemes
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Makalela, Leketi – Written Communication, 2004
This article reports on an empirical study undertaken at the University of the North, South Africa, to test personal classroom observation and anecdotal evidence about the persistent gap between writing and spoken proficiencies among learners of English as a second language. A comparative and contrastive analysis of speech samples in the study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Classroom Observation Techniques, Writing Instruction, Language Proficiency
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Janssen, Anna; Murachver, Tamar – Written Communication, 2004
This study investigates the roles of biological and psychological gender, as well as assigned discussion topic, in the written language use of nonprofessional writers. University students wrote passages on three specific topics-one socioemotional and descriptive, one functional, and one involving political debate. Effects of biological gender were…
Descriptors: Written Language, Psychology, Gender Differences, Language Usage
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Smagorinsky, Peter; Pettis, Victoria; Reed, Patty – Written Communication, 2004
This research analyzed the composing processes of two high school students designing horse ranch plans for a course in equine management and production. The investigation focused on understanding the problems driving the design process, the tools through which the students inscribed and encoded meaning in their compositions, and the integration,…
Descriptors: Horses, High School Students, Academic Achievement, Writing (Composition)
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Smith, Summer – Written Communication, 2003
This study examines the extent to which a teacher's level of expertise in the subject of a technical paper affects the teacher's reading and evaluation of it. Four engineering teachers and four writing teachers were asked to read aloud the same three student papers and to say aloud their thoughts as they read. The engineering teachers read papers…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Writing (Composition), Engineering, Writing Teachers
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Chenoweth, N. Ann; Hayes, John R. – Written Communication, 2003
This study explores the connection between writing and working memory, specifically the role of the subvocal articulatory rehearsal process (or inner voice). The authors asked the 18 participants to type sentences describing 24 multipanel cartoons. In some conditions, the participants were required to repeat a syllable continuously while writing.…
Descriptors: Sentences, Cartoons, Memory, Writing (Composition)
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Fahnestock, Jeanne – Written Communication, 2003
This study investigates the practice of presenting multiple supporting examples in parallel form. The elements of parallelism and its use in argument were first illustrated by Aristotle. Although real texts may depart from the ideal form for presenting multiple examples, rhetorical theory offers a rationale for minimal, parallel presentation. The…
Descriptors: Rhetorical Theory, Teaching Methods, Persuasive Discourse, Writing (Composition)
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