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TR 6. The Role of Task Representation in Reading-to-Write,
by Linda Flower (Reading-to-Write Report 2). In a
study of college writers, Flower looks at the ways
different writers interpret a "standard" writing task. In
analyzing their reading and writing strategies, Flower
demonstrates how students construct significantly
different representations of a task, leading to
differences in their texts and their writing process.
June, 1987; 35 pages; $4.00.
TR 16. How the Writing Context Shapes College Students'
Strategies for Writing from Sources, by Jennie Nelson
and John R. Hayes. This study explores processes college
students use to write assigned research papers. It
examines the skills and assumptions that freshmen and more
advanced college students bring to the tasks of selecting
paper topics, finding and selecting sources of
information, and developing an organizing structure and
thesis for their papers. August, 1988; 22 pages; $4.00.
TR 22. Promises of Coherence, Weak Content, and Strong
Organization: An Analysis of the Student Texts, by
Margaret Kantz (Reading-to-Write Report 3). This report
describes the ways that readers saw the structures in a
set of freshman essays and discusses the problems the
judges had in agreeing on how some students had
interpreted the writing assignment. Analysis of students'
organizing plans suggests that both students and teachers
may sometimes confuse coherence strategies (for text) with
knowledge transformation strategies (for content). May,
1989; 35 pages; $4.00.
TR 26. The Effects of Prompts Upon Revision: A Glimpse
of the Gap Between Planning and Performance, by Wayne
C. Peck (Reading-to-Write Report 7). This report analyzes
the think-aloud protocols and finished texts of students
asked to revise a written assignment. Students introduced
to task representation and prompted to "interpret for a
purpose of one's own" on revision were far more likely to
change their organizing plan than students prompted merely
to revise to "make the text better." However, the
protocols also revealed a significant group of "intenders"
who made plans they were unable to translate into text.
May, 1989; 26 pages; $4.00.
TR 34. Planning in Writing: The Cognition of a
Constructive Process, by Linda Flower, Karen A.
Schriver, Linda Carey, Christina Haas, and John R. Hayes
(a joint report with the Carnegie Mellon Planning
Project). This paper describes the process adult writers
bring to ill-defined expository tasks, such as writing
essays, articles, reports, and proposals. It presents a
theory of constructive planning based on a detailed
analysis of expert and novice writers and suggests goals
for instruction and the support of planning. July, 1989;
55 pages; $4.50.
TR 35. Differences in Writers' Initial Task
Representations, by Linda Carey, Linda Flower, John R.
Hayes, Karen A. Schriver, and Christina Haas (a joint
report with the Carnegie Mellon Planning Project). This
exploratory study investigates how writers represent their
task to themselves before beginning to write. Examining
the writing plans of expert as well as student writers, it
uncovers ways in which the type of planning writers do and
the quality of their texts correlate. July, 1989; 28
pages; $4.00.
TR 52. Planning Text Together: The Role of Critical
Reflection in Student Collaboration, by Lorraine
Higgins, Linda Flower, and Joseph Petraglia. The authors
argue that student collaboration does not necessarily
foster critical reflection in writing tasks; use of
reflection depends on students' assumptions about peer
interaction and the task itself. Three forms of reflection
were identified in college students' collaborative
planning on a course paper: evaluating, considering
alternatives, and justifying. While not all students
engaged in reflective thinking, those who did were more
likely to produce high-quality plans. September, 1991; 26
pages; $4.00.
TR 56. Collaboration and the Construction of Meaning,
by Linda Flower and Lorraine Higgins. This study explores
the constructive and collaborative process of a group of
college freshmen in a writing course. Flower and Higgins
discuss the theoretical roots of collaborative planning,
look at students' planning as acts of construction and
negotiation, and raise questions about the role students'
strategic knowledge plays in this social/cognitive
process. December, 1991; 74 pages; $5.50.
TR 59. Constructing a Research Paper: A Study of
Students' Goals and Approaches, by Jennie Nelson. This
study considers the processes involved in writing an
academic research paper. Nelson studied twenty-one college
freshmen enrolled in an introductory cognitive psychology
class to determine how students understood the teacher's
research paper assignments, whether students took
extensive notes and produced multiple drafts, and whether
these "high-investment" reading and writing processes led
to higher-quality papers. February, 1992; 16 pages; $3.50.
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