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Sheppard, Valerie – 1981
Picture books provide effective models for student writing. For purposes of organization and writing lessons, the models found in picture books may be divided into three groups: (1) language patterns; (2) story structures; and (3) literary elements. Language patterns include repetitive sentence patterns, verse forms, word patterns, and cultural…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Patterns, Picture Books, Prewriting
Isenberg, Joan; Jacob, Evelyn – 1983
A week-long exploratory observational case study of two white middle class girls (4 years, 9 months of age) investigated how children incorporate reading and writing literacy skills and knowledge of literacy artifacts into their play activities. Also examined was the role these play activities have in the development of literacy. Data were…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Literacy, Play, Preschool Children
Jenseth, Richard – 1984
The expressive reading journal aims to break through student passivity by asking students to write extensively and expressively about what they read, each time they read, and to make discoveries and take possession of what they read. This type of journal in the academic course depends for its usefulness on the nature of expressive language, the…
Descriptors: Prewriting, Reading Improvement, Student Attitudes, Teaching Methods
Keller, Rodney D. – 1985
The rhetorical cycle is a step-by-step approach that provides classroom experience before students actually write, thereby making the writing process less frustrating for them. This approach consists of six sequential steps: reading, thinking, speaking, listening, discussing, and finally writing. Readings serve not only as models of rhetorical…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Higher Education, Prewriting, Sequential Learning
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
Barnhart, June E.; Sulzby, Elizabeth – 1986
A study examined the developmental nature of early literacy in relation to variations in task demands, general cognitive development, and socioeconomic background. Subjects (N=32) were placed in two groups of 16 suburban Chicago kindergarten students that were designated either low income group (LIG) or high income group (HIG). The subjects,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten Children
Richmond, Kent C. – 1984
Students of English as a second language (ESL) often come to the classroom with little or no experience in writing in any language and with inaccurate assumptions about writing. Rather than correct these assumptions, teachers often seem to unwittingly reinforce them, actually inducing errors into their students' work. Teacher-induced errors occur…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, English (Second Language), Error Patterns, Second Language Instruction
Robinson, Susan S. – 1990
The purpose of this study was to examine the way in which early childhood educators introduce reading and writing to 4- and 5-year-olds. A random sampling of the 903 public and private preschools registered with the Human Services Department in a midwestern state was conducted. Questionnaires were mailed to 687 randomly selected early childhood…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Educational Needs, Educational Practices, Emergent Literacy
Moss, R. Kay; Stansell, John C. – 1981
Young children learn many important things about language from the television and radio ads they encounter that can help them learn to read and write. They learn that print carries messages that are personally important to them, that whatever can be said can also be written, what some forms of written language look like, and that language use can…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Language Experience Approach, Learning Activities, Radio
Manning, Maryann; And Others – 1986
What first graders chose to put in their journals when given no direct suggestions for topics was studied during the 1985-86 school year in a suburban Birmingham, Alabama, classroom. Journal writing was scheduled for 30 minutes daily throughout the school year, but not all children chose to write every day. At the end of the year, all of the…
Descriptors: Child Development, Creative Development, Creative Writing, Grade 1
Allen, Jeanne Vasterling – 1985
Writing apprehension needs to be understood and solutions found for it so that students' fears can be lessened and their success with writing increased. Carl Roger's client-centered, nondirective psychotherapy applies well to teaching composition. Composition teachers need to be real, empathic, and accepting, and should thus shed their…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Higher Education, Humanistic Education, Psychoeducational Methods
Ellenzweig, Judith – 1989
Project Solid Start was designed to test the hypothesis that a carefully structured, integrated, and intensive program reinforcing the regular first grade curriculum in all aspects of the language arts would significantly reduce the numbers of children experiencing delay, difficulty, and failure in the acquisition of reading and writing skills.…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 1, High Risk Students, Primary Education
Stallard, Charles K. – 1979
Writing readiness is defined in this paper as the skills and understandings necessary for minimum success in completing a writing task. The skills discussed are divided into three areas of need: to give students a clear, operational concept of the function and structure of composition that includes the concepts of paragraphs, sentences,…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Higher Education, Secondary Education
Darnall, Sherry L. – 1989
A research review examined approaches on how to tap into writing so that students will be motivated to want to express their thoughts on paper. In addition, interviews were conducted with a well known principal and teacher of an inner city school in Chicago, Illinois and with a professor of writing at Murray State University in Kentucky. A writing…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Journal Writing, Prewriting, Reading Writing Relationship
Gambrell, Linda B. – 1982
To test the hypothesis that induced mental imagery would facilitate the contemplation and reflection that have been suggested as being important to the writing process, a study investigated the effects of instructions to induce mental imagery upon the written language of young children. Subjects, 28 third grade children, were randomly assigned to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Grade 3, Language Usage