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Butler, Andrea; Turbill, Jan – 1984
Integrated approaches to the teaching of reading and writing being used in classrooms in Australia and New Zealand are described in this booklet. The first part of the booklet presents theoretical background on how children learn to talk and the reading and writing processes. The second and third parts of the booklet describe ways of putting…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Integrated Curriculum, Interdisciplinary Approach, Reading Instruction
Rager, John J. – 1986
The writing process depends heavily on linguistic, psycho-perceptual, and psycho-motor abilities. If a student has a significant weakness in one of these major trait clusters, then thinking will suffer and he or she may experience great difficulty in writing. The process of writing can be broken down into four main phases, which can be labeled…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Models, Remedial Instruction, Revision (Written Composition)
Hult, Christine A. – 1986
In the absence of appropriate instruction, word processing programs in general and stylistic analysis programs in particular can reinforce the unproductive revision strategies of inexperienced student writers. For example, the predilection of inexperienced writers to see text as parts (words) rather than as whole (communication) can be reinforced…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Courseware, Higher Education, Prewriting
Flower, Linda – 1988
How writers come by, find, or create their sense of purpose and whether readers are at all aware of or affected by this purposeful, sometimes elaborate rhetorical structure the writer labored to construct are questions that have motivated critical discussions of the construction of purpose. Using think-aloud protocols, the construction of purpose…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Protocol Analysis, Reading Processes, Rhetoric
Tompkins, Gail E., Ed.; Goss, Claudette, Ed. – 1987
Written by teachers for teachers, this book, the first publication of the Oklahoma Writing Project, contains a collection of articles which describe successful strategies and activities for teaching composition. The articles, which deal with a variety of topics, listed with their authors, are as follows: (1) The Writing Process (Gail E. Tompkins…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Developed Materials, Writing (Composition), Writing Improvement
Schultz, John – 1988
Composition researchers and teachers grant that the relationship of non-verbal thinking and language plays a crucial role in the writing of fiction and poetry, but they are sometimes reluctant to perceive that non-verbal thinking must, necessarily, be crucial, with different emphases, in the thinking/writing processes of rhetoric. Activities and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language, Nonverbal Communication, Nonverbal Learning
Pleasant Valley Community School District, IA. – 1982
The processes of prewriting, writing, revising, and proofreading are outlined in this four-page guide for writing center volunteers. Each section lists "things to remember" and provides ideas on "how to help students" when teaching these four stages of the writing process. (JW)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Guidelines, Prewriting, Revision (Written Composition)
Haas, Christina – 1987
An observational study examined computer writers' use of hard copy for reading. The study begins with a description, based on interviews, of four kinds of reading problems encountered by writers using word processing; formatting, proofreading, reorganizing, and critical reading ("getting a sense of the text"). Subjects, six freshmen…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Critical Reading, Ethnography, Higher Education
Miller-Souviney, Barbara; Souviney, Randall – 1987
This guide discusses how a computer can motivate students, how it can be used as a support for the writing process, and how it can help teachers reinforce good writing habits. The guide includes sections on managing the classroom computer; student scheduling; human resources; introducing the computer; learning editor commands; managing student…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Elementary Education, Student Writing Models, Teaching Methods
Stafford, Kim R. – 1989
Raw material for writing may be found by eavesdropping on conversations and informal speeches, and transcribing graffiti and written texts from the street. These snippets of the surrounding flow of language are recorded in notebooks and categorized, later to work their way into a variety of writings of a professional writer and teacher of writing.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Role, Listening Habits, Personal Narratives
Miller, Lori Ann – 1989
Writing is an act of self construction. Considering how students process information can improve the quality of instruction in composing courses, but only if quantifiable, verified models of cognitive functions are taken to heart and applied to teaching methods in the classroom. C. G. Jung's model of the four functions (thinking, sensation,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Higher Education
McLaughlin, Gerald W., Ed. – Association for Institutional Research, 1985
Intended for researchers in a variety of fields, this journal issue contains articles that provide guidance for technical writing for publication. Following an introduction, the first article explores some of the reasons papers are rejected by editors, including research design problems, lack of clarity and style, or unsuitability for the journal.…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Revision (Written Composition), Technical Writing, Writing for Publication
Dobler, Judith M. – 1989
The paper presents and demonstrates a heuristic for helping students learn how to read and understand figuration in literature. The heuristic contains elements from linguistics, New Criticism, and rhetorical analysis in a recursive process which enables students to see how features of words combine into figurative patterns. Beginning at the level…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Heuristics, Higher Education, Linguistics
Reed, Janine – 1988
In an attempt to understand what expressive writing means to themselves and to their students, teachers should explore and reflect on various questions regarding expressive writing theories and practices. For many, self-expression is the basis of all serious writing and an important stage in any act of learning, so it is essential to uncover the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Writing, Higher Education, Psychology
Durst, Russel K. – 1985
A study examined the differences between the processes involved in analytic and summary writing by contrasting student writing of both kinds. Twenty 11th graders, 10 high and 10 average ability writers, participated in two composing-aloud sessions. In one session, the student wrote an analytic essay about a history passage and, in the other…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Critical Thinking, Expository Writing, High Schools
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