ABSTRACT: To become successful professionals, accounting students must be able to write effectively. Yet, as faculty, we recognize that many of our students need to improve the quality of their writing. At the same time, we often struggle to find sufficient time to cover course content, much less to devote time and energy to address students' writing competencies. In this teaching note, we describe a writing framework that is a manageable tool for integrating writing activities into courses. The framework incorporates peer review along with features, such as repetition, that prior research suggests lead to writing improvements. The framework provides added benefits by allowing students to review others' work (a typical accounting task), engaging them in critical thinking activities, and exposing them to more course content knowledge. Using a sample of 155 students, the results support our contention that our framework improves students' written communication.
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1 August 2009
Research Article|
August 01 2009
Using Peer‐Reviewed Writing in the Accounting Curriculum: A Teaching Note
Michele Matherly, Associate Professor;
Michele Matherly, Associate Professor
Xavier University.
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Laurie Burney, Associate Professor
Laurie Burney, Associate Professor
Mississippi State University.
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Online ISSN: 1558-7983
Print ISSN: 0739-3172
American Accounting Association
2009
Issues in Accounting Education (2009) 24 (3): 393–413.
Citation
Michele Matherly, Laurie Burney; Using Peer‐Reviewed Writing in the Accounting Curriculum: A Teaching Note. Issues in Accounting Education 1 August 2009; 24 (3): 393–413. https://doi.org/10.2308/iace.2009.24.3.393
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