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Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1981
Examines the evidence for both the linguistic and rhetorical hypotheses about writers' planning and presents new research on episodic patterns within the writing process itself. Uses protocol analysis to look at the content and nature of writers' plans. (HOD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Planning
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Flower, Linda – College Composition and Communication, 1989
Argues that an integrated vision of the composition process is needed to explain how context cues cognition, which in turn mediates and interprets the particular world that context provides. Explores some ways that observational research might be used to create a well-supported, theoretical understanding of the composition process. (RS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Effect, Higher Education, Research Methodology
Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – 1981
This examination of an evaluation of writing based on process rather than on product argues that one of the primary functions of evaluation as a part of teaching should be to diagnose the writing strategies that underlie a writer's current performance, not just textual problems. The first half of the paper discusses the various ways teachers use…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Evaluation Methods, Prewriting, Writing (Composition)
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Flower, Linda – College English, 1988
Views purpose in writing as a complex web of meaning which writers build and which readers in their own, independently constructive way infer. (JAD)
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Reading Processes, Reading Research, Rhetoric
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Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – College Composition and Communication, 1981
Introduces a theory of the cognitive processes involved in composing in an effort to lay groundwork for more detailed study of thinking processes in writing. (RL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Theories, Models
Hayes, John R.; Flower, Linda – 1981
The act of composing is best described as a set of distinguishable processes that interact. There are four methods for researching these processes: (1) behavior protocols, in which subjects are observed but are not asked to report their thought processes verbally; (2) directed reports, in which subjects are asked to explain how they performed a…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Research Design, Research Methodology, Research Problems
Flower, Linda; And Others – 1989
Based on the premise that planning in writing is a strategic response to both the writing situation and the writer's own knowledge, this paper describes the process adult writers bring to ill-defined, expository tasks, such as writing essays, articles, reports and proposals. The paper also states that in planning, writers draw on (nest and…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Structures, Expository Writing, Writing Difficulties
Higgins, Lorraine; Flower, Linda – 1994
A study described college student writers as they constructed arguments, creating a picture of school-based argument drawn not from ideal models of arguments as envisioned by educators, but from experiences of students themselves. A three-part framework that synthesizes rhetorical perspectives on argument with a social-cognitive view of the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Individual Differences, Persuasive Discourse, Prior Learning
Flower, Linda; Deems, Julia – 1994
Part of an account of a community experiment in Pittsburgh trying to address the contested issue of landlords and tenants through explicitly rhetorical strategies for planning and deliberation, a study focused on conflict and how community collaboration handled difference. Four subjects, landlords and/or tenants who represented a range of…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Conflict, Conflict Resolution, Cooperation
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Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – Written Communication, 1984
Explores the ways in which writers actually use different forms of knowing to create prose. (FL)
Descriptors: Adults, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Knowledge Level
Flower, Linda – 1995
A series of three studies looked at argument across significant contexts to understand what students must learn to "argue" in these contexts and carry out their practices. Study 1 involved 19 pre-college minority writers who were asked to take a "rival hypothesis" stance to their source texts that discuss issues in minority…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Discourse Communities, Higher Education, Inquiry
Carey, L. J.; Flower, Linda – 1989
This report examines the composing processes of expert writers to determine which cognitive processes in expository writing produce an opportunity for a creative response. The first section considers how the ill-defined nature of many writing problems and the cognitive processes experts use to solve these problems interact to provide an…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Expository Writing
Flower, Linda; And Others – 1985
A study examined the role diagnosis plays in the process of revision. Seven student writers and seven expert writers were asked to revise a letter, written from one athletic coach to another discussing why women are reluctant to participate in college sports, for a handout recruiting freshman women. In addition to 26 explicitly "planted…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Persuasive Discourse
Flower, Linda; Higgins, Lorraine – 1991
A study explored the constructive, collaborative process of a group of writers under circumstances which throw light on dimensions of meaning making. The writers were college freshmen receiving "process instruction" and working collaboratively in a writing course. Collaborative planning is a loosely structured planning process in which…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Cooperative Learning, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Flower, Linda – 1989
This paper explores some ways research can be used to create a more integrated theoretical understanding of the interaction between individual cognition and social/cultural context as the motive force in literate acts. Drawing on data from recent research on writing, the paper proposes three principles that inform a more complicated interaction…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Cultural Context, Metacognition
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