In the newest contribution to our Teaching Writing Series, Laura Valeri describes the rewards of teaching her students to utilize primary research such as oral histories, court transcripts, and testimonies as avenues for inspiring their own fiction, as well as how working with these resources can prompt productive classroom discussions on ownership, truth in fiction, and about the ethical nuances of writing another person’s story
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
Engaging Writers with Multigenre Research Projects by Nancy Mack offers preservice and inservice edu...
Motivating learners is key to success in both high school and college classrooms. For writing instru...
In the newest contribution to our Teaching Writing Series, Laura Valeri describes the rewards of tea...
For the last few decades, teachers and writers of narrative nonfiction have developed instructional ...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a college introductory literature-based writing course. ...
‘One goal [of educational research] must be to produce accounts which deny the reader [the] comfort ...
Alternately referred to as historical role-playing, dramatic improvisation, sociodrama, or first-per...
What is the relationship between research and the writing process and between historical ‘truth’ an...
This ethnography of two college composition courses focuses on four students in order to question th...
From the American Revolution through the Civil War and beyond, fictional characters enrich social st...
Engaging Writers with Multigenre Research Projects by Nancy Mack offers preservice and inservice edu...
While traditionally non-fiction has required the writer to stand outside the work to deliver an obje...
The study examines potential opportunities from reading fictional stories. It is focusing on differe...
The author discusses how writers use real people and events and turn them into fiction/memoir
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
Engaging Writers with Multigenre Research Projects by Nancy Mack offers preservice and inservice edu...
Motivating learners is key to success in both high school and college classrooms. For writing instru...
In the newest contribution to our Teaching Writing Series, Laura Valeri describes the rewards of tea...
For the last few decades, teachers and writers of narrative nonfiction have developed instructional ...
This dissertation is a qualitative study of a college introductory literature-based writing course. ...
‘One goal [of educational research] must be to produce accounts which deny the reader [the] comfort ...
Alternately referred to as historical role-playing, dramatic improvisation, sociodrama, or first-per...
What is the relationship between research and the writing process and between historical ‘truth’ an...
This ethnography of two college composition courses focuses on four students in order to question th...
From the American Revolution through the Civil War and beyond, fictional characters enrich social st...
Engaging Writers with Multigenre Research Projects by Nancy Mack offers preservice and inservice edu...
While traditionally non-fiction has required the writer to stand outside the work to deliver an obje...
The study examines potential opportunities from reading fictional stories. It is focusing on differe...
The author discusses how writers use real people and events and turn them into fiction/memoir
grantor: University of TorontoWriting Fiction as a Form of Inquiry: A Defense and Explora...
Engaging Writers with Multigenre Research Projects by Nancy Mack offers preservice and inservice edu...
Motivating learners is key to success in both high school and college classrooms. For writing instru...