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Coe, Richard M. – 1984
An assignment given to students at the end of an advanced composition class empowers students by helping them grasp principles and develop abilities that allow them to get beyond needing teachers. The crux of the assignment is a heuristic for analyzing any particular type of writing for the purpose of learning to produce it. The students are…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Heuristics, Higher Education, Language Processing
Denenberg, Stewart A. – 1988
This paper describes part of a course for college freshmen entitled "Computation, Reasoning, and Problem Solving," which uses the LOGO programming language to integrate computer programming skills, collaborative problem solving skills, and writing skills. Discussion of the computer programming component includes two of the LOGO problem…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Freshmen, Discovery Learning, Higher Education
Bridges, Jean Bolen – 1986
Since 1975, an honors course in freshman composition has been offered at Emanuel County Junior College (ECJC), a unit of the University System of Georgia, for academically superior students whose needs may not be met by the standard curriculum. The process of identifying honors students involves screening entering students to identify those who…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Honors Curriculum, Two Year Colleges, Writing (Composition)
Saur, Pamela S. – 1985
A major goal in teaching basic writers is to show them the importance of revision in the writing process, specifically revision for correctness (correcting), for creating content (adding), and for cutting out inessential material (subtracting). Revising for correctness includes varying or limiting the assigned revision tasks, varying the length of…
Descriptors: College English, English Instruction, Higher Education, Revision (Written Composition)
Thompson, Nancy S. – 1985
In a collaborative learning experience at the South Carolina Humanities and Writing Institute, writing process teaching methods were used to teach literature. "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was used as a prototype study for the group, while at the same time, each teacher-fellow developed his or her own literature study and teaching…
Descriptors: Cooperative Planning, English Instruction, Inservice Teacher Education, Literature Appreciation
Meers, Betty White – 1983
Personality theory stresses the importance of communion with self to personal development. Since writing is a form of communion with self, researchers have begun looking for measurable differences in the personality development of writers and nonwriters. Several experiments have tended to confirm that writing has the potential to effect positive…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Individual Development, Personality Development, Self Concept
Education Commission of the States, Denver, CO. National Assessment of Educational Progress. – 1982
The 1982 writing objectives presented in this booklet were developed in preparation for the fourth assessment of writing conducted by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). The objectives are based on the premise that individuals write for a purpose and an audience, and each objective serves as a section of the booklet. The first…
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education, Teaching Methods
Wasylean, Phillip – 1982
The teaching of writing as a process can be accomplished through an eight-step "prewriting process" approach. The eight steps include planning, organizing, establishing assumptions and premises, obtaining data, evaluating data, electing a course of action, control, and implementation. In the planning stage, students are asked to complete an…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Motivation Techniques, Notetaking, Prewriting
Hunt, Maurice – 1985
A crucial concept in Francis Christensen's principles of writing involves the "addition," which may be construed as any grammatical unit that is not a main clause. Obviously the effect of rhetorical writing derives mainly from the number of additions as well as from their placement and function within the single sentence. By means of…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Models, Paragraph Composition
Hansen, Craig; Wilcox, Lance – 1984
Generally, there are three kinds of software that could be used in college writing courses: word processing programs, interactive questionnaires, and text parsers. Although the benefits of these programs are well known, they still pose some problems. Word processors, for example, have been designed to "process" existing text; few have…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Higher Education, Microcomputers
Sheidley, William E., Ed.; And Others – 1985
The focus of the conference proceedings in this booklet was evaluation of student writing at various levels and in various fields. The booklet contains a schedule of activities; a description of the morning session, which included a panel discussion on evaluating writing in college freshman composition courses; examples of students' papers, with…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Content Area Writing, Higher Education, Writing (Composition)
Santelmann, Patricia Kelly – 1985
In preparing students for business writing, a technical writing class should foster (1) a sensitivity to audience and an understanding of the business or technical organizational audience, (2) analytical problem solving that precedes any but the simplest writing task, (3) understanding of the patterns of organization that make information clear to…
Descriptors: Business English, Editing, Higher Education, Problem Solving
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Brozick, James R. – 1976
Four twelfth-grade students of "distinct" personality types participated in a study of relationships between composing processes and use of cognitive strategies, of relationships between personality type and cognitive functioning, and of the effects of these interrelationships on composing. Personality profiles were drawn based on responses to the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Grade 12, Language Styles
Dick, John A. R. – 1981
A college faculty workshop on developing a cross-disciplinary writing program is detailed in this paper. The goals of the workshop are defined as first helping content area teachers to learn to revise their syllabi, restructure their writing assignments, and teach content and disciplinary perspectives through writing, and then giving English…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Development, Higher Education, Inservice Teacher Education
Glatthorn, Allan A. – 1982
According to researchers Herriott and Gross in their book "The Dynamics of Planned Educational Change," educational innovations fail because administrators (1) fail to diagnose problems correctly, (2) fail to anticipate and resolve implementation problems, (3) adopt an "ad hoc" approach to educational innovation, (4) accept…
Descriptors: Administrative Problems, Educational Innovation, Elementary Secondary Education, Program Implementation
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