Cognitive Processes in WritingLee W. Gregg, Erwin R. Steinberg Routledge, 2016 M07 15 - 190 páginas Originally published in 1980, this title began as a set of questions posed by faculty on the campus of Carnegie-Mellon University: What do we know about how people write? What do we need to know to help people write better? This resulted in an interdisciplinary symposium on "Cognitive Processes in Writing" and subsequently this book, which includes the papers from the symposium as well as further contributions from several of the attendees. It presents a good picture of what research had shown about how people write, of what people were trying to find out at the time and what needed to be done. |
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Academic Press argument form artificial intelligence audience authors begin Bereiter Carnegie-Mellon University cognitive processes Cognitive Psychology Cognitive Science complex letters composing process concept constraints describe devices draft editing Errors and expectations example experience experimental expository writing Flower goal goal organize Gould grade grammar Hayes Hersey Hillsdale hypothesis ideas identify important instructions kind knowledge language learning long-term memory Marlene Scardamalia means-ends analysis memory Miss Sasaki motivation novice dictators operators organization paper paragraph Paris Review Interviews participants performance pre-writing procedure process of discovery process of writing production protocol analysis psychology quarts reader reading require revision rhetorical Rumelhart Scardamalia segments sentence skill speaking specific speech stages strategies subprocesses suggest T-unit tagmemic task teaching text structure theory of writing thought tion topic TRANSLATING trying understand words writing development writing process written York