Publication Date
| In 2015 | 1 |
| Since 2014 | 8 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 11 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 16 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 19 |
Descriptor
| College Students | 7 |
| Writing (Composition) | 6 |
| Foreign Countries | 5 |
| Persuasive Discourse | 5 |
| Writing Research | 5 |
| Discourse Analysis | 4 |
| Essays | 4 |
| Grammar | 4 |
| Undergraduate Students | 4 |
| Writing Assignments | 4 |
| More ▼ | |
Source
| Written Communication | 19 |
Author
| Lancaster, Zak | 2 |
| Aull, Laura L. | 1 |
| Bremner, Stephen | 1 |
| Britt, M. Anne | 1 |
| Brown, Robert | 1 |
| Brunk-Chavez, Beth | 1 |
| Butler, Jodie A. | 1 |
| Cramer, Peter | 1 |
| Crossley, Scott A. | 1 |
| Curran, Paul G. | 1 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 19 |
| Reports - Research | 13 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 5 |
| Information Analyses | 1 |
Education Level
| Postsecondary Education | 19 |
| Higher Education | 14 |
| Adult Education | 3 |
| High Schools | 1 |
| Junior High Schools | 1 |
| Secondary Education | 1 |
Audience
Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results
Hanauer, David I. – Written Communication, 2015
There is increasing usage of creative writing in the ESL/EFL classroom based on the argument that this pedagogy develops writer's voice, emotional engagement, and ownership. Within the context of teaching poetry writing to second language learners, the current article develops a scientific approach to ways in which voice can be measured and…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Creative Writing, Poetry, Computational Linguistics
Aull, Laura L.; Lancaster, Zak – Written Communication, 2014
This article uses corpus methods to examine linguistic expressions of stance in over 4,000 argumentative essays written by incoming first-year university students in comparison with the writing of upper-level undergraduate students and published academics. The findings reveal linguistic stance markers shared across the first-year essays despite…
Descriptors: Essays, Persuasive Discourse, College Freshmen, Undergraduate Students
Crossley, Scott A.; Roscoe, Rod; McNamara, Danielle S. – Written Communication, 2014
This study identifies multiple profiles of successful essays via a cluster analysis approach using linguistic features reported by a variety of natural language processing tools. The findings from the study indicate that there are four profiles of successful writers for the samples analyzed. These four profiles are linguistically distinct from one…
Descriptors: Essays, Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, Multivariate Analysis
Doolan, Stephen M. – Written Communication, 2014
Developmental composition courses serve a sizable and growing number of Generation 1.5 students, or long-term U.S. resident language learners, and it is believed that language challenges may be part of Generation 1.5 writers' difficulty in controlling the academic register. The current study investigates possible similarities and differences…
Descriptors: Writing Difficulties, Student Characteristics, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language)
Pigg, Stacey; Grabill, Jeffrey T.; Brunk-Chavez, Beth; Moore, Jessie L.; Rosinski, Paula; Curran, Paul G. – Written Communication, 2014
This article shares results from a multi-institutional study of the role of writing in college students' lives. Using case studies built from a larger population survey along with interviews, diaries, and a daily SMS texting protocol, we found that students report SMS texting, lecture notes, and emails to be the most frequent writing…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Writing (Composition), College Students, Surveys
Swales, John M. – Written Communication, 2014
This is a corpus-based study of a key aspect of academic writing in one discipline (biology) by final-year undergraduates and first-, second-, and third-year graduate students. The papers come from the Michigan Corpus of Upper-level Student Papers, a freely available electronic database. The principal aim of the study is to examine the extent of…
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Academic Discourse, Writing Across the Curriculum
Lancaster, Zak – Written Communication, 2014
Drawing on the appraisal framework from systemic functional linguistics (SFL), this article examines patterns of stance in a corpus of 92 high- and low-graded argumentative papers written in the context of an upper-level course in economics. It interprets differential patterns of stance in students' texts in light of interview commentaries…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Economics, Persuasive Discourse, Writing (Composition)
Cramer, Peter; Eisenhart, Christopher – Written Communication, 2014
Readers' objectivity and bias evaluations of news texts were investigated in order to better understand the process by which readers make these kinds of judgments and the evidence on which they base them. Readers were primed to evaluate news texts for objectivity and bias, and their selections and metacommentary were analyzed. Readers…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Textbooks
Leijten, Marielle; Van Waes, Luuk – Written Communication, 2013
Keystroke logging has become instrumental in identifying writing strategies and understanding cognitive processes. Recent technological advances have refined logging efficiency and analytical outputs. While keystroke logging allows for ecological data collection, it is often difficult to connect the fine grain of logging data to the underlying…
Descriptors: Writing Processes, Cognitive Processes, Writing Strategies, Data Collection
Bremner, Stephen – Written Communication, 2012
This article tracks the socialization of a Chinese intern into a Hong Kong PR company and considers the factors that enabled her to move toward acquiring the discourse of the profession. Taking a case study approach, the research is based on a detailed daily journal written by the intern during her internship, and two interviews. Over the 3-month…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Internship Programs, Socialization, Organizational Culture
Tachino, Tosh – Written Communication, 2012
Recent scholarship in genre studies has extended its focus from studying single genres to multiple genres, as well as how these genres interact with one another. This essay seeks to contribute to this growing scholarship by adding a new concept, "intermediary genre". That is, a genre that facilitates the "uptake" of a genre by another genre. This…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Literary Genres, Scholarship, Scientific Research
Thompson, Isabelle – Written Communication, 2009
In this microanalysis, a university writing center conference with an experienced tutor and a student he has never met before is analyzed for the tutor's use of direct instruction, cognitive scaffolding, and motivational scaffolding. Along with verbal expressions of scaffolding, this analysis also considers the tutor's hand gestures--topic…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Writing (Composition), Laboratories, College Instruction
Kenkel, James; Yates, Robert – Written Communication, 2009
In the tradition of work by Shaughnessy (1977) and Bartholomae (1980) applying concepts from second language acquisition research to developing writing, we explore the commonalities of L1 and L2 writers on the specific level of linguistic choices needed to order information within and across sentence boundaries. We propose that many of the kinds…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, Second Language Learning, Sentences, College Students
Kinloch, Valerie – Written Communication, 2009
In what ways do students understand and document literacies within out-of-school communities in their school-sponsored writings? How can community literacy sites and public perceptions of community disrepair stimulate students to create written responses on the politics of place? These questions are at the heart of this article's investigation…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Correlation, Undergraduate Students, Urban Environment
Wolfe, Christopher R.; Britt, M. Anne; Butler, Jodie A. – Written Communication, 2009
This article describes a cognitive argumentation schema for written arguments and presents three empirical studies on the "myside" bias--the tendency to ignore or exclude evidence against one's position. Study 1 examined the consequences of conceding, rebutting, and denying other-side information. Rebuttal led to higher ratings of agreement and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Persuasive Discourse, Program Effectiveness, Expository Writing
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1 | 2
Peer reviewed
Direct link
