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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Myers, James L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED462869
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author Myers, James L.
author_facet Myers, James L.
Myers, James L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents A Study of English Majors' Preferences in Invention. Myers, James L. Academic Discourse College Students Creative Thinking Cultural Differences English (Second Language) Essays Foreign Countries Higher Education Majors (Students) Questionnaires Student Attitudes Writing (Composition) This paper appraises aspects of Anglo-American and Chinese concepts of invention from a historical perspective. It then describes the results of 70 third-year Taiwanese English majors' responses to a Likert scale questionnaire that sought their reaction to Anglo-American strategies of invention in English academic writing. It singles out two randomly selected students' responses to the questionnaire to exemplify the importance of individual variation. Students chose their most preferred techniques for composition design from 26 idea-generating activities that are popular in English-as-a-Second-Language/English-as-a-Foreign-Language writing textbooks. The results suggest that most third-year students are aware of the importance of a systematic approach to idea creation in academic writing, but they prefer to initiate their discovery processes in essay writing with such activities as brainstorming, free writing, and use of their imaginations rather than by more traditional strategies such as outlining or library research. The study discusses implications for Anglo-American and Chinese contrastive rhetoric. (Contains 27 references.) (SM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED462869
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2001
record_format eric
spellingShingle A Study of English Majors' Preferences in Invention.
Myers, James L.
Academic Discourse
College Students
Creative Thinking
Cultural Differences
English (Second Language)
Essays
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Majors (Students)
Questionnaires
Student Attitudes
Writing (Composition)
A Study of English Majors' Preferences in Invention. Myers, James L. Academic Discourse College Students Creative Thinking Cultural Differences English (Second Language) Essays Foreign Countries Higher Education Majors (Students) Questionnaires Student Attitudes Writing (Composition) This paper appraises aspects of Anglo-American and Chinese concepts of invention from a historical perspective. It then describes the results of 70 third-year Taiwanese English majors' responses to a Likert scale questionnaire that sought their reaction to Anglo-American strategies of invention in English academic writing. It singles out two randomly selected students' responses to the questionnaire to exemplify the importance of individual variation. Students chose their most preferred techniques for composition design from 26 idea-generating activities that are popular in English-as-a-Second-Language/English-as-a-Foreign-Language writing textbooks. The results suggest that most third-year students are aware of the importance of a systematic approach to idea creation in academic writing, but they prefer to initiate their discovery processes in essay writing with such activities as brainstorming, free writing, and use of their imaginations rather than by more traditional strategies such as outlining or library research. The study discusses implications for Anglo-American and Chinese contrastive rhetoric. (Contains 27 references.) (SM)
title A Study of English Majors' Preferences in Invention.
topic Academic Discourse
College Students
Creative Thinking
Cultural Differences
English (Second Language)
Essays
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Majors (Students)
Questionnaires
Student Attitudes
Writing (Composition)
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED462869