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Wikborg, Eleanor – 1992
This study investigated the writing habits of seven professionals who regularly use word processing to compose texts at work. The aim of the investigation was to get some idea of the variation to be found in how these writers use word processing to compose longer texts (four pages or more). Subjects noted advantages of word processing, such as the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Employment, Foreign Countries, Word Processing
Forseth, Roger – 1985
To improve the quality of instruction in composition classes at the University of Wisconsin-Superior, a project incorporating the use of word processors was instituted. The project began in the summer session of 1984 with a regular section of beginning English. Although some students experienced difficulty in learning to use the word processors,…
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Higher Education, Microcomputers
Neff, Bonita Dostal – 1988
Computer technology (primarily word processing) enables the student of public relations writing to improve the writing process through increased flexibility in writing, enhanced creativity, increased support of management skills and team work. A new instructional model for computer use in public relations courses at Purdue University Calumet…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation, Public Relations
Dobrin, David N. – 1985
Idea processors are computer programs that can aid the user in creating outlines by allowing the user to move, reorder, renumber, expand upon, or delete entries with a push of a button. The question is whether these programs are useful and should be offered to students. Theoretically, an idea processor prioritizes ideas by placing them in a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Software, Evaluation Criteria, Notetaking
Hult, Christine A. – 1986
In the absence of appropriate instruction, word processing programs in general and stylistic analysis programs in particular can reinforce the unproductive revision strategies of inexperienced student writers. For example, the predilection of inexperienced writers to see text as parts (words) rather than as whole (communication) can be reinforced…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Courseware, Higher Education, Prewriting
Dickinson, Patricia F. – 1992
An instructor of a composition and computers writing course (designed for economically and culturally disadvantaged students) at the State University of New York at Buffalo, developed electronic conferences which combine the capabilities of the computer with the conference approach. The instructor reads students' papers while sitting at the…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Evaluation Methods, Feedback, Higher Education
Kellogg, Ronald T.; Mueller, Suzanne – 1989
A study examined whether word processing amplifies writing performance and whether it restructures the process of writing. Sixteen college students wrote a short essay in a single session on either a word processor or in longhand. The quality of the essays was assessed by trained judges who rated their content and style. Text analysis methods were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Comparative Analysis, Computers, Higher Education
Herrmann, Andrea W.; Herrmann, John – 1986
To illustrate the capabilities of local area networking (LAN) and integrated software programs, this paper reviews current software programs relevant to writing instruction. It is argued that the technology exists for students sitting at one microcomputer to be able to effectively carry out all phases of the writing process from gathering online…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Computer Software, Higher Education, Integrated Activities
Newton, Sandra S. – 1985
The use of word processing in composition classes provides the student with both the opportunity to experience a significant technology and the ability to improve the mechanics and style of their writing. Word processing software has many benefits over "drill and practice" programs, "dialogue" software, and "whole process" programs, since word…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Individualized Instruction, Postsecondary Education, Word Processing
Hansen, Craig; Wilcox, Lance – 1984
Generally, there are three kinds of software that could be used in college writing courses: word processing programs, interactive questionnaires, and text parsers. Although the benefits of these programs are well known, they still pose some problems. Word processors, for example, have been designed to "process" existing text; few have…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Higher Education, Microcomputers
Batschelet, Margaret; Woodson, Linda – 1991
An interim study measured changes in attitudes towards writing and the writing process among basic writing students taught in an electronic classroom (consisting of 25 networked computers). Students in six sections of basic writing which used the electronic classroom for at least 50% of their classroom time, and six control sections which did not…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Networks, Higher Education
Pair, Joyce M. – 1990
This project/study introduced the use of computers in one freshman composition course to determine whether the instructor and the students could accomplish more in a computer-based rather than a traditionally structured course. The assumption was that students would produce better essays on the word-processor and printer, and that the instructor…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Computer Assisted Instruction, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Edwards, Bruce L., Jr. – 1987
Computerized writing (the digitized word) may affect the utility and meaning of reading and writing in coming generations. The digitized word poses no threat to the technology of literacy; it merely entrenches literacy further into Western culture by making certain operations faster, easier, repeatable, etc. One significant, positive by-product of…
Descriptors: Computer Literacy, Computer Uses in Education, Futures (of Society), Higher Education
LeBlanc, Paul – 1989
Composition researchers are poised to offer new answers to the three questions which are at the heart of ideological definition: what exists; what is good; and what is possible? Researchers must consider the impact of computer-assisted composition programs (often called "style checkers") as well as the basic word processor. Style…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software Reviews, English Departments, Higher Education
Herrmann, Andrea W. – 1983
A review of the literature on computers and writing reveals that a dichotomy exists. The great debate that has been taking place in the world of writing instruction mirrors the emerging debate concerning the implementation of computers in education. Applications and research fall into one of two categories: the computer as a teaching instrument of…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computers, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
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