Writing as a learning activity /

Writing as a learning activity / edited by Perry D. Klein, Pietro Boscolo, Lori C. Kirkpatrick, Carmen Gelati. - 1 online resource (viii, 388 pages) : illustrations - Studies in writing ; volume 28 . - Studies in writing ; v. 28. .

Includes bibliographical references (pages 327-374) and indexes.

Introduction : new directions in writing as a learning activity / Writing to argue : writing as a tool for oral and written argumentation / Writing as a vocabulary learning tool / Supportive writing assignments for less skilled writers in the mathematics classroom / Writing to engage students in historical reasoning / Writing to learn from multiple-source inquiry activities in history / Strategy instruction in writing in academic disciplines / Writing a synthesis from multiple sources as a learning activity / Summary writing as a tool for improving the comprehension of expository texts : an intervention study in a primary school / Moving from "fuzziness" to canonical knowledge : the role of writing in developing cognitive and representational resources / Writing about reading to advance thinking : a study in situated cognitive development / University students' knowledge construction during face to face collaborative writing / Knowledge construction in collaborative science writing : strategic simplicity, distributed complexity, and explanatory sophistication / Perry D. Klein [and others] -- Silvia Del Longo and Lerida Cisotto -- Kenan Dikilitaş and Jerome C. Bush -- Markus Linnemann and Sabine Stephany -- Jannet van Drie, Carla van Boxtel and Martine Braaksma -- Jennifer Wiley [and others] -- Charles A. MacArthur -- Mar Mateos [and others] -- Carmen Gelati, Nicoletta Galvan and Pietro Boscolo -- Brian Hand, Mary Grace Villanueva and Sae Yeol Yoon -- Charles Bazerman, Kelly Simon and Patrick Pieng -- Minna Nykopp, Miika Marttunen and Leena Laurinen -- Perry D. Klein.

This book offers an account of the potentials of writing as a tool for learning. Four aspects of writing emerge particularly clearly through the chapters. First, writing to learn depends on the cognitive strategies of the writer; instruction in such strategies contributes significantly to the ability to use writing as a learning tool. Secondly, strategies for writing and reasoning are largely specific to academic disciplines. Thirdly, writing is not, as traditionally conceived, only an individual ability, but also an activity that is social. It is a collaborative practice facilitated by representational tools - books, computer, notes, schemata, drawings, etc. - by which knowledge is acquired, organized, and transformed at various levels of complexity. Fourthly, writing is a productive activity, exemplified by the varied and positive effects of writing on learning different subjects at various educational levels.


English.

9789004265011 (e-book) 9004265015 (e-book) (hardback ; alk. paper) (hardback ; alk. paper)

10.1163/9789004265011. doi

GBB3B9069 bnb

016590080 Uk


English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching.
Report writing--Study and teaching.
Rapports--Rédaction--Étude et enseignement.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES--Composition & Creative Writing.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES--Rhetoric.
REFERENCE--Writing Skills.
English language--Rhetoric--Study and teaching.
Report writing--Study and teaching.


Electronic books.
Electronic books.
Electronic books.

PE1408 / .W77195 2014

808/.042071

O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonepat-Narela Road, Sonepat, Haryana (India) - 131001

Send your feedback to glus@jgu.edu.in

Hosted, Implemented & Customized by: BestBookBuddies   |   Maintained by: Global Library