NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 61 to 75 of 86 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McAlexander, Patricia J. – Journal of Developmental Education, 1996
Discusses research on the role of audience awareness in writing and human cognition, arguing that developmental writers exhibit egocentric tendencies and assume that the readers do not need elaboration or transitions. Describes four subskills of audience awareness: clear execution, adequate content, perspective differentiation, and role taking.…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cognitive Processes, Communication Skills, Egocentrism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
O'Grady, Eileen; And Others – English Journal, 1993
Gives seven responses from practicing English teachers concerning ways that they have implemented the writing of various kinds of letters by students into the English curriculum. Demonstrates the efficacy and success of such methods. (HB)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Instructional Effectiveness, Letters (Correspondence), Secondary Education
Grow, Gerald – 1996
A literature review traced a major theoretical shift in the understanding of how people read--from the passive reader who receives and decodes information to the strategic reader who actively chooses what, when, and how to read, reads interpretively, and interprets a text (such as a newspaper article) as an organized structure. The result is a…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Journalism Education
Darling, Gregory J. – 1992
Students may forget that writing involves a relationship between writer and audience--a relationship foregrounded by speech-act theory. The writer should focus on what the audience is to be led to see about the subject. To be distinguished are "locution" (saying something), "illocution" (performance of an act in saying…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Freshman Composition, Higher Education, Letters (Correspondence)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Boice, Robert – Journal of Higher Education, 1995
An approach to college faculty development applies fundamental principles of writing to improvement of the writing of college faculty. A series of rules for writing are presented in six categories: motivation; imagination; fluency; control; audience; and resilience. The rules focus more on efficiencies and economies of writing than content or…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College Instruction, Faculty Development, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smagorinski, Peter – English Journal, 1991
Asserts that role-playing peer-response groups provide effective feedback and help students develop a sense of the characteristics of a particular audience. Illustrates with a sample lesson (a college application essay) by outlining five steps of the process. Offers other uses of the role-playing peer-response groups method. (PRA)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Audience Response, Group Discussion, Peer Evaluation
Evans, George P. – Student Press Review, 1995
Focuses on "emphasis and interest" as elements of power in writing that moves the reader along "roads of news." Suggests revisions in selected sentences from student publications, revisions which improve the sentences to give more information in opening sentences and nonrepetitive amplification in following sentences. Cites…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, News Writing, Revision (Written Composition), Scholastic Journalism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Wong, Albert T. Y. – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2005
This paper studies the composing strategies employed by four advanced L2 writers when they wrote in an academic setting and the rhetorical context of composing, i.e. their mental representations of the intended audience and of the rhetorical purpose for writing. Four student-teachers majoring in English and attending a postgraduate teacher…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Protocol Analysis, Preservice Teachers, Writing (Composition)
Evans, Karin – 1996
In a Purdue University English 101 class, students were told to identify an audience outside the classroom for each paper they wrote. The central challenge to composition teachers is preserving elements valued in teaching academic writing in the context of ill-defined problems to be addressed outside the classroom. Most useful for instructors…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Audience Awareness, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Walsh, S. M. – 1994
While few business people dispute the importance of carefully crafting persuasive, demanding, conciliatory, and bad-news letters, the regular flow of routine communications receives very little meaningful consideration or scrutiny. These routine communications (letters, inquiries, requests, collection letters, complaints, confirmations,…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Business Education, Electronic Mail
Paley, Karen Surman – 1994
An informal study explored the dynamics of the task of writing college application essays, which urge self-revelation but are judged by omnipotent admissions committees. Four students in the top 17% of their class of 194 in a predominantly white suburban school completed think-aloud protocols as they drafted a response to an application question…
Descriptors: Admissions Officers, Audience Awareness, College Admission, College Applicants
Burk, Jill – 1989
A study examined the instructional benefits of a semester-long letter exchange between first graders and preservice teachers in a language arts methods class. When first graders exchange letters with preservice teachers, all are involved in literacy events. Pen pals at both levels benefit from this correspondence. Often the focus is on the…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Grade 1, Higher Education, Letters (Correspondence)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Burnett, Rebecca E. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1990
Discusses collaborative planning as a heuristic for dealing with the rhetorical elements often considered by experienced writers when they plan and prepare documents. Defines collaborative planning, identifies its benefits, discusses its implementation in upper-level business communication courses, and presents a series of examples of students…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Communication, Collaborative Writing, Cooperative Planning
Mohr, Eric S. – 1990
Writing teachers should employ a pragmatic-eclectic approach to help freshman students become acquainted with as many writing models as possible. To privilege one model over the many others is to ignore the student's need for self- and world-discovery. The composition classroom has become the current center of critical reading and thinking skills,…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Audience Awareness, Critical Thinking, Freshman Composition
Aiex, Nola Kortner – 1991
College faculty who teach writing courses might find an examination of early religious literature helpful when trying to explain "writing for an audience" or "audience awareness" to their students. The Jesuit priest who preached to and wrote for the Indians in Brazil during the early colonial period, Jose de Anchieta, is a…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Christianity, Comparative Analysis, Drama
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6