Technical Reports and Occasional Papers

tech report

Peer Response and Collaboration


TR 4. Historical Overview: Groups in the Writing Classroom, by Anne DiPardo and Sarah Warshauer Freedman. DiPardo and Freedman review research on the use of peer groups in the classroom, focusing on peer response groups in the writing class. They discuss the role of groups in the collaborative process of language learning and suggest directions for future research on collaborative learning, particularly groups in writing classrooms. September, 1987; 17 pages; $3.50.
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TR 12. Peer Response Groups in Two Ninth-Grade Classrooms, by Sarah Warshauer Freedman. Freedman looks at peer response groups in two ninth-grade college preparatory classrooms. Her analysis of the students' face-to-face interactions reveals how students approach the substance and form of their writing, self- and other- evaluation, problem-solving, and audience awareness. October, 1987; 29 pages; $4.00.
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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.
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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.
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TR 60. Collaboration Between Children Learning to Write: Can Novices be Masters? by Colette Daiute and Bridget Dalton. Daiute and Dalton explore the role of peer collaboration in literacy development as a case study in the broader inquiry on the social nature of learning and cognitive development. They analyze individual and collaborative stories produced by low-achieving urban third-graders on a computer, as well as transcripts of the talk between collaborative pairs, to illustrate that children can learn and use complex story elements by working with their peers. April, 1992; 54 pages; $4.50.
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