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Writing
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What is Writing?

Writing as an academic subject spans nearly every discipline, making it one of the most broadly studied topics in higher education. Students encounter it in composition courses, education programs, linguistics, communication studies, and professional training contexts. What makes it academically interesting is its dual nature: writing is both an object of study and the primary medium through which knowledge is produced and communicated. This tension between writing as a skill and writing as a subject of critical inquiry gives the topic unusual range, touching on areas as varied as civil rights documentation, Islamic arts such as Arabic calligraphy, language acquisition in ESL classrooms, and phenomena like glossolalia.

The papers archived here reflect a wide spread of approaches. Some take a self-reflective angle, such as skill self-assessments and reflection papers that ask writers to evaluate their own abilities and understanding. Others are evaluative or critical, including critiques of lesson plans and literary analysis of authored works. Applied and professional writing appears too, covering areas like labor relations, municipal budgets, and army regulations. Methodological writing, such as work on in-depth interviewing, treats written communication as integral to research design itself.

A strong essay on writing benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension of the subject — craft, culture, function, or pedagogy — rather than treating all at once. Evidence drawn from specific texts, classroom contexts, or documented practices carries more weight than general claims about the importance of writing. The most common pitfall is circularity: writing about writing well requires demonstrating the very competencies being discussed, so clarity, precise word choice, and organized argument are not just stylistic preferences but core to the essay's credibility.

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Paper Undergraduate
Enlightenment in Europe the Enlightenment
The Enlightenment was a stage in Western philosophy and culture which spanned the eighteenth century, and advocated Reason as the primary source of authority. England anticipated the rest of Europe by decapitating its…
Paper Undergraduate
Sun Also Rises: Annotated Bibliography
Claire Sprague. "The Sun Also Rises: Its 'Clear Financial Basis.'" American Quarterly, Vol. 21, No. 2, Part 1 (Summer, 1969), pp. 259-266.
Paper Undergraduate
Redesignation Process in June, 1998,
In June, 1998, a Proposition was passed in California that significantly changed how English learners (ELs) were given instruction. This reversed two decades of bi-lingual education in the classroom and required all…
Paper High School
Social impacts of the current economic crisis on daily life
The Origin and Impact of the 2008 Economic Crisis
Paper Undergraduate
Theoretical and conceptual knowledge frameworks
The university is unique among institutionalized entities. Distinct from the corporation, the government agency or the religious congregation, the university represents a convergence of ideas, knowledge, imagination,…
Paper Doctorate
Authority the Notion of Obedience
The notion of obedience as it relates to social structure is one that researcher Milgram explored with his famous experiments. These experiments involved participants who think they are giving electric shocks to a…
Paper Masters
Dante's Inferno: the three main categories of sin
Dante's journey into hell presents the three main categories of sin, categorized in accordance with God's desire. Depending on the sins that offend God the least, the nine levels of hell put across more and more…
Paper Doctorate
Garden State Philharmonic Presents: Master
Sitting quietly reading my program for the evening, I notice the first piece will be the Overture of the Bartered Bride. I do remember that this is a piece from a comic opera by Bohemian composer Bedrich Semtana.
Paper Undergraduate
Reflective practice and personal development
The impact of poor living conditions and hygiene continued to be seen in the endemicity of hepatitis B (HBV) in rural and remote communities, although, as noted earlier, HBV was on the decline in urban settings. As many as 73 percent of Aborigines in some remote locations in the Northern Territory have shown evidence of exposure to hepatitis. In the later 1980s, the HBV carrier rate in non-indigenous Territorians was less than 0.1 1 percent, a rate similar to that found in the rest of non-indigenous Australia (CDHHS, 2004). The relative contribution of sexual and needle-sharing transmission to spread of HBV among indigenes is unknown, but the potential is significant, given the very high HBV carrier rates in some communities. Most infection appears to take place perinatally, through transmission from mother to child, or early in life through ?horizontal' transmission; overcrowding directly assists horizontal spread. The commonwealth provided, free from the beginning of 1987, universal vaccination for Aboriginal neonates (Gale, 2007).
Paper Undergraduate
Exegesis of Hebrews 12:1-3
One cannot give an account of Hebrews 12:1-3 without first giving an account of the letter to the Hebrews as a whole. And that cannot be done without first considering the author of the letter.