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Regional Educational Laboratory Mid-Atlantic, 2020
This guide helps families and caregivers carry out recommended practices described in the What Works Clearinghouse educator's practice guide, "Teaching Elementary School Students to be Effective Writers" (ED533112). It provides three tips for supporting writing skills at home: (1) Help children use the writing process for a variety of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Writing Skills, Family Environment, Evidence Based Practice
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Adams, Catherine – Educational Theory, 2016
In the wake of the digital, some have recommended that we abandon the tedium of teaching handwriting to children in service of promoting "more creative" digital literacies. Others worry that an early diet of keyboard and screen may have deleterious effects on children's social, emotional, and cognitive development, as well as their…
Descriptors: Handwriting, Writing Instruction, Word Processing, Writing Processes
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Hermansson, Carina – Language and Education, 2017
This paper arose out of a shared concern about how to explore young children's ways of becoming-writers. A framework based on the nomad thought of French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari was used to develop the analysis. A situated, relational and nomadic analysis offers insights into how processes of becoming-writers are produced,…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Qualitative Research, Swedish, Early Childhood Education
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Pufahl, John – College Composition and Communication, 1984
Discounts Collier's study of the effect of computer-based text editors on the quality of students' revision, arguing that editing is not an innate skill and that the computer predictably would not improve upon a process with which the students are not familiar. Collier replies that he excluded several methodological alternatives to reduce the…
Descriptors: Computers, Research Methodology, Research Problems, Revision (Written Composition)
Kellogg, Ronald T.; Mueller, Suzanne – 1989
A study examined whether word processing amplifies writing performance and whether it restructures the process of writing. Sixteen college students wrote a short essay in a single session on either a word processor or in longhand. The quality of the essays was assessed by trained judges who rated their content and style. Text analysis methods were…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Comparative Analysis, Computers, Higher Education
Newton, Sandra S. – 1985
The use of word processing in composition classes provides the student with both the opportunity to experience a significant technology and the ability to improve the mechanics and style of their writing. Word processing software has many benefits over "drill and practice" programs, "dialogue" software, and "whole process" programs, since word…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Individualized Instruction, Postsecondary Education, Word Processing
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Graham, Steve; Perin, Dolores – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2007
There is considerable concern that the majority of adolescents do not develop the competence in writing they need to be successful in school, the workplace, or their personal lives. A common explanation for why youngsters do not write well is that schools do not do a good job of teaching this complex skill. In an effort to identify effective…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Grammar, Adolescents, Word Processing
Nash, James; Schwartz, Lawrence – Collegiate Microcomputer, 1987
Discussion of the use of microcomputers as word processors in basic writing classes highlights the improvements in students' writing skills. Changes in teachers' approaches to writing courses are discussed and results of a study of 24 students in a basic writing course using microcomputers at Montclair State College are presented. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Microcomputers, Pretests Posttests, Teaching Methods
Crozier, D. S. R. – Unicorn, Journal of the Australian College of Education, 1986
Word processors can assist teachers and students by focusing on writing as a process, rather than a product. Word processing breaks writing up into manageable chunks that permit writing skills to develop in an integraged manner. (10 references) (CJH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education
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Fitschen, Kenneth – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1986
Points out that revising one's writing on hard copy after using the word processor for composing (1) reduces both computer and writing anxiety, (2) provides greater opportunity for decentering, and (3) is more comfortable to revise on hard copy than to revise onscreen. (EL)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, English Instruction, Revision (Written Composition), Two Year Colleges
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Donin, Janet; And Others – Written Communication, 1992
Employs a cognitive discourse analysis to analyze instructions for using a word processor written by eighth grade students. Analyzes text structure to specify underlying semantic and conceptual knowledge structures. Finds that written instructions produced by the students were deficient in content information and did not parallel the hierarchical…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Discourse Analysis, Grade 8, Junior High Schools
Engen-Wedin, Nancy; Collins, Terence – 1986
The annotated bibliography presented in this document reflects the focus of the first year of a three-year federally funded research program intended to shed light on the writing processes of learning disabled college-aged writers. With special emphasis on the use of technology in creating workable, mainstreamed curricula, this bibliography…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Computer Assisted Instruction, Higher Education, Learning Disabilities
Halpern, Jeanne W. – 1982
Because of dramatic changes in the technology of communication systems in business, industry, government, and the professions, college graduates are no longer writing the way they were taught to write. Instead of being physically engaged in a recursive pen-in-hand process, they are dictating their communications for word processing systems. A…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Higher Education, Teaching Methods, Technical Writing
Sudol, Ronald A. – ADE Bulletin, 1986
Defends the use of the word processor in writing classes. Describes how using it makes revision easier and cleaner, contributes to the speed and fluency of composing at the keyboard, and lends itself to new ways of composing and experiments with alternative structures for writing courses and classes. (EL)
Descriptors: College English, Computer Assisted Instruction, English Instruction, Higher Education
Hennings, Dorothy Grant – Phi Delta Kappan, 1983
Discusses multiple uses of the word processor as a writing tool. Following a description of the various parts of a word processing system, the author addresses concerns of the novice user, concluding that word processors may serve "both in the professional writing of educators and in the teaching of writing." (JBM)
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Professional Development, Revision (Written Composition), Teachers
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