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Frederiksen, Carl H., Ed.; Dominic, Joseph F., Ed. – 1981
Intended for researchers, teachers, local and national policy makers, and others interested in writing, this volume explores the processes and development of writing, particularly in the context of writing instruction. Following a preface, the introduction discusses various perspectives on the activity of writing, such as writing as a cognitive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition, Learning Theories
Nelson, Jack L. – 1984
Upton Sinclair's critique of education is examined, and what today's critics of education can learn from him is discussed. Sinclair is an example of deep or new critics of education who deal with more than surface blemishes and relate school criticism to deeper social issues like justice. In 1922 Sinclair conducted personal interviews with…
Descriptors: Capitalism, Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Needs
McKenzie, Hope Bussey – 1982
Intended for college students and teachers of English literature, this paper examines the lives and works of three great medieval Anglo-Saxon priestly scholars whose Latin writings have preserved the Anglo-Saxon roots of the English language. The paper first describes the works of Aldhelm, born in 650 A.D., whose poetry was not in the Latin…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Diachronic Linguistics, Higher Education, Latin
Steinberg, Erwin R. – 1985
Intended for writing teachers, this paper shows how "pithy prescriptions" for writing, such as "use definite, specific, concrete language," can be misleading or wrong. To support this thesis, the paper examines a technical writing book advocating short sentences and finds that it has sentences averaging 27.8 words in one section and 30.18 in…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Expository Writing, Generalization, Higher Education
Roth, Richard – 1985
Tautologies in student essays, arguments that most commonly assume the truth or self-evidence of themselves without relationship to something other than themselves, can be identified whenever an essay contains a series of nonsuccessive, noncumulative discourse units. Three kinds of tautologies in student papers are tautologies of redundancy,…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Convergent Thinking, Critical Thinking
Walker, Barbara J. – 1984
Based on gestalt psychology, guided fantasy is a technique that uses sensory images related to a particular situation to create a subjective understanding of that experience. For the young child, guided fantasy can be a process of creating an inner subjective experience that is subsequently integrated with objective knowledge (language) to produce…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Elementary Education, Fantasy, Holistic Approach
Otto, Paul B. – 1985
Writing in general is purported to be an all-important, most neglected area in education, especially in the area of science teaching. Several recognized authorities in the field of writing advocate that writing be taught in all the disciplines as well as in English. Since writing as a "process" rather than a "product" has been…
Descriptors: College Science, Higher Education, Physical Sciences, Preservice Teacher Education
Illinois Community Coll. Board, Springfield. – 1984
A study was conducted to determine the current status of and trends in writing instruction in the Illinois public community colleges. A survey sent to the colleges sought information on admissions, writing courses, course placement, graduation/completion requirements, in-service training for instructors, technical assistance, public service, and…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Educational Research, Educational Trends, Faculty Development
Sperling, Melanie – 1984
Intended for teachers, this paper considers response to student writing, looking at the different angles from which it is commonly perceived and acknowledging the complications that evaluation and the demands of curriculum add to that response. Three major areas are examined. There is an historical look at response, so that some of the roots of…
Descriptors: Feedback, Grading, Student Evaluation, Teacher Education
Harrington, David V. – 1985
A major concern when encouraging faculty development in teaching composition should be an appeal to faculty pride. Most college English faculty have been conditioned to see the teaching of composition as work for apprentices. The teaching of good writing is not merely strenuous and time-consuming; it demands the best of one's imaginative, mental,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, English Instruction, Faculty Development, Higher Education
Kellogg, Ronald T. – 1982
In a study of the relationship between the writing habits and productivity of technical writers, 127 science and engineering professors were surveyed concerning the number of technical articles, books, proposals, and reports they had produced over a three-year period and about their writing habits. Specifically, they were asked questions about the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Engineering Education, Job Skills, Occupational Surveys
Onore, Cynthia S. – 1984
One area of the writing process that has received considerable attention is revision. A case study was conducted to generate a picture of the effects of revision on texts, the writers' intentions and perceptions, and readers' assessments of the written products. Three students--Dan, Alex, and Miranda--enrolled in a required expository writing…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition)
Pringle, Ian; Freedman, Aviva – 1985
The third of three studies involving a comparative analysis of transactional and narrative writing of selected samples of students in two Ontario districts, this study addressed questions arising from the earlier studies and examined the writing skills of students in grades 5, 8, and 12. Writing samples were examined for conformity to the norms of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Narration
Bennett, Bruce – 1985
Teachers should be more aware of the function of place (an individual's physical and social environment) in the formation of the self in writing. By analyzing literature one can observe how the writer reflects upon the importance of a sense of place. Another kind of analysis is that of the writer in his or her environment, including the social and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Concept Formation, Cultural Influences, English Instruction
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Stallard, Charles K. – Research in the Teaching of English, 1974
Good writers, as compared to a randomly-chosen comparison group, spent more time in both prewriting and writing, revised more, re-read more often during writing, and were more concerned with the purpose of their writing. (JH)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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