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Flower, Linda | 14 |
Hayes, John R. | 3 |
Higgins, Lorraine | 1 |
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Flower, Linda – College Composition and Communication, 1984
Flower defends her book "Problem-Solving Strategies for Writing," stating that contrary to Petrosky's interpretation, it does not take an out-moded, logical positivist view of communication theory that treats thought as an object to be transferred while ignoring the constructivist nature of both reading and writing. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Theories, Higher Education, Textbook Preparation

Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1981
Examines the evidence for both the linguistic and rhetorical hypotheses about writers' planning and presents new research on episodic patterns within the writing process itself. Uses protocol analysis to look at the content and nature of writers' plans. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Planning

Flower, Linda – College Composition and Communication, 1989
Argues that an integrated vision of the composition process is needed to explain how context cues cognition, which in turn mediates and interprets the particular world that context provides. Explores some ways that observational research might be used to create a well-supported, theoretical understanding of the composition process. (RS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Effect, Higher Education, Research Methodology

Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Introduces a theory of the cognitive processes involved in composing in an effort to lay groundwork for more detailed study of thinking processes in writing. (RL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Theories, Models
Higgins, Lorraine; Flower, Linda – 1994
A study described college student writers as they constructed arguments, creating a picture of school-based argument drawn not from ideal models of arguments as envisioned by educators, but from experiences of students themselves. A three-part framework that synthesizes rhetorical perspectives on argument with a social-cognitive view of the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Individual Differences, Persuasive Discourse, Prior Learning

Flower, Linda; And Others – College Composition and Communication, 1986
Describes some of the key intellectual actions that underlie the process of revision in writing and that most affect its practice. Provides a working model of revision and discusses diagnosing problems and devising solutions. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Models, Problem Solving
Flower, Linda – 1995
A series of three studies looked at argument across significant contexts to understand what students must learn to "argue" in these contexts and carry out their practices. Study 1 involved 19 pre-college minority writers who were asked to take a "rival hypothesis" stance to their source texts that discuss issues in minority…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Discourse Communities, Higher Education, Inquiry
Flower, Linda – 1985
The task of teaching writing to students in business, engineering, design, computer science, accounting, and other professional areas raises the question of what knowledge the writers call upon to create a rhetorically effective writing plan. Research suggests three plausible answers: their knowledge of schemata, the structure of their topic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Knowledge Level, Metacognition
Flower, Linda; And Others – 1985
A study examined the role diagnosis plays in the process of revision. Seven student writers and seven expert writers were asked to revise a letter, written from one athletic coach to another discussing why women are reluctant to participate in college sports, for a handout recruiting freshman women. In addition to 26 explicitly "planted…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
Flower, Linda – 1989
This study is the 10th in a series of reports from the Reading-to-Write Project, a collaborative study designed to examine the cognitive processes of college freshmen in the act of entering a university-level academic discourse community and to present a model of that transition. Subjects, 17 freshmen (of a total of 72 participating either as…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Critical Reading, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Flower, Linda – 1989
Examining the cognitive processes of reading-to-write as they are embedded in the social context of a college course, this introduction to and overview of the 11-part Reading-to-Write Project study focuses on the study as a whole by sketching the reading-to-write task as one of practical importance, as a window on how students integrate reading…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Cognitive Processes, Critical Reading, Cultural Context
Flower, Linda – 1989
Reflecting new development in the field of rhetoric and composition, this textbook's third edition incorporates major changes which propose to turn theory into practical advice. These additions in the third edition draw on a new theoretical understanding of how writers operate within a discourse community, on a new research-based view of the…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Modes, Freshman Composition, Higher Education

Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – College Composition and Communication, 1980
Provides a model of the rhetorical problem, based on the study of writing as a problem-solving cognitive process; describes three major differences between good and poor writers revealed by a protocol analysis study. (DD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Educational Research, High Achievement
Flower, Linda – 1987
Second in the series "Reading-to-Write: Exploring a Cognitive and Social Process," this report looks at the different ways students represent reading-to-write tasks to themselves, analyzes the resulting divergence in their writing goals and strategies, and recommends teaching task representation as an interpretive process that continues…
Descriptors: College English, Content Area Writing, Expository Writing, Higher Education