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ACT, Inc., 2009
Since 1959, ACT has collected and reported data on students' academic readiness for college. Because becoming ready for college is a process that occurs throughout elementary and secondary education, measuring academic performance over time in the context of college readiness provides meaningful and compelling information about the college…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Academic Achievement, Algebra
Garcia, Paula – Assessment Update, 2006
Involving graduate teaching assistants (GAs) in the development and implementation of rubrics has many benefits. GA involvement increases their sense of ownership of the rubrics and makes it more likely that they will regard the rubrics in a positive light. GAs have insights about the students whose work will be evaluated by the rubrics; and, as…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Writing (Composition), Beginning Teachers, Teaching Assistants
Rose, Jeanne Marie – Composition Forum, 2005
In this essay, the author suggests that recent developments in English studies and popular culture create an opportune moment for writing teachers to welcome such literature in composition curricula. The author describes how studying stories by John Edgar Wideman enabled first-year composition students to engage political and interpersonal issues…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Literature, English
Ritter, Kelly – College Composition and Communication, 2005
Using sample student analyses of online paper mill Web sites, student survey responses, and existing scholarship on plagiarism, authorship, and intellectual property, this article examines how the consumerist rhetoric of the online paper mills construes academic writing as a commodity for sale, and why such rhetoric appeals to students in…
Descriptors: Student Surveys, Rhetoric, Intellectual Property, Writing (Composition)
Smith, Ronald E. – 1995
The practice of treating students as valuable contributors to the educational process can be traced back at least as far as Socrates. Unfortunately, the predominate pattern of pedagogy in the United States has been one of exclusion. Those instructors who are part of recent movement to help their students enter the academic discourse face the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Community, Cooperative Learning, Freshman Composition
Hayes, John R.; And Others – 1996
A study examined college students' responses to writing tasks that were created by their instructors--writing tasks that constituted an important part of the instructors' course designs and that were presented to students as an integral part of the curriculum. In all, approximately 4800 independent evaluations of 796 essays were analyzed. The…
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, College Freshmen, Freshman Composition, Grading
Fredericksen, Elaine – 1996
Composition teachers and researchers recognize the difficulty young writers, especially females, face as they enter postsecondary education and attempt to learn the language of the academy. Addressing academic audiences "takes confidence and authority, qualities that are often challenged in women because of their historical exclusion from and…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Females, Feminism, Freshman Composition
Mikkelsen, Nina – 1990
An instructor's teaching practices have been influenced by Edward T. Hall's theory in "Beyond Culture," which begins with the notion that "what is known least well and is therefore in the poorest position to be studied is what is closest to oneself," the "unconscious patterns that control us." This wisdom has been…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Fiction, Freshman Composition
Bergland, Bob – 1996
As more and more universities and composition classrooms add computer capabilities, the Internet is becoming an increasingly valuable part of the freshman composition course. The Internet can help students do research, learn and understand different perspectives on a given topic, and open their eyes to the potential of the technology. The most…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Computer Mediated Communication, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Hindman, Jane E.; Robinson, Michael A. – 1994
A video tape of a freshman composition student at the University of Arizona shows the difficulty she has faced in writing classes because of her black dialect. Her instructor points out that the student, after some of the readdings in class, recognizes that she has learned code switching on her own to survive in the educational system; this…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Collaborative Writing, Cultural Differences
Lambdin, Laura – 1994
English instructors working towards diversifying the curriculum, increasing multicultural discussions in the classroom, and encouraging interdisciplinary approaches to awakening consciousness can learn much from their students' interest in popular music. MTV and VH1 have special significance for students and can be easily incorporated into a…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Moran, Michael G. – 1992
Frank Aydelotte is best remembered for developing in the 1930s and 1940s the nation's most innovative and influential honors program, based on the education he received as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. As coordinator of freshman English at Indiana University, Aydelotte attacked the dominant Harvard model of instruction while promoting a method…
Descriptors: Educational History, English Curriculum, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Carney, Paul – 1995
An informal study attempted to determine if audio-taped comments on student papers in freshman composition were as efficient and effective as those actually written on student papers. An instructor began the experiment in the third week of the semester--after he had already returned one batch of papers with written comments on them. Students…
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, Audiotape Recordings, Comparative Analysis, Evaluation Methods
Berg, Allison; Hutnik, Kathy – 1992
As Martha Nussbaum argues, narratives, and especially novels, provide a way of reflecting on what it means to live well morally, and the emotional responses that stories evoke are crucial to the ability to formulate complex moral judgments. An important aspect of the moral nature of literature is the reader's "empathetic imagination," or…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cultural Context, Emotional Response, Freshman Composition
Siebert, Bradley G. – 1993
Kenneth Burke has continued to exert a profound influence on recent theories of composition and rhetoric, specifically on how writing might be taught in the classroom. Two recent composition textbooks, "Process, Form, and Substance: A Rhetoric for Advanced Writers" by Richard Coe and "Writing Is Critical Action" by Tilly…
Descriptors: Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Models, Process Approach (Writing)

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