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Hudson, Kathleen – 1982
Writers' comments on writing can help teachers incorporate within their classrooms the idea that writing is a process of discovery. They can remind students and teachers how important enthusiasm, motivation, and reinforcement are. Even though such comments are not saying anything new, saying the same thing in new terminology can lead to new…
Descriptors: Authors, Creative Teaching, Higher Education, Reading Materials
Dixon, John; Stratta, Leslie – 1982
A consideration of real world language use yields five questions that could prove helpful in assessing student writing achievements: (1) What is the writer's purpose or intention? (2) What audience does the writer have in mind? (3) What are the organizing principles of the piece? (4) What range of experience and knowledge might one reasonably…
Descriptors: Descriptive Writing, Expository Writing, Instructional Improvement, Secondary Education
Sommers, Nancy – 1982
To describe and analyze the revision processes of a group of college freshmen and a group of experienced adult writers, eight freshman students and seven experienced adult writers were asked to write three compositions, rewrite each composition two times, suggest revisions for a composition written by an anonymous author, and be interviewed three…
Descriptors: Adults, Case Studies, College Freshmen, Higher Education
Slavin, Ann Marie – 1982
A senior English course at Padua Academy (Delaware) is going to be taught through an interdisciplinary approach that involves as many faculty members as possible, stresses the teaching of the writing process, and reinforces the concept that writing is not just for the English class. Speaker presentations by members of other departments will be…
Descriptors: Course Content, English Literature, Instructional Improvement, Instructional Innovation
Haugen, Nancy S., Ed.; And Others – 1981
Focusing on the teacher's role in helping students to be creative in writing while expressing themselves more clearly, concisely, and accurately, the first four chapters of this guide offer a simple three-step process with strategies for teachers to follow when teaching writing. First, the guide discusses how the teacher can more thoroughly…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Revision (Written Composition), Teacher Role, Teaching Methods
Milner, Joseph; Reising, R. W. – 1982
As more and more writing process oriented teachers must oversee, design, and execute classroom intervention studies, a discrepancy arises from the inappropriateness of the process style to the product orientation of research. In establishing experimental procedures, researchers try to account for all variables, but for process-oriented teachers,…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Classroom Research, Elementary Education, Ethnography
Cooper, Elizabeth J. – 1982
Style is teachable and learnable, but literary models should not be introduced for imitation until the basic writer has already developed some fluency in writing; then literature can provide students with examples of experiences that they can internalize, store away, and draw upon in their own writing. A brainstorming exercise, "the messy…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imitation, Literary Styles, Observational Learning
Sanford, James F. – 1982
Students could gain considerable insight into the philosophy and methods of scientific experimentation if instructors adopted procedures based on an understanding of and respect for writing as a process. Laboratory courses in psychology offer such an opportunity. These courses usually involve a heavy workload for both students and faculty, for, in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Psychology, Revision (Written Composition)
Humes, Ann – 1982
Whereas previous research on writing focused on measurable aspects of written products, more recent research has focused on the processes of writing, using such research methodologies as laboratory case studies, naturalistic studies, quasiproduct studies that interpret results in terms of process, and studies that have unique procedures as a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Observation Techniques, Research Methodology, Research Opportunities
Bennett, Susan G. – 1981
Research on the composition process and writing instruction has reiterated that red-pencilling students' literary efforts achieves mostly negative effects. Researchers contend that if teachers ignore the mechanics used (or misused) by beginning writers, if they encourage and stimulate the production of both oral and written language, reward the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Student Attitudes, Teacher Response, Teaching Methods
Kurfiss, Joanne – 1983
The link between writing and the development of reasoning abilities, and implications for the college curriculum are discussed. The developmental models/theories of Piaget, Kohlberg, Gilligan, and Perry are described. Perry identifies a level of cognitive development called "dualism," which is a tendency to view the world in absolute,…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, College Instruction, Developmental Stages, Higher Education
Osburn, E. Bess; McDonell, Gloria M. – 1983
A study was conducted to identify characteristics of young children's written compositions that might be used to indicate growth patterns. Written compositions of 482 children of all ability levels, grades 1-3, were examined by two teams of teacher-researchers and placed on a continuum of sophistication. Four growth strands were identified: (1)…
Descriptors: Beginning Writing, Child Development, Child Language, Language Acquisition
Air Univ., Gunter AFS, Ala. Extension Course Inst. – 1984
One of six related documents, making up a U.S. Air Force correspondence course, this publication deals with effective writing and emphasizes the sentence as the basic unit of written communication. Part one focuses on internal sentence punctuation and covers the use of the comma, semicolon, colon, period, capital, abbreviations, and numbers. Part…
Descriptors: Armed Forces, Extension Education, Grammar, Paragraph Composition
Cheshire, Barbara W. – 1984
In a study to determine whether the writing apprehension of college writers is diminished by regular freewriting and whether apprehension affects the quality of writing, two experimental classes spent ten minutes freewriting each day while two control classes spent ten minutes on vocabulary building. The pretest and posttest consisted to two…
Descriptors: College Students, Free Writing, Higher Education, Writing Apprehension
Murray, Donald M. – 1985
Writing in the first person is not usually tolerated in academic writing under the illusion that the third person insures some kind of objectivity. But writing in the first person is honest, permitting the reader to know that what is being said is a matter of opinion. It is a direct way of speaking about what a writer sees or feels or thinks, and…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Expressive Language, Higher Education, Personal Narratives
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