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Nystrand, Martin – 1984
Intensive peer review is a method of teaching expository writing developed two years ago by A. N. Doane and now used extensively in freshman expository writing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Students meet regularly in groups of four three times a week over the course of the term to share and critique each other's writing. The instructor…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Higher Education, Language Processing, Peer Evaluation
Pickett, G. D. – 1986
Business language is directed both outward, toward the general public and inward, toward the particular type of business. In the first instance, it approximates lay language and has contributed some expressions to common usage. In the second instance, it departs from lay language and becomes specialized within each industry, sometimes to the point…
Descriptors: Business Administration, Business Communication, Business Correspondence, Definitions
Johnson, Martha; And Others – 1987
A study investigated the effectiveness of strategies designed to improve reading comprehension, in order to (1) determine the effectiveness of the Cloze Story Map (CSM), a cloze-mapping strategy, on improving the reading comprehension of fourth-grade students using expository text and different sorts of deletion procedures; (2) investigate the…
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Cognitive Mapping, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades
Farr, Marcia, Ed. – 1985
Recent research on children learning to write, coming from a mix of disciplines (English education, linguistics, psychology, anthropology, and rhetoric), is described in this volume. The introduction, by Marcia Farr, emphasizes how the research contributes to understanding (1) of research methodology and theoretical frameworks, and (2) of…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Learning Processes
Thomas, Joy – 1972
Since the early nineteenth century, scholars have marveled at the unlettered Cherokee native named Sequoyah--or Sikwaya--and also known as John Guess--or Guest or Gist--who, unassisted, developed a medium for the written expression of the Cherokee language that was uniquely appropriate to the peculiarities of the spoken language. There is much…
Descriptors: Alphabets, American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians
Flower, Linda – 1987
Noting that the new literary and rhetorical theories are concerned with revealing the constructive nature of productive and interpretive processes, this paper examines the cognitive processes in reading and writing which make them constructive and intentional acts, and how reader and writer "negotiate" meaning in light of context, reader…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Metacognition, Problem Solving
Cress, Cynthia J., Comp. – 1986
This bibliography provides citations to studies of word/letter frequencies and vocabulary applications based on issues of word frequency. While the original intent was to gather information pertinent to developing communication board vocabularies for argumentative communication systems, these resources should be useful for a variety of word…
Descriptors: Communication Aids (for Disabled), Difficulty Level, Disabilities, Letters (Alphabet)
Brown, Tracy; Haynes, Margot – 1983
A study of the possible transfer of reading skills from a first language other than English to English, called script-carryover effects, focused on two aspects of the written language: (1) the manner in which the script represents information about sound and meaning, and (2) whether or not the script uses the same graphemic characters as English.…
Descriptors: Arabic, English (Second Language), Graphemes, Interlanguage
Brewer, William F. – 1984
This paper draws upon a theory of stories that relates particular text structures to particular affective states and then relates the affective states to story intuitions and overall judgments of liking. The first section of the paper outlines the theory as it deals with some important properties of the genre of popular stories in Western…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Interrelationships, Discourse Analysis, Evaluation Criteria
Franz, Thomas R. – 1984
Teaching Spanish while either restricting classroom use of the textbook or ignoring application of the computer is a losing proposition. Withdrawn from the typographic-video world that engages them daily, students are deprived of their most comfortable means of knowledge acquisition. Typography and visual images can be an immeasurable aid in…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Strategies, Educational Technology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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)
Gentry, Larry – 1982
A study identified the homophones most commonly used in children's writing and showed how the relative use of specific homophones changes as writing skill develops. Homophones appearing in Rinsland's "A Basic Vocabulary of Elementary School Children," a vocabulary list compiled from a national sample of children's writing in grades 2…
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Secondary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Research Methodology
Havelock, Eric A. – 1981
The development of literacy is traced in this paper to promote the thesis that dependence on literacy education naturally leads to two competing cultures, one oral and one literate. Events in the development of the Greek alphabet are traced to advance the argument, and the differences between cultures dependent on Greek and non-Greek writing…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Diachronic Linguistics
Green, Georgia M. – 1981
Inversion constructions (declarative sentence constructions in which the subject follows part or all of its verb phrase) are distributed over the whole range of spoken and written language, not along the spoken-written dimension but along a colloquial-literary dimension. Some of these inversions are colloquial or literary for functional reasons,…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Language Styles, Language Usage, Literary Styles
Stotsky, Sandra – 1982
There appear to be two basic theories about the relationship of written language to oral language and the relationship of writing to reading. The first theory views written language as a derivative of oral language and as an alternate but parallel form of oral language. The pedagogical implications of this model suggest that the problems of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Language Acquisition, Language Processing
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