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Marx, Michael Steven – Computers and Composition, 1989
Describes how using split screens allows students to see writing as a complex and recursive yet coherent process rather than as a linear progression of distinct activities. Suggests that "windows" encourage sustained engagement in prewriting by opening accessible passageways for movement from prewriting and planning to drafting and…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Word Processing, Writing Exercises, Writing Processes
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Dowling, Carolyn – Computers and Composition, 1994
Suggests that, although the benefits of word processing are widely acknowledged, writing is still perceived as a difficult activity. Considers the degree to which particular features of word processing might constitute new and significant impediments to individual writers. Discusses this issue with writers who expressed concerns that their…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Word Processing, Writing Attitudes, Writing Processes
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Hill, Charles A.; And Others – Computers and Composition, 1991
Discusses why recent studies of word processing offer contradicting results about computer-assisted revision. Examines how writers' cognitive processes for revision are affected by word processing. Finds that (1) experienced writers define revision to include more global-level changes, whereas students tend to focus on local-level concerns; and…
Descriptors: Computers, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Word Processing
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Slatin, John; And Others – Computers and Composition, 1990
Argues that Marcia Peoples Halio's "Student Writing: Can the Machine Maim the Message?" (which argues that students using IBM computers wrote better than those using Macintosh computers) is seriously flawed by methodological and interpretive errors. Explains the problems of Halio's article. Notes that the present article grew out of a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Research Methodology, Word Processing
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Youra, Steven – Computers and Composition, 1990
Argues that Marcia Peoples Halio's "Student Writing: Can the Machine Maim the Message?" (which argues that students using IBM computers wrote better than those using Macintosh computers) is flawed by poor experimental design and is filled with questionable logic and evidence. Contends that she overlooks many specific features that make…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Research Methodology, Word Processing
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Kaplan, Nancy; Moulthrop, Stuart – Computers and Composition, 1990
Presents a detailed critique of Marcia Peoples Halio's article "Student Writing: Can the Machine Maim the Message?" (which argues that students using IBM computers wrote better than those using Macintosh computers). Rejects the "Macintosh versus IBM" contention. Explores ways technology influences education and the growing…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Research Methodology, Word Processing
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Halio, Marcia Peoples – Computers and Composition, 1990
Responds to criticisms of "Student Writing: Can the Machine Maim the Message?." Argues that cognitive psychologists, human computer interaction specialists, and teachers have provided "heavy support." Supports the use of "Writer's Workbench," the writing topic selection, self-selection, teaching methods, computer…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Research Methodology, Word Processing
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Arms, Valarie Meliotes – Computers and Composition, 1988
Discusses creativity and the teacher's importance in providing a context that encourages creative thought. Contrasts the author's success in teaching technical writing to college juniors and seniors with her experiences in using the Macintosh personal computer to teach first year composition. Notes that computers alone cannot stimulate creativity.…
Descriptors: Creativity, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Teacher Role
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Hesse, Douglas – Computers and Composition, 1992
Presents a nine-assignment sequence that has students engage three interconnected problems of writing and word processing. (SR)
Descriptors: Computers, Higher Education, Teaching Methods, Word Processing
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Kantrov, Ilene – Computers and Composition, 1991
Considers ways in which writers use word processing packages. Analyzes the benefits and obstacles of such packages. Suggests that ease of revision can be both an advantage and a disadvantage. Observes that the limited ability to view an entire word-processed document inhibits critical reading. Argues that word processing technologies must be…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Computer Software Reviews, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
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Chandler, Daniel – Computers and Composition, 1994
Surveys British academics. Reveals a divide between writers who favor a word processor as their main writing tool and those who favor the pen or pencil. Finds that word processors are both indirect and delayed. Suggests that educators may need to legitimate handwritten drafts or reversion to handwriting for some word-processor users. (RS)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Handwriting, Higher Education, Word Processing
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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
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Sullivan, Patricia – Computers and Composition, 1989
Examines the contexts of human-computer interaction, and argues that understanding word-processing research done in that setting can enrich thinking about the impact of teaching writing with the use of computers. Suggests issues developed in recent word-processing studies that may interest future researchers. (KEH)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Computers, Word Processing
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Etchison, Craig – Computers and Composition, 1989
Examines the effects of word processing on writing quality and the amount of text produced by basic writers. Finds that students using computers wrote more, but that there was no difference in quality between those who used a word processor and those who did not. (MS)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Higher Education, Word Processing, Writing Improvement
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Tuman, Myron – Computers and Composition, 1993
Discusses the impact of word processing on the teaching of college composition at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. Describes seven design principles developed by writing teachers at the university in outlining a solution to the problem of how students can really work together collaboratively over a computer network. (RS)
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Cooperation, Higher Education, Teacher Role
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