When it was first published,Teaching Students to Writeearned a reputation for doing just that--helping instructors and prospective instructors teach their students how to write effectively. It was-and is-a student-centered, research-based text that combines scholarly theory with practical pedagogy to offer teachers a rich variety of strategies to meet their students' diverse needs. Extensively updated to reflect current research and theoretical scholarship, this revised edition is enhanced by in-depth discussions of collaborative learning and extensive exemplification of experiential or discovery learning. It now includes a full chapter on invention and prewriting heuristics, some important new approaches to teaching revision, a chapter devoted to designing effective assignments, and a chapter on teaching the rhetorical analysis that incorporates whole language pedagogical concepts and current literary theory. This text puts special emphasis on reaching gifted students and nonstandard-dialect speakers and suggests workable techniques for conducting conferences, responding to papers and assessing them fairly. The second edition is even richer in pedagogical apparatus for both writing teachers and their students-including duplicable Student Guidelines, Teaching Strategies sidebars, and chapter-ending questions that encourage discussion and essay-writing.
Abbreviations to Notes and Works Cited PART I. THE STUDENT 1. Teaching the Student PART II. THE WRITING PROCESS 2. Section A Teaching Expository Structure 3. Teaching Prewriting: Invention and Arrangement 4. Teaching the Writing Process 5. Teaching the Rewriting Stage: Structural Revision Section B Teaching Expository Style 6. Teaching Audience and Voice: Help from the Art of Rhetoric 7. Teaching Grammar and Syntax: Help from the Science of Linguistics 8. Stylistic Problems from Nonstandard Dialects Section C Teaching Special Kinds of Expository ElÓ4