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Penrose, Ann M. – 1989
A study examined the assumption that writing is a way to learn by examining the relative effects of writing and studying as learning aids. The study also explored the role of individual differences in an effort to identify features of the writing process that may influence what students learn through writing. The experiment used think-aloud…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Higher Education, Protocol Analysis, Reading Processes
Greenwood, Claudia M. – 1989
Re-entry female students are unique in one particularly important way: they respond and grow under even the most difficult conditions. The classroom and the text are two contexts in which the factor of gender appears to have affected these students' attitudes toward writing and their expectations as writers. Central to both of these contexts are…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Females, Higher Education, Nontraditional Students
Piper, Terry – 1989
A study analyzed and described the writing development of 24 children in a multiethnic inner city classroom in Canada to learn whether there were measurable differences among native speakers, bilinguals, and English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) beginners. Writing samples were analyzed for describing, interpreting, generalizing, and speculating…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language)
Mahala, Daniel – 1989
The function of basic writing in the university is to teach students whose language practices are most distant from prestige forms to use language in ways which will enable their advancement in college and in the world outside. In composition studies, the awareness that the intelligent activity of students can produce apparently…
Descriptors: College English, Cultural Context, Ethnography, Higher Education
Roundy, Nancy – 1985
Technical writing instructors lack a framework for evaluating pedagogical materials. One framework for classification divides the pedagogical materials into three groups: those locating their heuristics in form, context, and method. Formal pedagogies (the modes, sentence generation) can produce generic writing, separated from audience, purpose,…
Descriptors: Classification, Evaluation Criteria, Heuristics, Higher Education
Davies, Anne – 1987
The relationships between the understandings children develop while learning the written form of their own names and those developed while learning other words were examined in a study. Twelve children, aged three, four, and five, were selected. The study involved three tasks which examined the subjects' expertise with letters, numbers, and the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Foreign Countries, Handwriting, Literacy
Whale, Kathleen B. – 1985
Extending an earlier Donald Graves study by including students over seven years of age, this study identified relationships among the nature of writing tasks assigned by teachers and the written responses of elementary school students to those tasks. One class each at the third, fifth, and seventh grade levels provided eighteen sets of writing…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Processing, Student Reaction, Writing Exercises
Kucer, Stephen B. – 1985
Theoretical issues related to the parallel role of internal revision in reading and writing are explored in this paper, which explains that meanings generated during reading or writing are always tentative and that readers and writers must build and maintain a continuous text world. The paper next examines criteria for evaluating the continuity of…
Descriptors: Context Clues, Educational Theories, Language Processing, Reading Comprehension
Lang, Frederick K. – 1983
The reader response criticism that has arisen in direct response to the New Criticism can be adapted to the needs of the developing writer through its emphasis upon the experience of the reader engaged with the text. The reader response approach generates content--helps the developing writer find something to say--and facilitates the process…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Gentile, John S. – 1986
Most performer-writers accept the writing process simply as a means to an end: the shared performance event with a live audience. While writer-performers regard a script as more important than the performance, a solo performance is, however, a showcase of the artist's talent, and creating one's own text offers the performer artistic control. Some…
Descriptors: Acting, Audiences, Authors, Characterization
Hudson, Kathleen – 1982
Writers' comments on writing can help teachers incorporate within their classrooms the idea that writing is a process of discovery. They can remind students and teachers how important enthusiasm, motivation, and reinforcement are. Even though such comments are not saying anything new, saying the same thing in new terminology can lead to new…
Descriptors: Authors, Creative Teaching, Higher Education, Reading Materials
Dixon, John; Stratta, Leslie – 1982
A consideration of real world language use yields five questions that could prove helpful in assessing student writing achievements: (1) What is the writer's purpose or intention? (2) What audience does the writer have in mind? (3) What are the organizing principles of the piece? (4) What range of experience and knowledge might one reasonably…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing, Instructional Improvement, Secondary Education
Sommers, Nancy – 1982
To describe and analyze the revision processes of a group of college freshmen and a group of experienced adult writers, eight freshman students and seven experienced adult writers were asked to write three compositions, rewrite each composition two times, suggest revisions for a composition written by an anonymous author, and be interviewed three…
Descriptors: Adults, Case Studies, College Freshmen, Higher Education
Slavin, Ann Marie – 1982
A senior English course at Padua Academy (Delaware) is going to be taught through an interdisciplinary approach that involves as many faculty members as possible, stresses the teaching of the writing process, and reinforces the concept that writing is not just for the English class. Speaker presentations by members of other departments will be…
Descriptors: Course Content, English Literature, Instructional Improvement, Instructional Innovation
Haugen, Nancy S., Ed.; And Others – 1981
Focusing on the teacher's role in helping students to be creative in writing while expressing themselves more clearly, concisely, and accurately, the first four chapters of this guide offer a simple three-step process with strategies for teachers to follow when teaching writing. First, the guide discusses how the teacher can more thoroughly…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Revision (Written Composition), Teacher Role, Teaching Methods
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