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Peer reviewedvan Herk, Aritha – Journal of Educational Thought/Revue de la Pensee Educative, 1990
Drawing on works of literary theory and postmodern fiction, discusses the relationship between reader, writer, and text. Examines the boundaries and frontiers that writers patrol and readers inhabit as they live out their personal lives with texts. (DMM)
Descriptors: Authors, Fiction, Literary Criticism, Literature
Peer reviewedFu, Danling; Lamme, Linda – Journal of Children's Literature, 2002
Discusses a literature-inspired model of teaching writing and two scenarios of reading and writing connections in the classroom. Presents several reading and writing lessons drawn from the children's book "The Bat Boy and His Violin" by Gavin Curtis. Discusses Curtis' craft and demonstrates how to use this book to teach writing. Includes brief…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Reader Response, Reading Instruction
Liebman-Kleine, JoAnne – 1985
In developing an interactive model of composing, this paper discusses three groups of reader-oriented theories, each of which provides composing theorists with some research and theory to use in developing such a model. First the paper discusses the main principle of the literary reader-response theorists--that the meaning and value of texts do…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Language Processing, Linguistic Theory, Reader Response
Roskelly, Hephzibah – 1988
Writing does more than demonstrate the interpretive process active in the mind of a student, it influences and directs the interpretive process in writing. Writing to read allows the expressive dimension to find an overt, secure place in the interpretive framework of a student's learning. By examining a student's theoretical explanation of her…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Critical Reading, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Dierking, Connie Campbell; Anderson-McElveen, Susan – 1998
Intended for teachers, this workbook uses 20 well-known children's books as models to teach expository and narrative writing skills. The workbook teaches students about brainstorming, focus, organization, elaboration, and writing conventions with readily-available quality children's literature, such as "When I Was Young in the…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Class Activities, Elementary Education, Language Arts
Baer, Eugene M. – 1988
A study investigated the effects on students' cognitive development of a freshman composition course in which reading, writing, and discussion were integrated in an attempt to increase students' awareness of ambiguities, uncertainties, and complexities. The design of the one-semester course was derived from William Perry's theory of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Research, Cognitive Development, Freshman Composition
Flower, Linda – 1987
Noting that the new literary and rhetorical theories are concerned with revealing the constructive nature of productive and interpretive processes, this paper examines the cognitive processes in reading and writing which make them constructive and intentional acts, and how reader and writer "negotiate" meaning in light of context, reader…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Metacognition, Problem Solving
Peer reviewedVanDeWeghe, Richard – English Quarterly, 1987
Examines how students make and revise meaning when writing in purposeful, informal ways about their interpretation of literary texts. Also reveals five ways in which students develop their understanding of literature through writing. Suggests a mutually enriching reading-writing process of interpretation. (AEW)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Interpretive Skills, Literary Criticism, Reader Response
Peer reviewedArrington, Phillip – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1984
Draws an analogy between reading and writing, and between reading and responding to the world. Concludes that reading, like writing and responding to the world around us, is revisionary. (MS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Dissonance, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, English Instruction
Peer reviewedDillard, Jill; Dahl, Karin – Language Arts, 1986
Describes a three-week seminar for education students that simulated the environment of the classrooms in which they will eventually teach and focused on the writing process, the reading process, and the reading-writing relationship. (SRT)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Peer Evaluation, Reader Response, Reader Text Relationship
Peer reviewedCianciolo, Patricia J. – English Journal, 1985
Presents comments by authors of children's and adolescent literature about qualities of good writers, which include being a good reader, caring about language, being well educated, being an alert observer, being a good story teller, and being a compulsive writer. (EL)
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Authors, Childrens Literature, Creative Writing
Lang, Frederick K. – 1986
This paper provides a creative approach to developing literary understanding and writing ability in students in a college introduction to literature course. Eight assignments are described which pair literary works having some feature in common. A sample suggestion from the first group of exercises, concerned with characterization, is as follows:…
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
Peer reviewedSakiey, E. H.; Cagney, M. A. – Reading Horizons, 1987
Describes the Directed Reading-Writing Activity (DRWA) as a framework that helps high school students write about the information they acquire through reading. Discusses how the DRWA's three steps--preparation, involvement, and reaction--extends the thought processes associated with reading comprehension into effective writing. (AEW)
Descriptors: High Schools, Reader Response, Reading Comprehension, Reading Instruction
Peer reviewedAu, Kathryn H.; And Others – Reading Teacher, 1990
Shares a curriculum framework based on six aspects of literacy: ownership, reading comprehension, writing process, word identification, language and vocabulary knowledge, and voluntary reading. Notes that this framework is consistent with a whole literacy approach, and includes an assessment system and provisions for accountability. (MG)
Descriptors: Accountability, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Reader Response
McClure, Amy A. – 1986
In an effort to understand the effect of a nurturing, supportive environment on children's understanding of poetry, a study was conducted involving the observation of 42 rural fifth and sixth grade students and their two teachers over a school year. During the course of the year the children were invited to respond to published, professional…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Writing, Intermediate Grades, Peer Evaluation
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