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Freedman, Sarah Warshauer; Hechinger, Fred – 1992
Recent research creates a better understanding of how writing is best learned, taught, and used for learning in school and life. Research done by Anne Haas Dyson and Carol Stack has indicated that many low-income African American children may bring resources to school that are often overlooked. Matthew Downey moves from Dyson's findings about how…
Descriptors: Black Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Limited English Speaking, Portfolios (Background Materials)
Roen, Duane H.; McNenny, Geraldine – 1992
Negative attitudes toward collaborative writing are common, especially in the humanities, and some people view it as a form of plagiarism or cheating. Plagiarism, or the borrowing of ideas from other writers, can be both conscious and unconscious, and can stem from a variety of motives. Even single-authored works are products of many minds,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Collaborative Writing, Community Role, Discourse Modes
Zak, Frances – 1993
Writing teachers are constantly confronted with the problem of forming effective responding strategies to help student writing improve. Even though the way writing is taught has shifted from a product- to a process-oriented approach, teachers' responding practices seem particularly resistant to modification. "Practitioner lore" suggests…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Process Approach (Writing), Teacher Behavior, Teaching Methods
Brown, Bill – Bread Loaf News, 1991
Students at Hume-Fogg Academic High School in Nashville, Tennessee do every kind of writing, have won numerous writing awards, and have published everything from chapbooks to articles in national literary magazines. According to the creative writing teacher, students are first taught to write about things they know--to go back to their own…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Writing, High Schools, Peer Evaluation
Blackall, Donna – 1991
When the state legislators of Illinois mandated a full-scale statewide assessment program in reading/language arts, the Illinois Association of Teachers of English (IATE) made its stand clear: that tests for Illinois students must be created, designed, and executed by Illinois English/language arts educators, and that a writing sample was an…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Language Arts, Minimum Competency Testing, Politics of Education
Meikle, Robert J. – 1982
A total of 47 twelfth grade students from five different English classes and the six teachers in the English department at a secondary school in Canada took part in a study to determine what effects traditional grade-based writing evaluation procedures had upon the process of writing. There were three distinct yet related components to the…
Descriptors: Evaluation Criteria, Grade 12, Grading, High Schools
Heffernan, James A. W. – 1983
The tendency to read for errors is an occupational hazard for writing teachers, but there is something profoundly wrong in measuring progress by measuring the reduction of errors. To begin breaking this habit, teachers must first recognize the fundamental hypocrisy in making correction markings that are at odds with the intended message (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Feedback, Grading, Higher Education, Literature
Witte, Stephen P. – 1982
Writing research has long sought to identify the internal features of written discourse that help to explain qualitative differences among student texts. Reflecting the theories of the Prague School linguists, this study used a topical structure analysis to distinguish between the sentences and T-units of 48 college freshman essays evaluated as…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Linguistic Theory
Perkins, Kyle; Parish, Charles – 1984
A comparison of measures of the attained writing proficiency of 45 college-level students of English as a second language is reported. Students were tested by two indirect measures, the Test of the Ability to Subordinate (TAS) and the Revision and Editing Test (RET), and their compositions were evaluated by a direct measure, holistic evaluation.…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Higher Education, Language Processing, Revision (Written Composition)
McCaig, Roger A. – 1982
This paper was prepared for school officials and researchers who plan to conduct an assessment of student writing but have limited field experience with this activity. The paper identifies twelve critical questions assessors should consider, and it explores issues involved in reaching a decision about each from the perspectives of measurement…
Descriptors: Administrators, Educational Researchers, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Methods
Breland, Hunter M.; Lytle, Eldon G. – 1990
The utility of computer analysis in the assessment of written products was studied using the WordMAP software package. Data were collected for 92 college freshmen, using: (1) the Test of Standard Written English (TSWE); (2) the English Composition Test of the College Board; (3) verbal and mathematical Scholastic Aptitude Tests; (4) two narrative…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Computer Assisted Testing, Educational Assessment, Essay Tests
Patkowski, Mark S. – 1989
A study of the holistic evaluation of writing compared holistic rating and the rating for "conformity to correct prose" technique, a technique based on error counting, of five essays representing five ability levels. The essays were produced in a college English-as-a-Second-Language program. The two scoring methods produced the same ranking of…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, English (Second Language), Error Patterns, Essays
Rijlaarsdam, G. – 1983
To demonstrate that peer evaluation is an appropriate means of improving written composition, particularly in terms of audience and goal orientation, the use of peer evaluation as a teaching method is discussed and then the connection between peer evaluation and audience awareness is drawn. Based on observation of Dutch 17-year-old students, the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Goal Orientation, Metacognition, Peer Evaluation
Gilman, F. David; And Others – 1990
A study compared the effects of retesting (with and without the benefit of short term instruction) on the scores of subjects in an upper-division university who had failed a writing test. Subjects who did not receive a passing score in their first attempt at the essay test were given the opportunity of attending a 4-hour workshop designed to…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Adults, College Students, Comparative Analysis
Wallace, David L.; Hayes, John R. – 1990
A study investigated the impact of task definition on students' revising strategies to determine whether college freshman writers could revise globally if instructed to do so and if those global revisions would result in improved texts. Data were elicited from 38 students enrolled in two entry-level college writing courses. Participants, randomly…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Error Correction, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
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