Descriptor
Connected Discourse | 6 |
Paragraph Composition | 6 |
Teaching Methods | 6 |
Writing Skills | 5 |
English (Second Language) | 2 |
Higher Education | 2 |
Paragraphs | 2 |
Secondary Education | 2 |
Writing Instruction | 2 |
Advanced Students | 1 |
Applied Linguistics | 1 |
More ▼ |
Source
English Record | 1 |
Author
Kaplan, Robert B. | 2 |
Fahnestock, Jeanne | 1 |
Parks, Kathleen Danaher | 1 |
Soven, Margot | 1 |
Wason, Peter | 1 |
Williams, Joan | 1 |
Publication Type
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 2 |
Opinion Papers | 2 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 2 |
Reports - Research | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Soven, Margot – 1979
Even at an early age, children are guided by their intuitions as they write. Intuitions are the culmination of perceptions that have been internalized and synthesized into patterns. Furthermore, they take time to develop. Consequently, if systematic instruction is to play a part in the formation of intuitions about written language then it must…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Processing, Paragraph Composition
Fahnestock, Jeanne – 1981
Helping students understand coherence in terms of the lexical ties and semantic relations possible between clauses and sentences formalizes an area of writing instruction that has been somewhat vague before and makes the process of creating a coherent paragraph less mysterious. Many students do not have the intuitive knowledge base for absorbing…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), College English, Connected Discourse
Parks, Kathleen Danaher – 1977
"Muddiness" in student writing can be eliminated, and students can learn to write with clarity, through the employment of a 1-3-3-3-1 pattern: one opening sentence, three paragraphs of three sentences each, and one closing sentence. To this basic pattern, the concept of key words may be added to help students develop a focus for each piece of…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, English Instruction, Higher Education
Williams, Joan; Wason, Peter – 1977
This paper describes a classroom game designed to help students overcome their fear of writing. Two classes of top- and middle-ability adolescents were divided into pairs to work on a single composition. After the teacher proposed the initial sentence, the partners took turns writing sentences to complete the story. Although the collaborative…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Collaborative Writing, Communication (Thought Transfer), Connected Discourse
Kaplan, Robert B. – English Record, 1971
The process of constructing connected discourse varies just as language structure itself varies from one language to another. Different languages combine thoughts in different ways. For the advanced level student of English as a second language, composition instruction is a critical area and should not be left to the typical freshman composition…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Connected Discourse, English (Second Language), Language Instruction
Kaplan, Robert B. – 1972
This book provides a discussion of rhetoric and its importance in second language learning in general, with specific remarks on problems in teaching English as a second language. Logic (not in the strictest philosophical sense), the basic rhetoric, is evolved out of a culture; it is not universal. Rhetoric is not universal either. Rhetorical…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Connected Discourse, Cultural Differences, Educational Strategies