Search results for author:"Helen J. Schwartz"
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Hypothesis Testing with Computer-Assisted Instruction
Helen J. Schwartz
Educational Technology Vol. 23, No. 10 (1983) pp. 26–27
Describes the components of SEEN, a computer program which provides an environment that prompts the user to create, support, and test an hypothesis, and its applications in an introductory world literature and an art history course. (MBR)
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Literacy Theory in the Classroom: Computers in Literature and Writing
Helen J. Schwartz
Computers and Composition Vol. 7, No. 1 (1989) pp. 49–63
Illustrates how the following educational goals are being reached with existing software and hardware: integrating reading and writing instruction; providing a new sense of community among readers; and encouraging a shared exploration of cultural...
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The Student as Producer and Consumer of Text: Computer Uses in English Studies
Helen J. Schwartz
Journal of Teaching Writing Vol. 7, No. 1 (1988) pp. 57–66
Argues that computers offer a means of integrating literary analysis, imaginative writing, and expository writing by both professional and student writers. (JAD)
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The Computer Medium in Writing for Discovery
Helen J. Schwartz; Christine Y. Fitzpatrick; Brian A. Huot
Computers and Composition Vol. 11, No. 2 (1994) pp. 137–49
Asks undergraduate students to respond to a series of questions by hand and using a word processor. Finds that some students felt profoundly disadvantaged writing by hand, and students who felt uncomfortable on the computer wrote longer and better...
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21st-Century Citizen Scholars: Testing What Is Possible and Desirable
Helen J. Schwartz
A pilot program at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis (IUPUI), called the Twenty-First Century Citizen Scholars, explores and evaluates the pedagogy of computer conferencing in writing-across-the-curriculum and makes sure of equal...
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Teaching Stylistic Simplicity with a Computerized Readability Formula
Helen J. Schwartz
A study was conducted to test whether quantitative feedback would help students write with the stylistic simplicity appropriate to their audience and purpose without sacrificing other elements of good writing. Two business and technical writing...
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A Computer Program for Invention and Feedback
Helen J. Schwartz
SEEN (Seeing Eye Elephant Network) is a computer program intended to help students write better essays by providing a heuristic for invention and a means for audience feedback. In the solo mode, the program prompts students to perceive what they...
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Pricing Literacy: The Ethics of Access
Helen J. Schwartz
Computers are necessary to the future of literacy in the United States, but they are not determinative. Instead the determining factor will be human values and political will, and so it is necessary to build the future on democratic ideology. Four...
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Computer Aids for Individualizing Instruction throughout the Writing Process
Helen J. Schwartz
This document describes how computer assisted instruction and word processing can combine the systematic coverage of a writing class with the individualization of a writing workshop. Ways to revise computer programs for use in a writing course are...
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Issues of Integrating Computers into Writing Instruction
Helen J. Schwartz
Computers can provide four kinds of help to practicing writers: (1) data storage and retrieval, (2) computer-assisted instruction and text feedback, (3) utility or word processing programs, and (4) telecommunications capability. Writing teachers...