NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 3,136 to 3,150 of 7,038 results Save | Export
Takala, Sauli – 1987
One of the most difficult problems facing researchers on writing is to define writing as a construct. The way writing is conceptualized determines how writing assignments are created and how written products are analyzed and rated. A functional approach to defining writing as a construct is presented here. It begins with the overall construct of…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Cognitive Ability, Competence, Language Proficiency
Spivey, Nancy Nelson – 1991
Writers construct meaning when they compose texts, and readers construct meaning when they understand and interpret texts. Building meaning through reading entails organizing, selecting, and connecting. Readers use previously acquired knowledge to operate on textual clues, organizing mental representations that include material they select from…
Descriptors: Reader Text Relationship, Reading Processes, Reading Writing Relationship, Text Structure
Hayes, John R. – 1991
Researchers and educators sometimes need to be reminded of the broad range of factors which have a crucial impact on how writers write. This paper offers a personal checklist of six factors which have been shown to be important, yet which are easy to forget in in heat of research because of the tendency to become immersed in a particular agenda…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Research Design, Research Methodology
Hatch, Gary – 1991
The time has come to re-evaluate the metaphors used when people think about composition. Such a re-evaluation is under way and may affect composition theory, research models, and classroom practice well into the future. Robert Zoellner rejected the prevailing metaphor for teaching writing which equates the act of thinking with the act of writing.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Higher Education, Models
Bruce, Bertram; And Others – 1983
The process of writing is explored from three perspectives in this paper. In the first part of the paper writing is viewed as a communicative act with four principles that form tacit objectives in any communicative act: comprehensibility, enticingness, persuasiveness, and memorability. The second part of the paper, which examines writing in the…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Speech Communication, Teaching Methods, Verbal Communication
Puma, Vincent; And Others – 1983
The annotated titles in this bibliography are intended to introduce the novice to current or significant work on the application of cognitive psychology methodologies to the writing process. The bibliography is arranged in four sections: (1) an overview of the topic that includes anthologies, essays and papers; (2) relevant publications of Linda…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Cognitive Processes, Psychology, Research Methodology
King, Mary – 1983
A text's meaning is, in part, independent of its form. Reading, most of the time, is taking meaning--not words--from the printed page, while proofreading requires attention to form rather than meaning. The author notes that: (1) a meaningful passage is easier to read than one with less meaning; (2) errors in oral reading usually do not obscure a…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Reading Comprehension, Revision (Written Composition), Writing Evaluation
Bogen, Don – 1982
Writing exercises are games that can lead to success in the classroom because they are artificial and have arbitrary rules defined by the instructor. By giving students a starting point, a limited task, and the assurance that the writing is, after all, "just a game," exercises can circumvent students' initial anxieties about self-presentation and…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Higher Education, Poetry, Teaching Methods
Flower, Linda; And Others – 1989
Based on the premise that planning in writing is a strategic response to both the writing situation and the writer's own knowledge, this paper describes the process adult writers bring to ill-defined, expository tasks, such as writing essays, articles, reports and proposals. The paper also states that in planning, writers draw on (nest and…
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Structures, Expository Writing, Writing Difficulties
Cohen, Robin; Kleiner, Gail – 1989
Intended for adaptation by teachers to suit their students' and their own strengths, this guide is a series of thematic units intended to encourage meaningful language use in an enjoyable and serious atmosphere in the ninth grade classroom. The guide includes many reading and writing activities that can be used in both the specific contexts in…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Grade 9, Junior High Schools, Summer Programs
Greene, Stuart – 1990
This paper argues for a dialectical conception of theory that avoids the problem of trying to yoke together theories that embody conflicting epistemological and idealogical concerns in any unified way. Called a "cognitive-social epistemic," this dialectic is a theoretical construct that subsumes a family of cognitive and social theories…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Rhetorical Invention, Social Cognition, Theory Practice Relationship
Wingate, Molly – 1990
John Reiff's conceptual framework regarding conflicting views of peace provides insight into interpersonal communication which can be successfully applied to conflicts in writing conferences and has already been used at the Colorado College Writing Center. First, a tutor or writer using the "Peace through Strength" frame of reference…
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Models
Grijalva, Osvaldo; And Others – 1990
A group of four brief papers provides ideas for teachers of writing and reading. "Writing to Learn" (Osvaldo Grijalva) focuses on writing as a process emphasizing experience and participation, and compares the traditional approach to writing instruction with a learning-process-oriented approach. "Teachers' Corner" (Rogelio Chavira) lists possible…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Editing, Literacy Education, Reading Materials
Puma, Vincent D. – 1986
A study explored the complexities of audience adaptation by examining the relationships between writer/audience proximity, register, and overall quality in essays written for assigned audiences. Subjects, 100 college freshmen, each wrote one essay in response to two audience-specified tasks in which subjects were to write persuasive letters to…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audiences, College Freshmen, Freshman Composition
Tremmel, Robert – 1983
Writer-teachers in the classroom offer two characteristics central to teaching students to write. The first is the writer's concern and respect for the students' own language and experience, and the second is the writer's broadly conceived sense of audience in the classroom. Writers try to maintain the connection between their students' own…
Descriptors: Authors, Classroom Techniques, Peer Evaluation, Teacher Role
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  206  |  207  |  208  |  209  |  210  |  211  |  212  |  213  |  214  |  ...  |  470