This article reports the findings of 141 student questionnaires and interviews with six teachers to investigate whether first-year students’ preferences align with their teachers’ written commentary in composition classes in an urban community college. Results show that students appreciate and rely on teacher commentary and prefer it to be clear, detailed, and supportive. They indicated that commentary that combines the message with a positive phrase works best. Teachers, on the other hand, were not aware of their students’ needs and preferences, and expressed self-doubt and frustration about their students’ reception of written commentary
Many first-year writing students represent writing assignments as distinct moments or “discreet unit...
This dissertation examines a widely practiced but often under-valued and under-examined component of...
Teaching has been described as a rhetorical art (Grant-Davie & Shapiro, 1987; Lindemann, 1983), a ve...
This article reports the findings of 141 student questionnaires and interviews with six teachers to ...
College teachers who make use of student surveys evaluating instruction frequently invite written co...
We teachers believe the written responses we put on our students\u27 papers are as clear, concise, a...
For teachers of freshman English composition, the most time-consuming aspect of teaching is respondi...
Poster presentation given at the Department of Writing Studies' 2018 Spring Research Showcase.Resear...
Much research on teacher written feedback has focused on the teacher\u27s role in giving the written...
In order to include more writing assignments in large classrooms, some instructors have been utilizi...
This study sought to answer a number of questions. First, how do teachers respond to “successful” an...
This study examines effects of teachers' written comments on students' writing, specifically the nu...
Jane Mathison-Fife and Peggy O\u27Neill, along with Nancy Summers, have decried the lack of student ...
Under specific conditions, writing students effectively use teacher commentary when revising current...
The purpose of this study was to investigate what happens when successful and less successful writer...
Many first-year writing students represent writing assignments as distinct moments or “discreet unit...
This dissertation examines a widely practiced but often under-valued and under-examined component of...
Teaching has been described as a rhetorical art (Grant-Davie & Shapiro, 1987; Lindemann, 1983), a ve...
This article reports the findings of 141 student questionnaires and interviews with six teachers to ...
College teachers who make use of student surveys evaluating instruction frequently invite written co...
We teachers believe the written responses we put on our students\u27 papers are as clear, concise, a...
For teachers of freshman English composition, the most time-consuming aspect of teaching is respondi...
Poster presentation given at the Department of Writing Studies' 2018 Spring Research Showcase.Resear...
Much research on teacher written feedback has focused on the teacher\u27s role in giving the written...
In order to include more writing assignments in large classrooms, some instructors have been utilizi...
This study sought to answer a number of questions. First, how do teachers respond to “successful” an...
This study examines effects of teachers' written comments on students' writing, specifically the nu...
Jane Mathison-Fife and Peggy O\u27Neill, along with Nancy Summers, have decried the lack of student ...
Under specific conditions, writing students effectively use teacher commentary when revising current...
The purpose of this study was to investigate what happens when successful and less successful writer...
Many first-year writing students represent writing assignments as distinct moments or “discreet unit...
This dissertation examines a widely practiced but often under-valued and under-examined component of...
Teaching has been described as a rhetorical art (Grant-Davie & Shapiro, 1987; Lindemann, 1983), a ve...