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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Huiyu Wang; Ying Wei; Mingxin Yao – Written Communication, 2024
Researchers' investment in reader engagement includes the construction of an appealing abstract. While numerous studies have been conducted on abstracts' rhetorical features, scant empirical attention has been paid to negation use in academic writing. The current study seeks to narrow the research gap from a general and diachronic perspective by…
Descriptors: Science Education, Writing (Composition), Documentation, Academic Language
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Jagaiah, Thilagha; Olinghouse, Natalie G.; Kearns, Devin M. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2020
Syntactic complexity has been recognized as an important construct in writing research, and for the past five decades, many syntactic complexity measures (SCMs) have been examined in numerous studies. This systematic review is the first study of its kind to synthesize 36 studies spanning from 1970 to 2019 by identifying and cataloging all SCMs…
Descriptors: Syntax, Difficulty Level, Writing Evaluation, Literary Genres
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Bada, Erdogan; Ulum, Ömer Gökhan – Online Submission, 2018
By its nature, AW [academic writing] represents adversity compared to other types of writing. It owns the characteristics of more notable patterns and language usage compared to other writing styles such as literary works, news, etc. Without discriminating the language used, this kind of writing generally bears similarities across languages due to…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Content Analysis, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Datchuk, Shawn M.; Kubina, Richard M. – Remedial and Special Education, 2013
Students with writing difficulties and learning disabilities struggle with many aspects of the writing process, including use of sentence-level skills. This literature review summarizes results from 19 published articles that used single-case or group-experimental and quasi-experimental designs to investigate effects of intervention on the…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Learning Disabilities
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Vande Kopple, William J. – Written Communication, 2002
This article presents evidence that, from selected spectroscopic articles in the earliest volumes of the Physical Review to other selected spectroscopic articles from the same journal in 1980, a shift in sentence style takes place. This shift is from what M.A.K. Halliday calls the dynamic style (which reflects happenings, processes, and actions)…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Journal Articles, Periodicals, Sentence Structure
Penelope, Julia – 1980
Although the nature of topicalization is complex and cannot be easily separated from considerations of syntactic structure and sentence focus, analysis of language usage has indicated that topicalization is more a stylistic than a syntactic process. Topicalization refers to moving a noun phrase (NP) into the initial position of a sentence.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Literary Devices
Morenberg, Max – 1981
When the literature and the research results on sentence combining are analyzed, they seem to provide an expanded meaning of sentence combining and reasons for its effects on the writing of some students. Gains in syntactic maturity alone do not explain why sentence combining affects positively the writing of some students, nor does the fact that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Paragraph Composition, Sentence Combining, Sentence Structure
Morenberg, Max – 1979
A review of the literature reveals that increased syntactic maturity is developmental growth properly associated with elementary and junior high school students and that measuring this maturity will not prove that an individual writer is skilled or unskilled. Improved style, unlike increased syntactic maturity, is not quantifiable growth, though…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition, Literary Styles, Literature Reviews
Conway, William D. – Technical Writing Teacher, 1981
Offers examples of appropriate and improper use of the passive voice in technical communications and gives suggestions for using these examples in technical writing classrooms. (RL)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Negative Attitudes, Sentence Structure
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Zarnowski, Myra – Language Arts, 1981
Examines structural ties that children use to join their sentences into a coherent paragraph or composition. (HTH)
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Elementary Education, Sentence Structure
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Stewart, M. F. – English Quarterly, 1979
Provides a brief review of sentence combining development and research, and suggests some future directions for the technique. (RL)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, English Instruction, Higher Education, Sentence Combining
Suhor, Charles – 1978
Sentence combining (SC) has proved to be valuable in increasing the syntactic maturity of students. However, teachers have felt uncomfortable with the arhetorical nature of SC. Little research has been done on the relation of cognitive processes and SC. SC might be more useful if account is taken of the fact that syntax is an abode for cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Educational Research, Research Needs
Campbell, B. G. – 1980
Coherence and cohesion are fundamental considerations of the composing process that help to define the global and local components of texuality. Global text coherence centers on those aspects of the familiar rhetorical situation. Coherence operates at the paragraph and essay levels, answering questions about focus, tone, mode, topic, and thesis.…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Flynn, Thomas – 1981
A review of the literature reveals that three writing skills have been of particular interest to writing researchers recently. First, work on planning the rhetorical strategy recognizes three components of the planning process: prewriting, pausing, and reviewing what has been written. Second, research on audience analysis indicates that maturity…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Individual Development, Language Processing, Literature Reviews
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Harris, Muriel – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Discusses the collected research on free modifiers and "minor sentences," or "formal fragments." Asks English teachers for less concentration on initial placement of modifiers, less rigidity concerning fragments, and more practice with punctuating final free modifiers. (RL)
Descriptors: College Students, Error Patterns, Higher Education, Language Usage
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