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Haswell, Richard H. | 5 |
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Reports - Research | 4 |
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Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
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Haswell, Richard H. – Written Communication, 1988
Argues that the context of writing improvement helps explain writing error. Findings imply that undue efforts by teachers to prevent mistakes may hinder improvement. (RAE)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Higher Education, Writing Improvement

Haswell, Richard H. – Written Communication, 2000
Investigates normative longitudinal change in student writing during college. Selects nine measures as good representatives of nine factors--factors of independent and bound ideas, idea elaboration and substantiation, local cohesion, establishment of logical boundaries, free modification, fluency, and vocabulary. Finds that eight of the nine…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Longitudinal Studies, Vocabulary Skills, Workplace Literacy
Haswell, Richard H. – 1989
This paper provides additional discussion and interpretation of the original findings of a study examining the development of writing skills across college years. The paper focuses on six interpretive problems from the mass of primary data in an attempt to clarify issues and block off false interpretive trails. The paper discusses: (1) the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Factor Analysis, Graduate Students, Higher Education

Haswell, Richard H. – College English, 1983
Presents a method of evaluating writing that (1) reduces teachers' marking time; (2) facilitates rather than judges student writing; (3) emphasizes performance rather than finished product; (4) provides double feedback, before and after revision; (5) helps bridge successive drafts by requiring immediate revision; and (6) improves student writing.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Feedback, Grammar, Higher Education
Haswell, Richard H. – 1984
To determine whether the development of writing skills changes across college years, a study examined the writing of average-age college freshmen, sophomores, and beginning juniors. Writing samples were obtained during the first week of the first semester, last week of the first semester, first week of the third semester, and first week of the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cohesion (Written Composition), Comparative Analysis, Developmental Stages