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Sims, Brenda R. – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1993
Discusses research on ethics and technical communication and examines specific methods that writers may use to manipulate language and to present information unethically. Suggests questions designed to teach students how to analyze situations that may involve such manipulation and misrepresentation. Concludes with two case studies illustrating…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Ethical Instruction, Ethics, Higher Education
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Brandt, Deborah – Written Communication, 1986
Examines the relationship among writer, context, and text (1) by exploring the notion of context-independence as it pertains to writers and texts, and (2) by placing the issue of context and composition within a wider framework of context and language use. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Educational Theories, Language Usage
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Guthrie, John T. – Reading Teacher, 1984
Notes research showing that narration and opinion writing are two different crafts and that children differentiate between the two when they write. (FL)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Emotional Response, Expository Writing, Language Usage
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Gray-Rosendale, Laura – Journal of Basic Writing, 1996
Traces scholarly constructions of basic writers' identities. Asks what those students who are labeled basic writers are accomplishing in their speech and writing. Offers a speculative model for analyzing basic writing student discourse. Uses that model to examine the language used in a basic writing classroom. Reviews the implications of such work…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classroom Communication, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities
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Stotsky, Sandra – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Suggests that nonfictive writing typically employs a vocabulary different from that used in works of fiction. Characterizes the vocabulary of essays, asserts that students are usually not given enough assistance in acquiring such vocabulary, and offers steps for giving students help in acquiring the vocabulary of essays. (RL)
Descriptors: College English, Expository Writing, Language Usage, Literary Styles
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Johanyak, Michael F. – Computers and Composition, 1997
Claims that participants in computer-mediated "chat" (CMC) produce a kind of hybrid text. Stresses the importance of investigating the individual texts and writing practices of each participant in CMC studies to better understand what occurs when language users bring individual cognitive, social, and contextual factors with them to a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Mediated Communication, Discourse Analysis, Electronic Text
Kolln, Martha – 1984
A conscious understanding of the grammar system can have value for student writers. Unfortunately, the positive value of teaching grammar in an instrumental, or functional, way has been overshadowed by the negative and irrelevant data concerning "formal grammar." However, if teachers were to use "rhetorical grammar" and emphasize the importance of…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Language Usage, Rhetoric
Dixon, John; Stratta, Leslie – 1980
To determine staging points reached in written narratives based on the personal experience of four secondary school students, researchers examined (1) the kinds of ordering or reordering that occur as the writer imaginatively recovers the events of the past; (2) whether the writer automatically assumes or takes for granted that a reader is already…
Descriptors: Individual Development, Language Usage, Literature Appreciation, Models
Grunig, James E.; And Others – 1983
Noting that although a great deal of empirical research has been done to investigate the writing rules commonly taught, this paper points out that no one has yet constructed a deep theory of the relationship between cognition and writing that confirms the writing rules and explains how they work. The paper then uses theories and research in the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Epistemology, Language Processing, Language Usage
Schultz, John – 1987
Advancement of students' abilities to cope with the demands of exposition and argument is noted when they are encouraged to accept mixed diction within a framework of activities that interrelate thinking, speaking, reading, writing, and listening, in the context of the immediate audience of class and teacher. Research indicates that when a weak…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Diction, Higher Education, Language Styles
LeFevre, Karen Burke – 1987
Working from both literary and composition theory, this book argues that American composition theory and pedagogy of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is founded on the Platonic view that invention is a solitary act in which the individual, drawing upon innate knowledge and mental structures, searches for the truth, using introspective self…
Descriptors: Authors, Cognitive Processes, Cooperation, Curriculum Development
Moore, Beatrice S. – 1981
Teacher evaluation of student writing usually focuses on errors or inadequacies of the written product. One method of changing teacher attitudes is to conduct a writing workshop for department chairpersons to show the benefits and share the techniques of making writing an integral part of their particular disciplines. Such a workshop must address…
Descriptors: Administrators, Dialects, Grammar, Instructional Improvement
Bizzell, Patricia – 1984
Basic writers are defined as those whose home dialects are least like standard English. Given that all dialects of English are capable of conveying complex thought, the question facing educators is, Should students be made to learn and work in standard English, or should they be given the opportunity to express themselves in their home dialect?…
Descriptors: Bidialectalism, Civil Rights, College Students, High Risk Students