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Fitzgerald, Jill – Reading Teacher, 1988
Examines current views on revision, and notes the importance of nurturing students' revision abilities. Presents three successful approaches to teaching revision, including: naturalistic classroom support, direct instruction in the problem-solving revision process, and procedural facilitation of revision. (MM)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Elementary Education, Problem Solving, Revision (Written Composition)
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Bridgers, Sue Ellen – ALAN Review, 1995
Discusses the author's novels in relation to her life, and how her childhood and adult memories found their way into her writing. Maintains that writing out of her experience means writing as a woman, to understand her connections to the women in her life and to explore through fiction the human condition. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Attitudes, Authors, Characterization
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Alvermann, Donna E.; And Others – Reading Research Quarterly, 1996
Extends a conversation begun in response to issues the authors identified in their own work as writers of qualitative research and in the works of others. Discusses theory, methodology, representation and legitimation, and writing and write-up of qualitative research. (RS)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Qualitative Research, Reading Research
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Breetvelt, Iris; And Others – Cognition and Instruction, 1994
Investigated the relationships between cognitive activities and text quality using think-aloud protocols. Found that some cognitive activities appeared to be relatively restricted to the first part of the writing process, whereas others dominated at later stages. The relationships between text quality and cognitive activities seemed to depend on…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, High School Students, High Schools, Protocol Analysis
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Church, Susan; And Others – English Quarterly, 1995
Shares the views of five authors about what is being done in the name of whole language in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia. States that these essays represent only temporary perspectives, and that more challenging questions about the theoretical assumptions that underlie whole language will arise. (PA)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Feminism, Politics of Education, Special Education
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Grice, Roger A.; Ridgway, Lenore S. – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1995
Notes that hypermedia may place additional cognitive loads on audiences and may change the way information is processed. Argues that those who write for hypermedia applications may need to change the way they look at the writing process, and those who teach writing may need to reconsider what they teach and what they choose to emphasize. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Hypermedia
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Bowden, Darsie – Writing Center Journal, 1995
States that one liberating feature of modern writing centers is the way they oblige individuals to (re)examine conventional definitions. Argues that writing centers contribute to developments in writing pedagogy. Describes the WCCD (Writing Center Conference Diagnostic) test and how it is used in writing centers. Discusses success and failure in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Program Evaluation, Teacher Student Relationship, Writing Instruction
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Downing, Shannon O'Hearn – Language Arts, 1995
Describes working with multiage elementary school students on demand writing--writing to meet deadlines. Discusses why to teach it, practical applications, what teachers need to know before beginning instruction, getting started, introducing demand writing, modeling it, teaching beginnings and endings, and revising and editing/proofreading. (SR)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Editing, Elementary Education, Teaching Methods
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Blanton, Shirley – English in Texas, 1994
Discusses a thinking-writing-organizing technique that Kenneth Burke called the dramatistic method. Suggests that having students ask and answer a series of questions prompted by five words (who, what, where, why, and how) placed at each of the points of a star can help students think and write about works of literature. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Questioning Techniques
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Fleckenstein, Kristie S. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1995
Describes methods for teaching student writers by bringing in the literary concept of metaphor. Argues that such a method of writing instruction helps students to develop skills of imagination and logical reasoning. Claims that metaphors can help underprepared students control the chaos called the writing process. (HB)
Descriptors: Course Content, English Instruction, Higher Education, Metaphors
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Shwom, Barbara L.; Hirsch, Penny L. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1994
Discusses the development of a pragmatic model of the writing process in the workplace, focusing on the importance of "drafting" as part of that process. Discusses writers' attitudes about drafting and the structures of the workplace that drafting has to accommodate. Introduces a drafting model and discusses results of using this model…
Descriptors: Employee Attitudes, Employer Attitudes, Higher Education, Models
Davis, Kenneth W. – Training, 1995
Writing involves two abilities, only one of which can be taught. Competence, which cannot be taught, is unconscious knowledge of language, which is acquired by hearing it repeatedly. The second ability, performance, can be taught to those with competence. Its components are confidence, process knowledge, and reinforcement. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Competence, Language Processing, Performance Factors
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Ivanic, Ron – Prospect, 1995
Discusses four interrelated aspects of identity related to the teaching of writing, including the effects of people's life histories on their writing, the affect of discourse type on identity, the impression that individuals give of themselves in their writing, and writers' expression of authorship, authoritativeness, and authorial presence.…
Descriptors: Discourse Modes, English (Second Language), Influences, Literacy
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Pelletier, Pierre – International Journal of Instructional Media, 1992
Investigates the theoretical basis of the writing process and describes the possibilities of word processing as a tool to support it. Writing process models are compared; the advantages of word processing are discussed, highlighting the revision process; and a model for use by elementary and secondary teachers is suggested. (21 references) (LRW)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Elementary Secondary Education, Models
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Burnham, Christopher C. – College Composition and Communication, 1992
Presents two journal exercises teachers can use to help their students develop and apply their cognitive skills. Asserts that the exercises help students to integrate what many consider to be dichotomous and frequently contradictory activities--feeling and thinking. Cites G. Lakoff and M. Johnson's "Metaphors We Live By" for the theoretical…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Journal Writing, Metaphors, Teaching Methods
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