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Young-Suk Grace Kim – Grantee Submission, 2024
Theoretical models hold that written products (e.g., quality of written composition) are the outcome of the writing process (e.g., translation, transcription, revision) and skills and knowledge on which the writing process draws (e.g., language, transcription, cognitive skills). In the present study, we examined the relations among writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Transcripts (Written Records), Language Usage, Cognitive Processes
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Young-Suk Grace Kim – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2024
Theoretical models hold that written products (e.g., quality of written composition) are the outcome of the writing process (e.g., translation, transcription, revision) and skills and knowledge on which the writing process draws (e.g., language, transcription, cognitive skills). In the present study, we examined the relations among writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Transcripts (Written Records), Language Usage, Cognitive Processes
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Healey, Brett; Gardner, Paul – English in Australia, 2022
Writing involves a complex web of deliberations as writers make specific choices from their repertoire of grammatical resources. However, curriculum and assessment criteria that favour top-down prescriptions of writing marginalise the agency of the writer (Gardner, 2012). Conversely, we posit a bottom-up process that integrates grammar teaching…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Grammar, Writing Processes, Writing Instruction
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Falhasiri, Mohammad – TESL Canada Journal, 2022
For corrective feedback (CF) to contribute to second language (L2) development, some cognitive processes need to be completed. Learners need to notice and comprehend the CF, reflect on and deeply process it, and finally integrate it into their interlanguage (Gass, 1997). Written languaging (WL), which requires learners to explicitly explain to…
Descriptors: Written Language, Feedback (Response), Error Correction, Cognitive Processes
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Mutta, Maarit; Johansson, Marjut – Language Learning Journal, 2018
Verbal protocols are usually used to study cognitive processes involved in various activities, as it is argued that they could make implicit processes of thinking visible and thus reportable. Here, it is proposed that verbalisations can also be approached from another angle, namely as a discourse that contains linguistic markers of writers'…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Cognitive Processes
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Riley, Jacqueline – Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, 2015
This study seeks to explore the cognitive processes involved as bilinguals wrote English and Spanish Facebook status updates. Three phases of data collection were employed: individual interviews, examination of participants' Facebook status updates and a group interview. The findings suggested that regardless of the language in which participants…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Social Networks, Cognitive Processes, Writing Processes
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Williams, Jessica – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Writing is often seen as having a minor role in second language learning. This article explores recent research that suggests that writing can have a facilitative role in language development. In particular, it focuses on three features of writing: (1) its slower pace, and (2) the enduring record that it leaves, both of which can encourage…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Carroll, Joyce Armstrong – English Journal, 1982
Invites a different look at metaphorical abstraction in hopes of raising realizations about language processes, writing processes, and the mental activities involved in both. (RL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Imagery, Language Processing, Language Usage
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Harris, Joseph – College English, 2003
Argues that in teaching students to write as critics, educators need to ask them to change not how they think but how they work--to take on a new sort of intellectual practice. Shows how helping students become more aware of choices they make in revising their texts can help them gain control of using the work of others and gain a reflectiveness…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Criticism, Higher Education, Language Usage
McCutchen, Deborah – 1984
The current focus on high level planning and abstract goals runs the risk of misrepresenting the contributions that cognitive psychology could make to the study of writing if it neglects important linguistic features that distinguish the writing of natural language from other problem solving tasks. An alternative perspective on writing emphasizes…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Skills, Language Usage, Linguistics
Keiser, Samuel E.; DeLuca, Emeric – 1981
Arguing that to consider only the writer's mental processes is an intellectualist view of the composing process that does not present a fully human way of knowing, this paper takes the position that the writer is more than a mind at work and that an account of the writer as knower must include a consideration of the interaction between mind and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Expressive Language, Language Usage, Learning Theories
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Staab, Claire F.; Smith, Karen – English Quarterly, 1986
Discusses three principles germane to the idea that writing is a response to its function, compares school writing with home writing, and suggests specific functions of writing that are frequently used in classrooms. (DF)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Usage, Writing Exercises
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Brandt, Deborah – Written Communication, 1986
Examines the relationship among writer, context, and text (1) by exploring the notion of context-independence as it pertains to writers and texts, and (2) by placing the issue of context and composition within a wider framework of context and language use. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Educational Theories, Language Usage
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Elbow, Peter – College Composition and Communication, 1985
Examines the cognitive processes associated with speech and writing. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Coherence, Epistemology
Micham, Dennis L. – 1983
Meaningful use of language involves intending to have an effect and intending the audience to recognize that aim. In a Freudian modification of this premise, allowing for different levels of intentional awareness, writing can be discussed in terms of how writers intend to affect readers, as well as how aware they are themselves of their intentions…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Language Usage
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