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Barrett, Terry; Hussey, Jennie – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
Doctoral students experience many challenges on the long journey towards completion. Common problems include: synthesising data, working at a conceptual level, clarifying the relationship of the parts of the thesis to the whole, finding a voice and completing a viva successfully. Few authors have addressed the use of visualisations to meet these…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Visualization, Academic Discourse
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Vogler, Jane S.; Schallert, Diane L.; Park, Yangjoo; Song, Kwangok; Chiang, Yueh-hui Vanessa; Jordan, Michelle E.; Lee, SoonAh; Cheng, An-Chih Janne; Lee, Ji-Eun; Park, Jeong-bin; Sanders, Anke J. Z. – Journal of Literacy Research, 2013
Unlike previous research on computer-mediated discussions that has focused analysis on the final conversation as a completed product, this study was focused on the process by which the conversation was created. Using screen-capturing software, the on-screen actions of the nine participants in an online classroom discussion were recorded and…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Literacy, Educational Technology
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Leijten, Marielle; Van Waes, Luuk – Written Communication, 2013
Keystroke logging has become instrumental in identifying writing strategies and understanding cognitive processes. Recent technological advances have refined logging efficiency and analytical outputs. While keystroke logging allows for ecological data collection, it is often difficult to connect the fine grain of logging data to the underlying…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Cognitive Processes, Writing Strategies, Data Collection
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Stapleton, Paul – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2010
Studies on second language (L2) learners writing in English have found that composing is a recursive process requiring planning, formulating and revising. Of particular note among the many studies that have explored the composing processes of L2 writers are two characteristics: 1) They examine the composing processes of writers in real-time while…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Case Studies, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language)
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Orleans, Myron, Ed. – IGI Global, 2014
Online education continues to permeate mainstream teaching techniques in higher education settings. Teaching upper-level classes in an online setting is having a major impact on education as a whole and is fundamentally altering global learning. "Cases on Critical and Qualitative Perspectives in Online Higher Education" offers a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Electronic Learning, Case Studies, Instruction
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Berkenkotter, Carol – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Examines the roots of some disciplinary quarrels (cognitive versus social perspectives and quantitative versus qualitative research methods) that polarize thinking in composition studies. Notes that these quarrels act as obstacles to reading and evaluating research and to training graduate students to conduct multimodal inquiry. (MG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Inquiry
Blau, Sheridan – 1983
To demonstrate how discourse tasks can differ in their cognitive difficulties, students in a graduate course on the teaching of writing participated in a procedure called "invisible writing." The purpose was to show the students that as they took on more cognitively demanding writing tasks, their ability to produce coherent discourse…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students, Higher Education
Hu, Jim – TESL Canada Journal, 2003
This article reports the findings of part of a major study exploring the disciplinary writing processes and perceptions of 15 Chinese graduate students in sciences and engineering at a major Canadian university. The findings relate to the thinking languages of the participants in writing disciplinary assignments. The study reveals that whether an…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Translation, Knowledge Level, Writing Processes
Stein, Victoria – 1989
This study is the fifth in a series of reports from the Reading-to-Write Project, a collaborative study of students' cognitive processes at one critical point of entry into academic performance. This part of the study examines the ways in which college students interpret and negotiate an assignment that calls for reading to write. Subjects, 17…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Audience Awareness, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes