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Ottawa County Office of Education, OH. – 1988
This guide outlines the writing procedures for English Composition Pupil Performance Objective (PPO) assessments and tests. Procedures for both students and teachers are included for the prewriting, first draft writing, and revising/rewriting sessions. A brief guide to evaluation procedures and intervention strategies is also provided. (MM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Writing (Composition), Writing Evaluation, Writing Instruction
Haas, Christina – 1988
A study examined the effect of word processing on the amount and kind of planning writers do. Subjects, 10 experienced writers and 10 student writers, wrote essays with pen and paper, word processing alone, and a combination of word processing and pen and paper. All students were experienced with computers. The subjects' think-aloud protocols and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Planning, Protocol Analysis, Word Processing
Foster, Bill R., Jr. – 1989
Reading and writing are complementary activities--if not two sides of the same activity--and together they provide a model for instruction in writing and thinking. The classical rhetorical concept of imitation as analysis followed by genesis provides the connection between classical imitation and the recent reading/writing connections proposed for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imitation, Reading Writing Relationship, Rhetoric
Ahlstrom, Amber Dahlin – 1989
According to Stephen M. North, most of the people in composition belong to a category he calls "Practitioners," so the description is not only applied to the University of New Hampshire (UNH). But if the instructors at UNH are most influenced by one person, it would be Donald Murray, and he is specifically listed as a Practitioner. It's…
Descriptors: Classification, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
Shock, Diane Hahn – 1983
A qualitative study focused on incubation and illumination within the act of writing to determine if life-span development affects image production during these creative, cognitive acts. Sixteen subjects of both sexes from four age groups represented major developmental stages in the life cycle. The research design provided two 90-minute sessions…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Developmental Stages, Imagination
Gentry, Larry A. – 1982
The process, content, and effect of revision in the writing process is analyzed in light of recent writing process research. Taylor calls for an approach to English as second language composition in which students are taught how to write with an emphasis on revision. Most authorities agree that revision entails a complex set of behaviors that…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Writing Processes
Flower, Linda S.; Hayes, John R. – 1979
The three papers in this report set forth the research methodology and the theory used in one research project to identify the processes involved in writing. The first paper proposes a method, termed protocol analysis, for use in identifying the organization of writing processes. It defines protocol analysis as a means for examining the detailed…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Theories, Models, Research Methodology
Meyers, G. Douglas – 1982
An application of reader response criticism, with its abundance of ways of construing readers, permits writing teachers to identify sets of readers for students more effectively than simply exhorting them to remember their audience while writing. Composition teachers can employ the concept of "narratee" (the author's alter ego) as a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Learning Theories, Phenomenology, Teaching Methods
Florio, Susan; Clark, Christopher M. – 1980
One segment of a year-long descriptive field study of school writing is described in this paper. In particular, the paper examines some of the uses to which writing is put in the first weeks of school in one second/third grade classroom. In doing this, the paper speculates on the writing curriculum in elementary schools and on the realization of…
Descriptors: Audiences, Primary Education, Teacher Attitudes, Writing Instruction
Aldrich, Pearl G. – 1979
In an effort to identify some factors that interfere with effective writing in adult writers, a three-page questionnaire was administered to 165 adults, most with technical degrees, who worked in the Washington, D. C., area. Respondents were top to middle management personnel who spent a significant portion of their time on the job writing and who…
Descriptors: Adults, Middle Management, Occupational Surveys, Technical Writing
Rivers, Thomas M. – 1981
This paper lists and describes inventionist themes that writers and writing teachers can use during rhetorical invention. It defines invention as the process whereby writers discover ideas to write about, and the inventionist as one who focuses on this discovery process, whether that focus be pedagogical or theoretical. The items included and…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Classification, Higher Education, Individual Characteristics
Underwood, Virginia Allen – 1980
This paper explicates and compares theories of composition that use heuristic or problem solving procedures in order to determine what can logically be expected from the application of a particular heuristic during the composing process. The heuristic models examined include E. P. J. Corbett's selection from the classical topics; R. Young, A. L.…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Models, Rhetoric, Theories
Flower, Linda; Hayes, John R. – 1981
In an examination of two alternative hypotheses about the role played by pauses in the planning of writing, this paper focuses on the long, "pregnant" pause. The first section of the paper examines the two alternative hypotheses about planning, one based on the theoretical perspective of linguistics and the other on the assumptions of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Linguistics, Planning, Prewriting
Ewald, Helen Rothschild – 1981
Clinical report writing involves two interlinking processes--creation and communication. There are six stages of clinical inference that find parallels in generative writing stages: possessing a postulate system, constructing the major premise, observing for occurrences, instantiating (classifying) the occurrences, reaching a referential product,…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Epistemology, Technical Writing
Myers, Mildred S. – 1980
A study examined the written communication at the technical/professional and managerial levels in a "Fortune 500" corporation to determine whether managers/executives had different communications purposes and, therefore, used different rhetorical strategies and approaches than did professional/technical staff. Rhetorical analysis was conducted of…
Descriptors: Administrators, Organizational Communication, Technical Writing, Writing Processes
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