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Clark, J. Milton; Haviland, Carol Peterson – Journal of Basic Writing, 1995
Describes an assignment that uses Spanish, Chinese, and French texts in addition to customary English texts, allowing class members to share one another's languages, embrace diversity, and shift privilege. Argues that this move foregrounds oppositional discourse for both students and faculty, creating classrooms in which "right thinking is…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Environment, Cooperation, Higher Education
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Thorne, Sheila – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1993
Argues that prewriting is the most important skill to emphasize and practice extensively in basic writing classes. Describes basic writers as almost universally neglecting prewriting activities. Suggests some guidelines for teaching prewriting effectively. (HB)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Basic Writing, Higher Education, Prewriting
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Gunner, Jeanne – Journal of Basic Writing, 1993
Argues that basic writing teachers must consider the negative effects of their lack of professional definition, particularly their lack of influence within the larger field. Argues that they need a resolution or professional statement to join in reasserting the value of teaching as their primary professional purpose. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Politics of Education, Professional Development
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Greenberg, Karen L. – Journal of Basic Writing, 1993
Discusses political challenges that basic writing programs face and describes strategies for meeting those challenges. Suggests ways to improve basic writing instruction and assessment to empower basic writing students. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Politics of Education
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Berger, Mary Jo – Journal of Basic Writing, 1993
Argues that knowing how higher education is organized can enable basic writing teachers to improve both the status and funding of their programs. Describes features of higher education which organizational analysts consider crucial to the budgeting process. Suggests actions for teachers to revise the reputations and budgets of basic writing…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Financial Support, Higher Education, Institutional Characteristics
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Lamos, Steve – Journal of Basic Writing, 2000
Explores the racialized discourses surrounding basic writing students by using the notion of education as "white property." Shows how students are racialized as "minorities" despite the significant numbers of whites in the program. Argues open-admissions students are discursively coded as non-white. Contends that racialization…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Mainstreaming, Open Enrollment
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McAlexander, Patricia J. – Journal of Basic Writing, 2000
Notes Rei Noguchi's recommendation of integrating grammar instruction with writing instruction and teaching only the most vital terms and the most frequently made errors. Presents a project that provides a review of the grammar lessons, applies many grammar rules specifically to the students' writing, and teaches students the effective use of the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Class Activities, Grammar, Higher Education
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Smoke, Trudy – Journal of Basic Writing, 2001
Presents a farewell piece by a co-editor of this journal. Describes experiences and inspirations over seven years of editing. Considers what the future holds for basic writing. (SG)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Basic Writing, Editors, Futures (of Society)
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Lane, Mary T. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2004
Known as Bitter Bierce, the writer Ambrose Bierce spent years ironically redefining the terms for a host of people, things, actions, and concepts, compiling his redefinitions into the "The Devil's Dictionary." In this article, the author describes how she uses this caustic work as a model for an exercise when her developmental writing class begins…
Descriptors: Definitions, Writing Instruction, Critical Thinking, Creativity
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Fitts, Karen – Journal of General Education, 2005
The author argues that first-year students understand "writing" narrowly and that introductory writing courses should deepen that understanding. The article describes class projects designed to help students see themselves as authors (closely related to "authorities"), create a "community of dissensus," and raise awareness of ideology--their own…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Basic Writing, Writing Instruction, Introductory Courses
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Street, Chris – Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 2005
By drawing upon numerous real-world experiences with reluctant writers, the author illustrates how tapping their interests can lead to improved writing skills and attitudes toward writing. The critical link between identity and writing is emphasized. Though the experiences in this article are drawn from the author's work with basic writers at the…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Improvement, Writing Attitudes, Community Colleges
McBeth, Mark – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2006
Basic writing has played a large role in the history and institutional identity of the City University of New York (CUNY). From the Open Admissions era of Mina Shaughnessy to the present day, "remedial courses" at CUNY have been revised in response to different colleges' missions, curricular initiatives, university policies, and public…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Remedial Instruction, Courses, Public Colleges
Mlynarczyk, Rebecca Williams – Journal of Basic Writing (CUNY), 2006
More than ten years have passed since the widely publicized debate about personal and academic writing that played out in the 1990s between Peter Elbow and David Bartholomae. But the question of the relative merits of these two different types of writing for student writers continues to be an issue of concern for teachers of composition,…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Basic Writing, Academic Discourse, Personal Narratives
Buscemi, Santi V. – 1989
One of the most important advantages to using literature with developmental writing students is that some pieces can be used as illustrations of important rhetorical principles and strategies that the instructor would like students to use in their own writing. The most important reason to use literature has to do with its usefulness as a source of…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Journal Writing, Literature
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Skinner-Linnenberg, Virginia – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1996
Describes a unit of study for a basic writing class that incorporates the writing of a dramatic monologue as a first step in learning to write a narrative essay. Discusses how one student's monologue changed as the unit progressed. (RS)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Narration, Postsecondary Education, Units of Study
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