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Gordon, Ricia – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2004
This article profiles a group of college students with learning disabilities, outlines strategies used to help those students in their 100-level expository-writing class, and illustrates persistent writing problems with three student writing samples. This study revealed that, even with explicit support, students whose learning disabilities had an…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Concept Formation, Writing Instruction, Two Year College Students
Xin, Cindy; Feenberg, Andrew – Journal of Distance Education, 2006
This article elaborates a model for understanding pedagogy in online educational forums. The model identifies four key components. Intellectual engagement describes the foreground cognitive processes of collaborative learning. Communication processes operating in the background accumulate an ever richer store of shared understandings that enable…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis
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Lee, Young-Ju – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2006
This study examines a process-oriented ESL writing assessment called the Computerized Enhanced ESL Placement Test (CEEPT). The CEEPT at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign or its non-computerized alternative (EEPT) have since 2000 offered a daylong process-oriented writing assessment in which test takers are given extended time to plan,…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Essays, Writing Evaluation, Writing Tests
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LeTourneau, Mark S. – Composition Chronicle: Newsletter for Writing Teachers, 1996
This paper proposes that a metaphor of linguistic levels, similar to that used in general linguistic theory, be applied to the study of levels within an essay. The linguistic conception of levels in a piece of writing is not sentence-paragraph-essay (which might be characterized as a rhetorical division) but rather (or in addition to)…
Descriptors: Coherence, Connected Discourse, Definitions, Discourse Analysis
Yuill, Nicola; Oakhill, Jane – 1991
Noting that although some children read aloud with apparent fluency, they fail to understand fully or remember connected discourse, this book brings together research on children who have a specific comprehension deficit. The book first provides an introduction and overview of adult and child text comprehension, and then describes the research.…
Descriptors: Children, Connected Discourse, Decoding (Reading), Elementary Education
Thavenius, Cecilia – 1982
A study investigated the exophoric function of the pronouns "it, they, he, she" and related forms in four English conversations. It analyzed the frequency and characteristics of the occurrence of those exophoric pronouns and found that they were much less frequent than endophoric pronouns. It also found that the exophoric pronoun groups…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, English, Language Research
Heath, Robert W. – 1985
While teaching mechanical aspects of writing in English as a second language (ESL) to ten- and eleven-year-olds has been found to be relatively simple, the most difficult thing to teach, and the first to break down when guidance is removed, is logical information sequencing. Without guidance, most children will produce random sentences, but when…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Connected Discourse, Elementary Education, English (Second Language)
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Stahl, Abraham – Research in the Teaching of English, 1974
A rating instrument for describing nine structural characteristics of written compositions is presented and explained. (JH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Evaluation Methods
Johnston, Peter; Pearson, P. David – 1982
A study examined the effects of prior knowledge and the explicitness of text connectivity on various measures of reading ability. Subjects were 130 eighth grade students who read 6 prose passages that had been manipulated for content familiarity and for use of explicit connectives and implied connectives (those brought about by the author's…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Grade 8, Junior High Schools
Fahnestock, Jeanne – 1981
Helping students understand coherence in terms of the lexical ties and semantic relations possible between clauses and sentences formalizes an area of writing instruction that has been somewhat vague before and makes the process of creating a coherent paragraph less mysterious. Many students do not have the intuitive knowledge base for absorbing…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), College English, Connected Discourse
Schiffrin, Deborah – 1978
This paper presents the results of a quantitative analysis of the historical present tense (HP) in English. The tokens of HP in narrative clauses, such as "he's smiling, an' he picks up the card," are referentially equivalent to their past tense alternants in the phrases, "he was smiling an' he picked up the card." Previous…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Language Patterns
Hays, Janice – 1979
Ways in which the study of discourse analysis can aid the teacher of basic writing in helping their students to express themselves fluently are explored in this paper. It is noted that remedial writers need to learn to relate abstract ideas to concrete examples and that they seem unable to supply the connections between ideas, especially those of…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, College Freshmen, Connected Discourse, Developmental Programs
Shima, Fred – 1969
The focus of this experiment was on the effects of associative strength on retention of connected discourse, in terms of both single words and strings of words. Also of interest was the short- and long-term retention of two types of information, verbatim and substance. Verbatim information covered words and word sequences identical to those in the…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis
Christiaansen, Robert E.; Dooling, D. James – 1975
The encoding specificity principle predicts that a change in context between input and test will adversely affect recognition memory. Experiment I tested this with sentences from a prose passage and no context effects were obtained. Experiments II, III, and IV compared context effects for words in random sentences versus connected discourse. In…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Context Clues, Cues
Arapoff, Nancy – 1969
In the last decade an unprecedented number of college-level foreign students have appeared in the United States, competing with native speakers in schools where the only medium of instruction is English. All students at American universities have to do three kinds of sophisticated writing--summarizing in notes, writing exam essays, and writing…
Descriptors: College Students, Connected Discourse, English (Second Language), Foreign Students
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