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Roth, Robert G. – 1987
In order for students to write for a general audience, they must be able to address unknown readers. Research into how successful writers perceive their audience suggests that they write to an audience who is an idealized version of themselves. Writing for an unknown audience can be a writer's search for common ground, for a set of beliefs and…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audiences, Higher Education, Reader Text Relationship
Taylor, William M. – 1986
A series of five writing assignments that focus on the critical thinking skills needed for the intelligent reading of political articles that appear in newspapers and popular magazines was developed for use in a political science course at Oakton Community College (Illinois). Each of the assignments begins with a lesson that teaches the specific…
Descriptors: Assignments, Critical Thinking, Political Science, Reading Processes
Roth, Robert G. – 1985
To address the questions of whether writers create their audiences and, if so, how, a case study of three skilled student writers sought to elicit the students' tacitly held knowledge about composing and audience. The students wrote an essay that they were told would be published in a campus anthology, and then responded to questions in taped…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Educational Theories, Higher Education, Writing Instruction
Jones, William – 1986
Rather than giving basic writing students handbook and workbook exercises to direct their proofreading, teachers can use a monitoring system that teaches the students to recognize problems and to systematically monitor and eliminate the difficulties. After completing two or three assignments that include several drafts, students copy out all the…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition), Teaching Methods
Rueda, Robert – 1984
The theoretical background and empirical studies concerned with the relationship between language and cognition in bilingual children and in bilingual mildly retarded children are examined. It is suggested that the effects of bilingualism are not necessarily detrimental to mildly handicapped children. Cognitive and interactional factors in the…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development, Functional Literacy
Murphy, Richard – 1981
Noting that effective writing requires organization, honesty, and personal experiences, this booklet offers suggestions for teaching students to write expository essays that are serious and truthful. The first section of the booklet suggests ways to teach students to organize their ideas, while the second section discusses both the value of…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Expository Writing, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
Kelly, Leonard P.; Kerst, Stephen – 1989
In order to examine the differential availability of attention between the self-written text and standard text conditions, changes in error detection performance of unskilled hearing writers were compared with those of profoundly deaf writers. Subjects, 10 profoundly, pre-lingually deaf college freshmen with no additional handicaps and a…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Editing
Gachuhi, D., Ed.; Matiru, B., Ed. – 1989
Developed from a series of workshops in Kenya, this handbook offers practical guidance for those creating printed distance education materials for African students. The introduction describes the workshops and a short section explains how to use the handbook. Twelve units appear on the following topics: (1) overview of distance education; (2)…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Distance Education, Editing, Instructional Materials
Carey, Linda; And Others – 1989
An exploratory study investigated how writers represent their task to themselves before beginning to write. Using data from verbal protocols, the initial plans of 12 writers (5 experts and 7 student writers) who were working on an expository writing task were examined. The protocols were coded for types of planning. Independent measures of the…
Descriptors: Expository Writing, Planning, Prewriting, Protocol Analysis
Adamson, June N. – 1989
Recent use of the "New Yorker" Education Program in an upper division non-fiction writing class in the School of Journalism of the University of Tennessee proved to be very effective. Initially, the numerous assignments to read detailed articles appeared overwhelming to the students, but they soon learned the importance of reading as the…
Descriptors: Authors, Higher Education, Journalism, Journalism Education
Walzer, Arthur E. – 1989
"Purpose" is an important term in rhetorical theory and writing pedagogy. An analysis of the presentation of "purpose" in three well-regarded, theory-based textbooks ("Writing in the Liberal Arts Tradition: A Rhetoric with Readings,""Writing with a Purpose," and "Form and Surprise in Composition")…
Descriptors: Definitions, Higher Education, Rhetoric, Textbook Evaluation
Steinberg, Erwin R. – 1985
Noting that recent issues of several scholarly journals have contained criticism of protocol analysis and the use of verbal reports in the analysis of the writing process, this paper examines some of the charges made and then explores the implications of the criticisms. Specific charges addressed in the paper include the following: (1) protocols…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Theories, Protocol Analysis, Research Methodology
Magistrale, Tony – 1985
The use of a Jonathan Schwartz essay as a prose model to teach writing lends itself appropriately to classroom discussions on various aspects of autobiography and general narrative design. Such use has proved to be particularly helpful with young writers because of its deceptively simple style and language and its use of a variety of sophisticated…
Descriptors: Essays, Models, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
Gannett, Cinthia; Diller, Karl – 1981
The relation between reading and writing is important because tacit and possibly unwarranted assumptions underlie the theories and pedagogies which govern these processes. These assumptions are challenged by the claims that: (1) reading and writing are related in neurolinguistically specifiable ways; (2) they do not seem to be simple inverses of…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia, Language Handicaps, Language Processing
Woodman, Leonora – 1982
A theory of style called the doctrine of synonymity argues that the separation of form from content allows the possibility of alternative phrasing. This theory led to the conception that during the writing process, writers consider different ways of phrasing and settle on the formulation that best expresses the meaning intended. However, the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Learning Theories, Rhetoric
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