Descriptor
Source
Computers and Composition | 5 |
Author
Collier, Richard | 1 |
Collins, Terence | 1 |
Dierckins, Tony | 1 |
Harrington, Susanmarie | 1 |
Kowalski, Rosemary | 1 |
Rollins, Angela L. | 1 |
Shermis, Mark D. | 1 |
Slattery, Patrick J. | 1 |
Werier, Clifford | 1 |
Publication Type
Journal Articles | 5 |
Reports - Research | 4 |
Reports - Evaluative | 1 |
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Harrington, Susanmarie; Shermis, Mark D.; Rollins, Angela L. – Computers and Composition, 2000
Considers whether differences might emerge in writing quality when students wrote examinations by hand or on a computer, and whether raters differed in their evaluation of essays written by hand, on a computer, or by hand and then transcribed to typed form before scoring. Finds no statistically significant differences in ratings among the three…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Student Placement, Testing

Collier, Richard; Werier, Clifford – Computers and Composition, 1995
Reviews videotapes of three professional writers composing several essays from start to finish, both by hand and by computer. Discusses similarities and differences among the completed essays. Finds that writing appears to be governed by deep cognitive models that are little influenced by the mode of text production or by the writer's preference…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Word Processing, Writing (Composition)

Dierckins, Tony – Computers and Composition, 1994
Examines argumentative and research papers written by students using Macintoshes in comparison to those written using IBM-compatibles. Finds that differences are not large enough to justify claims that the use of a graphical user interface affects writing skills. Suggests that rapid changes in technology makes the issue moot. (RS)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Interfaces, Computer System Design, Higher Education

Slattery, Patrick J.; Kowalski, Rosemary – Computers and Composition, 1998
Suggests that when first-year students composed on screen, they developed a tendency to expand their writing processes; and that when upper-level students did, they tended to collapse their processes. Suggests that first-year and upper-level students interacting with a computer can learn and adopt different types of writing strategies. (SR)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, College Juniors, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education

Collins, Terence; And Others – Computers and Composition, 1988
Compares course completion rates for students enrolled in sections of a required first-year writing course taught in a microcomputer laboratory/classroom to the course completion rates for pen-and-paper sections of the same course. Finds higher course completion rates for students enrolled in the microcomputer sections. (RS)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Comparative Analysis, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Research