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Rice, Jeff – College English, 2006
What should college English be? This author contends that college English should be the intersection of the various areas of discourse that shape thought and produce knowledge. It should be the study of the mixing and remixing of connections: those connections that move from popular culture to the university, from geography to politics, from…
Descriptors: Internet, College English, Connected Discourse, Networks
Langer, Judith A. – 1992
The current national focus on critical thinking is unnecessarily narrow in its scope, and this mitigates against essential changes being made in the thinking and reasoning activities experienced by students. Two shortcomings, however, restrict the possibilities for change: the first results from taking a generic (versus discipline-based) view of…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Thinking, Higher Education, Language Arts
Chapman, David W. – 1993
Ideological tensions at the heart of conflicting philosophies concerning the role of English department studies in higher education generate such questions as: "Should courses in literature be required?" and "Is the ultimate goal of the English major a good job or a good karma?" The answers to these questions are important, as…
Descriptors: College English, College Faculty, Curriculum Evaluation, English Departments
Kies, Daniel – 1985
A discussion of what functional linguistic research can offer teachers of composition and English is presented in this paper, which provides examples of different levels of analysis (phonology, morphology, and syntax) for the language of a variety of populations (including traditional freshmen, basic writers, English as a second language (ESL)…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, College English, English Instruction, English (Second Language)
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McDonald, Robert L. – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1994
Provides an edited transcript of an extensive interview with compositionist James Berlin. Covers his background, his views on composition theory and practice, and a variety of other topics. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, Educational Trends, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Dobrin, Sidney I. – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1993
Provides an edited transcript of an extensive interview with compositionist Gary A. Olson. Covers his background, his views on composition theory and practice, and a variety of other topics. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, Educational Trends, English Instruction, Higher Education
Sparrow, W. Keats – 1980
A course in technical writing has justification for appearing in a college English department curriculum if course content as it is currently taught is somewhat modified. In general, business or technical writing has been primarily a study of a wide variety of letter and report writing forms. To be taught as a liberal arts course, a technical…
Descriptors: College English, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Course Objectives
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Cooper, Marilyn M. – College English, 1986
Assesses the benefits and limitations of writing as a cognitive process. Discusses the cognitive process model of writing, then proposes an ecological model of writing, where a fundamental tenet is that writing is an activity through which a person is continually engaged with a variety of socially constituted systems. (EL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College English, Educational Theories, Models
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Gray, W. Russell – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1984
Explores the linkages between Thomas Hardy's poem "The Darkling Thrush" and the thrush scene in George Orwell's novel "1984." Suggests a variety of enrichment projects for students that deal with aspects of these two works. (RBW)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Authors, College English, Community Control
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Moxley, Joseph M. – Composition Studies/Freshman English News, 1993
Questions the role of argumentation in the college composition classroom. Studies the responses of a variety of students to three sample arguments that address the same topic. Shows that most students can correctly rank arguments, suggesting that students have a tacit knowledge of argument prior to instruction. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
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Williams, Harriet – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1985
Outlines an introductory literature course wherein students learn to apply Jakobsen's schema of the communications process to the analysis of a variety of readings, both as a means of improving their critical reading skills and as a heuristic device for the essays they write on the readings. (FL)
Descriptors: College English, Course Content, Critical Reading, Educational Theories
Woodman, Leonora – 1981
Although the acts of reading literature and writing are closely linked, literature study and composition instruction remain distinct pursuits within college English departments. Style seems to be an interest that unifies the two pursuits. The most common view of style equates it with acceptable rhetorical and grammatical conventions. A second view…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Reading, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
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Whittier, Gayle – Clearing House, 1995
Suggests that, despite the expanding variety of the university population, despite diversity and challenges to the literary canon, writing assignments continue to be uninspired and outdated. Describes an "Alternative Responses to Literature" course whose aim was to open up the communal readings, the forms of response to them, and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, College English, Course Descriptions, Higher Education
Flemming, Donald N. – 1980
Modern linguistic theory offers two main contributions to the improvement of writing: readability and appropriateness. Readability can be developed by improving the correctness of forms used and achieved by carrying out an error analysis on the student's writing to provide insights into errors and clause structure. Linguists have determined that…
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Linguistic Theory, Structural Grammar
McDonald, James C. – 1990
The freshman research paper is the most institutionalized writing assignment in the academy, with the possible exception of the dissertation, and the research paper in general (of which the dissertation may be a species) is the most institutionalized genre of student writing, at least in the humanities. First, the research paper is the most…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Thinking, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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