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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 16 to 30 of 234 results
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Pomerantz, Anne; Kearney, Erin – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
This paper offers a narrative framework for understanding how multilingual graduate students make sense of the continuous and frequently contradictory talk they engage in as they write. It illustrates how attention to the telling, form, and content of the stories such students relate about their ongoing interactions around academic writing can…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Discourse Communities, Graduate Students, Multilingualism
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Johnson, Mark D.; Mercado, Leonardo; Acevedo, Anthony – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
This study contributes to L2 writing research which seeks to tie predictions of the Limited Attentional Capacity Model (Skehan, 1998; Skehan & Foster, 2001) and Cognition Hypothesis (Robinson, 2001, 2005, 2011a, 2011b) to models of working memory in L1 writing (Kellogg, 1996). The study uses a quasi-experimental research design to investigate…
Descriptors: Research Design, Writing Research, Grammar, Oral Language
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Porte, Graeme; Richards, Keith – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
This paper discusses the meaning and range of replication in L2 research from both quantitative and qualitative perspectives. In the first half of the paper, it will be argued that key quantitative studies need to be replicated to have their robustness and generalizability tested and that this is a requirement of scientific inquiry. Such research…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Qualitative Research, Writing Research, Research Methodology
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Abasi, Ali R. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Understanding how individuals interact with texts in situated writing acts and what goes into the process of writing in various social, cultural, and educational contexts has recently been laid out as a broadened research agenda for cultural studies of writing within the framework of intercultural rhetoric. However, there is a paucity of classroom…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Student Attitudes, Writing Instruction, Indo European Languages
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Ortega, Lourdes – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
In this closing commentary, I first briefly recognize areas that have made the dialogue between the fields of second language (L2) writing and second language acquisition (SLA) difficult in the past. I then offer some comments on the interfaces that are brought to the fore by the contributions gathered in the special issue. The themes explored are…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Second Language Learning, Teacher Improvement, Faculty Development
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Bitchener, John – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
For more than 30 years, different opinions about whether written corrective feedback (CF) is a worthwhile pedagogical practice for L2 learning and acquisition have been voiced. Despite the arguments for and against its potential to help L2 learners acquire the target language and the inconclusive findings across studies that have sought answers to…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Feedback (Response), Second Language Learning, Error Correction
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Williams, Jessica – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Writing is often seen as having a minor role in second language learning. This article explores recent research that suggests that writing can have a facilitative role in language development. In particular, it focuses on three features of writing: (1) its slower pace, and (2) the enduring record that it leaves, both of which can encourage…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Hanaoka, Osamu; Izumi, Shinichi – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
The assumption underlying research on feedback is that, in writing, feedback is something provided for what actually shows up in the learner's text. However, a new dimension may need to be added to the debate in light of the Noticing Hypothesis, the Output Hypothesis, and the emerging evidence on what L2 learners actually notice as they produce…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Evidence, English (Second Language), Feedback (Response)
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Kormos, Judit – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Although the role of individual differences in second language (L2) speech has been extensively studied, the impact of individual differences on the process of second language writing and the written product has been a neglected area of research. In this paper, I review the most important individual difference factors that might explain variations…
Descriptors: Role, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Individual Differences
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Polio, Charlene – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
The controversies surrounding written error correction can be traced to Truscott (1996) in his polemic against written error correction. He claimed that empirical studies showed that error correction was ineffective and that this was to be expected "given the nature of the correction process and "the nature of language learning" (p. 328, emphasis…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Linguistic Theory, Error Correction, Writing (Composition)
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Wigglesworth, Gillian; Storch, Neomy – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2012
Writing is generally thought of as an activity which is carried out individually, often with feedback then provided by a teacher or colleague. While the use of pair or small group work in the second language classroom in relation to oral work has been extensively studied, and its benefits well documented, there are only a few studies which have…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Collaborative Writing, Second Language Learning, Writing (Composition)
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Negretti, Raffaella; Kuteeva, Maria – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2011
Although the concept of metacognition has received considerable attention for its impact on learning across disciplinary areas, it has not been sufficiently discussed in the context of L2 academic reading and writing. In this paper, we bring together two theoretical frameworks, genre analysis and metacognition theory, and discuss the concept of…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Writing Assignments, Metacognition, Metalinguistics
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Kormos, Judit – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2011
The research presented in this paper aimed to investigate the linguistic and discourse characteristics of narratives produced by upper-intermediate foreign language learners in a bilingual secondary school. In our analyses we used a variety of linguistic and discourse variables and a recently developed computer tool (Coh-Metrix 2.0: McNamara,…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Second Language Learning, Personal Narratives, Secondary School Students
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DePalma, Michael-John; Ringer, Jeffrey M. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2011
In this paper, we argue that discussions of transfer in L2 writing and composition studies have focused primarily on the reuse of past learning and thus have not adequately accounted for the adaptation of learned writing knowledge in unfamiliar situations. In an effort to expand disciplinary discussions of transfer in L2 writing and composition…
Descriptors: Writing Across the Curriculum, Rhetoric, Educational Psychology, Transfer of Training
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Yasuda, Sachiko – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2011
This study examines how novice foreign language (FL) writers develop their genre awareness, linguistic knowledge, and writing competence in a genre-based writing course that incorporates email-writing tasks. To define genre, the study draws on systemic functional linguistics (SFL) that sees language as a resource for making meaning in a particular…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Linguistics, Second Language Learning, Writing (Composition)
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