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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 7. A Sisyphean Task: Historical Perspectives on the
Relationship Between Writing and Reading
Instruction, by Geraldine Joncich Clifford (a joint
report with the Center for the Study of Reading). Using
perspectives drawn from American educational and social
history, Clifford identifies five historical forces and
probes their interacting influence on English education:
the democratization of schooling, the professionalization
of educators, technological change, the functionalist or
pragmatic character of American culture, and liberationist
ideologies. September, 1987; 47 pages; $4.00.
TR 8. Writing and Reading in the Classroom, by James
Britton (a joint report with the Center for the Study of
Reading). Britton explores the classroom as an environment
for literacy and literacy learning. He discusses ways in
which teachers have developed strategies for encouraging
children to learn to write-and-read--activities that have
often been dissociated in classrooms but that together
create a literacy learning environment. August, 1987; 25
pages; $4.00.
TR 10. Movement Into Word Reading and Spelling: How
Spelling Contributes to Reading, by Linnea C. Ehri (a
joint report with the Center for the Study of Reading).
Drawing on studies of the role of spelling in the reading
process, Ehri discusses ways in which spelling contributes
to the development of reading and, conversely, how reading
contributes to spelling development. The role of writing
in reading and spelling development is also discussed.
September, 1987; 15 pages; $3.50.
TR 13. Writing and Reading: The Transactional Theory,
by Louise M. Rosenblatt (a joint report with the Center
for the Study of Reading). This report focuses on some
epistemologically-based concepts relevant to the
comparison of the reading and writing process which
Rosenblatt believes merit fuller study and application in
teaching and research. January, 1988; 20 pages; $3.50.
TR 17. Written Rhetorical Syntheses: Processes and
Products, by Margaret Kantz. Addressing the ways in which
college students synthesize source material when they
write research papers, Kantz presents case study analyses
of the composing processes and written products of three
undergraduates, supplemented by quantitative analyses of a
group of seventeen undergraduate research papers. From
this analysis, she offers a tentative model of a
synthesizing process. January, 1989; 26 pages; $4.00.
TR 18. Readers as Writers Composing from Sources, by
Nancy Nelson Spivey and James R. King. Extending research
on writing processes as well as reading processes, this
study examines the report-writing of sixth, eighth, and
tenth graders, as accomplished and less accomplished
readers work with source texts and compose their own new
texts. Analyses reveal composing patterns connected not
only to grade level but to reading ability as well.
February, 1989; 30 pages; $4.00.
TR 19. Rethinking Remediation: Toward a Social-Cognitive
Understanding of Problematic Reading and
Writing, by Glynda Hull and Mike Rose. This paper
presents a case study of the writing produced by a
community college student, considered "at risk" of not
succeeding in school, for a basic reading and writing
class. The authors reveal what writing strategies, habits,
rules, and assumptions characterize the writing skills of
this underprepared student and suggest a pedagogy to move
such students toward more conventional discourse. May,
1989; 16 pages; $3.50.
TR 20. Forms of Writing and Rereading From Writing: A
Preliminary Report, by Elizabeth Sulzby, June Barnhart,
and Joyce Hieshima (a joint report with the Center for the
Study of Reading). The authors report on a study of young
children's use of five emergent forms of writing--
scribble, drawing, non-phonetic letter strings, phonetic
or invented spelling, and conventional orthography.
Describing developmental patterns of writing and rereading
from writing found among kindergarten children, the
authors discuss ways that children build a repertoire of
useful linguistic tools using these five forms. July,
1989; 34 pages; $4.00.
TR 21. Studying Cognition in Context: Introduction to
the Study, by Linda Flower (Reading-to-Write Report 1).
Reading-to-write is an act of critical literacy central to
much of academic discourse. This report introduces the
Reading-to-Write project, which examined the cognitive
processes of reading-to-write as they were embedded in the
social context of a college course. Flower discusses the
background to the project and provides an overview of the
study design, which included an exploratory study
(Technical Report 6) and a teaching study (Technical
Reports 22-30). May, 1989; 42 pages; $4.00.
TR 24. Exploring the Cognition of Reading-to-Write, by
Victoria Stein (Reading-to-Write Report 5). This report
describes how a comparison of the think-aloud protocols of
36 students showed differences in ways students monitored
their comprehension, elaborated, structured the reading,
and planned their texts. A study of these patterns of
cognition and case studies of selected students revealed
both some successful and some problematic strategies
students brought to this reading-to-write task. May, 1989;
39 pages; $4.00.
TR 25. Elaboration: Using What You Know, by Victoria
Stein (Reading-to-Write Report 6). This report provides a
more in-depth look at one of the cognitive processes used
in reading-to-write, namely elaboration. The process of
elaboration allows students to use prior knowledge not
only for comprehension and critical thinking, but also for
structuring and planning their papers. However, this study
found that much of this valuable thinking failed to be
transferred into students' papers, although it had an
important indirect influence. May, 1989; 24 pages; $4.00.
TR 27. Translating Context into Action, by John Ackerman
(Reading-to-Write Report 8). Based on protocols, texts,
and interviews, this report describes a set of "initial
reading strategies" nearly every freshman used to begin
the task--strategies that appear to reflect their training
in summarization and recitation of information. From this
limited and often unexamined starting point, students then
had to construct a solution path which either clung to,
modified, or rejected this a-rhetorical initial approach
to reading and writing. May, 1989; 31 pages; $4.00.
TR 30. Expanding the Repertoire: An Anthology of
Practical Approaches for the Teaching of Writing,
edited by Kathleen McCormick (Reading-to-Write Report 11).
This set of classroom approaches, written by teachers
collaborating on a course that grew out of the Reading-to-
Write project, helps students to explore their assumptions
about their own reading and writing processes, become more
aware of the cognitive and cultural implications of their
choices, and find alternative approaches to the writing
task. May, 1989; 77 pages; $5.50.
TR 40. Reading, Writing, and Knowing: The Role of
Disciplinary Knowledge in Comprehension and
Composing, by John M. Ackerman. To explore how
experienced writers use both knowledge of a specific
discipline and knowledge of general rhetorical skills,
Ackerman analyses 40 synthesis essays written by graduate
students in psychology and business. He finds that reading
comprehension and composing processes are interrelated.
March, 1990; 42 pages; $4.00.
TR 45. Effects of Controlled, Primerese Language on the
Reading Process, by Paul Ammon, Herbert D. Simons, and
Charles Elster. Millions of American children have
received beginning reading instruction based on
"controlled" texts in which words from a restricted
vocabulary are used repeatedly in short sentences. To
determine whether such "primerese" language makes learning
to read easier or more difficult, the authors rewrote four
primerese stories from basal readers to use more "natural"
language. They then compared the effects of the original
versus the rewritten texts on the reading process and
reading comprehension of first graders. December, 1990; 22
pages; $4.00.
TR 46. Plain Language for Expert or Lay Audiences:
Designing Text Using Protocol-Aided Revision, by
Karen A. Schriver. This paper addresses both critics and
proponents of the "plain language" movement, arguing for a
redefinition of plain English and suggesting a method for
assessing whether or not a text is indeed clear to its
intended readership. Using two case studies, Schriver
details the process of protocol-aided revision, which uses
reader feedback to help writers to modify texts for expert
or lay audiences. She also provides a cognitive model of
the process of protocol-aided revision. February, 1991; 38
pages; $4.00.
TR 47. Transforming Texts: Constructive Processes in
Reading and Writing, by Nancy Nelson Spivey. This paper
focuses on the complex processes involved when writers
compose from sources, processes in which writing
influences reading and reading influences writing. Arguing
that this "hybrid act of literacy" has been neglected in
research, Spivey discusses ways writers organize, select,
and connect content as they appropriate source materials
and transform them in generating new texts. February,
1991; 24 pages; $4.00.
TR 55. Writing from Sources: Authority in Text and
Task, by Stuart Greene. In this study, fifteen
undergraduates in a European history seminar were asked to
write either a report or a problem-based essay,
integrating prior knowledge with information from six
textual sources. Analyses of the student essays as well as
think-aloud protocols and reading-writing logs revealed
that the groups differed significantly in their
interpretations of the two tasks and in their approaches
to restructuring textual information; students writing
problem-based essays included significantly more content
units in their essays than students writing reports.
October, 1991; 32 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.
OP 1. Interpretive Acts: Cognition and the Construction
of Discourse, by Linda Flower. This paper discusses the
cognitive processes which make reading and writing
constructive (and intentional) acts. Flower elucidates a
cognitive framework for understanding the acts of reading
and writing, contrasting it with other familiar frameworks
from other disciplines. September, 1987; 18 pages; $3.50.
OP 4. The Construction of Purpose in Writing and
Reading, by Linda Flower. Based on a decade of studies of
the cognitive processes student and expert writers reveal
while composing text, this paper discusses two
interrelated concerns: how writers come by/find/create
their sense of purpose, and whether readers are aware of
or are affected by writers' purposeful text construction.
July, 1988; 21 pages; $4.00.
OP 5. Writing and Reading Working Together, by Robert J.
Tierney, Rebekah Caplan, Linnea Ehri, Mary K. Healy, and
Mary Hurdlow (from a joint project with the Center for the
Study of Reading). Drawing on their teaching experience
and research perspectives, the authors discuss specific
classroom practices in which writing and reading work
together. They focus on students' social and personal
growth, growth in their learning, development of their
critical reading, and improvements in their writing and
reading skills as a result of these practices. August,
1988; 37 pages; $4.00.
OP 7. The Problem-Solving Processes of Writers and
Readers, by Ann S. Rosebery, Linda Flower, Beth Warren,
Betsy Bowen, Bertram C. Bruce, Margaret Kantz, and Ann M.
Penrose (from a joint project with the Center for the
Study of Reading). The authors focus on writing and
reading as forms of problem-solving that are shaped by
communicative purpose. They examine the kinds of problems
that arise as writers and readers attempt to communicate
with one another--as writers and readers try to write to a
specific audience, for example, or as readers try to
interpret an author's meaning--and the strategies they
draw upon to resolve those problems. January, 1989; 30
pages; $4.00.
OP 8. Writing and Reading in the Community, by Robert
Gundlach, Marcia Farr, and Jenny Cook-Gumperz (from a
joint project with the Center for the Study of Reading).
This paper reviews recent scholarship on writing and
reading outside of school--that is, in the community, both
at home and in the workplace. Gundlach, Farr, and Cook-
Gumperz explore writing and reading as social practices
and consider the implications of this social view of
literacy outside of school for writing and reading
instruction in school. March, 1989; 41 pages; $4.00.
OP 9. Bridges: From Personal Writing to the Formal
Essay, by James Moffett. Moffett discusses the transition
from writing personal-experience themes to writing formal
essays. As a framework for understanding this transition,
he presents a schema that groups different writing types
and shows their connections. As illustration, he includes
examples of student writing from his anthology series
Active Voices. March, 1989; 19 pages; $3.50.
OP 12. Construing Constructivism: Reading Research in
the United States, by Nancy Nelson Spivey.
Constructivism portrays the reader as building a mental
representation from textual cues by organizing, selecting,
and connecting content. This paper reviews research on
these aspects of reading and assesses the impact of
constructivism on four reading-related issues in the
United States: readability of texts, assessment of reading
ability, instruction in reading, and conception of
literacy. June, 1989; 24 pages; $4.00.
OP 29. Mining Texts in Reading to Write, by Stuart
Greene. In this paper, Greene proposes a set of strategies
for connecting reading and writing, discussing ways
writers read and select information from source texts when
they have a sense of authorship. In order to make clear
how authorship affects reading, Greene explores three key
"excavation" strategies students employ for what he terms
"mining" a text--reconstructing context, inferring or
imposing structure, and seeing choices in language.
October, 1991; 18 pages; $3.50.
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