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Cosgrove, Cornelius – 1992
A study examined whether composition specialists can counterbalance the potential privileging of the assessment perspective, or of self-appointed interpreters of that perspective, through the study of assessment discourse as text. Fourteen assessment texts were examined, most of them journal articles and most of them featuring the common…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Statistical Inference, Student Evaluation
Gefvert, Constance J. – 1982
In his rhetorical theory, James Kinneavy distinguishes between "aim" and "mode," but his modes do not represent kinds of reality; instead they represent more specific aims on a lower level of abstraction. Although Kinneavy's classification has been useful in the classroom, seeing the modes as specific aims yields even more…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Theories, Essays, Higher Education
Hindman, Jane E. – 1994
To better facilitate students' learning how to write with authority, instructors need to look more carefully at what it is they do when they teach composition courses. They must look critically at what they accept as "natural" or "true" about good writing practices. A training session for the graders of the Freshmen Placement…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Student Evaluation
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Myers, Greg – Applied Linguistics, 1989
Study of the pragmatics of politeness conventionally draws on conversational data, but can be extended to some genres of written text. A framework is described that analyzes politeness strategies in terms of impositions (claims and denials of claims) and reveals some stylistic features in scientific papers and in popularizations. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Styles
Bizzell, Patricia – 1986
The two current approaches to teaching academic discourse are conventional and collaborative; in practice, they overlap because both are based on a "conversational model" of learning to write in college. Taxonomists and collaborationists disagree on the relative emphasis that should be placed on the various pedagogical methods:…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Connected Discourse, Cooperation, Discourse Analysis
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Stotsky, Sandra – College Composition and Communication, 1983
Offers a framework for analyzing lexical cohesion in academic discourse based on a previous model for analysis of conversational and literary discourse. Discusses the implications of this new framework for teaching expository reading/writing and for research. (HTH)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Expository Writing
Knoblauch, C. H.; Brannon, Lil – 1984
Following an introduction by James Britton, this book discusses the attitudes and values giving rise to effective writing instruction. The seven chapters examine the following topics: (1) achieving a philosophical perspective on composing through awareness of how writers actually work; (2) assumptions underlying classical rhetoric; (3) writing as…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Intellectual History, Learning Theories
Miller, Susan – 1982
Teachers read student papers with both eager and anxious expectancy about discourse they have caused but not written. Whatever the teachers may have said about what they will look for as they read, they still measure each paper against their ideas about appropriate performances in each of the categories of textual analysis. They are not reacting…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Reading Processes
Chandrasegaran, A. – 1993
This paper argues that unsatisfactory argumentative and expository texts generated by college students represent a simplification of complex discourse structures. It asserts that the usual explanations for poor student performance, such as illogical thinking, lack of academic commitment, and poor mastery of grammar, are unsatisfactory. The paper…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College Students, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries
Mortensen, Peter – 1987
When writing is taught through conferences between a student and teacher, the authority of the teacher profoundly influences what students think and say about writing. Also, as students learn to deal with their teacher's authority, they develop strategies for talking about writing tasks in voices that are authentically their own. An examination of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Personal Autonomy
Newmann, Fred M. – 1986
Social studies assessment for the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) should focus on students' oral and written discourse on social topics. Discourse is language produced by the student with the intention of providing a narrative, argument, explanation, or analysis. The assessment of discourse is important because: emphasis on…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Educational Assessment, Educational Testing, Elementary Secondary Education
Keech, Catharine Lucas – 1982
In examining why performance scores on writing tests so often fail to improve in neat positive intervals for individuals and groups, testers have sought the answer in differences in test conditions on progressive retestings. Two other sources of performance variation are possible: the U-shaped learning curve or phenomenon of apparent regression…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Cohesion (Written Composition), Difficulty Level, Discourse Analysis
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Miller, Susan – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1984
Examines the experience of reading student writing by holding it against current views of reading from literary theory and composition studies. Describes this experience as a concentrated effort at once to read and not to "read" the student writing. (MS)
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audience Awareness, Discourse Analysis, English Instruction