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Showing 1 to 15 of 97 results Save | Export
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Pamela Takayoshi – College Composition and Communication, 2018
Empirical research on composing processes is virtually absent in our field. What "do" contemporary writers actually do when they compose? I argue that we need a return to research on composing processes, as writers are every day weaving together the social and cognitive through writing. One writer's composing process think-aloud suggests…
Descriptors: Authors, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes, Writing Instruction
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Kristopher M. Lotier – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Around 1986, inventional researchers began to presuppose an externalist philosophy of mind, thereby ushering in the postprocess era. Ecological composition and posthumanism, now understood as postprocess inventional models, present direct pedagogical applications, allowing different objects (e.g., databases, search engines) to qualify as writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Processes, Cognitive Processes
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Ira J. Allen – College Composition and Communication, 2018
This article addresses an impasse between rhetoric and composition practice and theory. On one hand, from the poststructural through the posthuman, our most vigorous theories challenge classical notions of selfhood and agency. On the other hand, from institutional assessment through writing about writing, composition's most vigorous practices…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Writing (Composition), Theory Practice Relationship, Postmodernism
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Chris Mays – College Composition and Communication, 2017
This article uses systems and complexity theory to illustrate key characteristics of writing as a complex system. This illustration reveals how writing works on multiple levels of scale, and adds to the body of theoretical knowledge that can be taught within the discipline of writing studies. In so doing, it shows how a complex systems writing…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Writing Processes
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Chris W. Gallagher – College Composition and Communication, 2016
This article offers a fuller account than we currently have of the complex, uneasy relationship between behaviorism and writing studies in order both to complicate our disciplinary historiography and to encourage writing scholars, teachers, and program administrators to articulate productive and unproductive understandings of writing behaviors.
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Behaviorism, Behavior Patterns
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Heather Lindenman; Martin Camper; Lindsay Dunne Jacoby; Jessica Enoch – College Composition and Communication, 2018
This essay brings to light new evidence about the relationship between revision and reflective writing in the first-year writing classroom. Based on a robust study of student work, we illuminate a variety of complex relationships between the writing knowledge that students articulate in their reflections--including how they narrate their course…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Writing Instruction, Revision (Written Composition), Reflection
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Daniel Barlow – College Composition and Communication, 2016
Drawing from cultural studies and social justice education, this essay argues for the productive potential of racial inquiry in composition scholarship and pedagogy. Ethical imperatives facing rhetoric and composition are also pedagogical opportunities to rethink multiculturalism, politicize student affect, and develop student-centered writing…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Writing Processes, Race, Inquiry
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James P. Purdy – College Composition and Communication, 2014
Through sharing results of an analysis of design language use in several writing studies journals, this article explores why we invoke design in published scholarship. After defining the approach to composing known as design thinking, it then moves to a comparison of design thinking and the writing process and looks at an example application of…
Descriptors: Design, Writing (Composition), Language Usage, Writing Processes
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Cleary, Michelle Navarre – College Composition and Communication, 2013
Adult students add nuance to the understanding of transfer. Overwhelmingly, research on writing transfer assumes students move from grammar to high school to college to work in one uninterrupted progression. Yet, 40 percent of college students are older than twenty-four, and younger students increasingly work while attending college. These…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Adult Students, Writing (Composition), Writing Processes
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Bazerman, Charles – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article presents a written version of the address the author gave at the Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) meeting in San Francisco on March 12, 2009. In this address, the author talks about the wonder of writing and discusses how writing has been considered sacred. Reading and writing are associated with inwardness…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Conference Papers, Writing Skills, Writing Achievement
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Addison, Joanne; McGee, Sharon James – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This article synthesizes and extends data from some of the most prominent and promising large-scale research projects in writing studies while also presenting results from the authors' own research. By juxtaposing these studies, the authors offer a complex understanding of writing practices at the high school and college level. Future directions…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, High Schools, Trend Analysis, Research Projects
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Reid, E. Shelley – College Composition and Communication, 2009
While writing pedagogy instructors assign their students a range of writing tasks, often as central or repeated features of the course, a crucial question has not yet been addressed: does it matter what new teachers write? If pedagogy students are being assigned writing in part to further develop their attitudes and practices related to teaching…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Processes, Writing Teachers, Writing Instruction
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Cicotello, David M. – College Composition and Communication, 1983
An interview with a well-known writer reveals how he writes and how he feels about the way writing is being taught. (FL)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Poetry, Poets, Writing Instruction
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Hilbert, Betsy S. – College Composition and Communication, 1992
Describes the problems faced by community college students as they begin to write an essay. Notes that a writer must trust the sense of the work and be secure that no one will laugh or sneer. Notes also that teachers must not get too confident--diligent students taking notes may still not be able to start an essay. (RS)
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Processes
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Jensen, George H.; DiTiberio, John K. – College Composition and Communication, 1984
Discusses three approaches to allowing individual students to approach the writing process in their own way. Describes one conceptual system for identifying learning styles in the writing classroom, based on Jungian psychological types. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Psychology, Writing Instruction
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