Authors
Marlene Scardamalia, Carl Bereiter, Rosanne Steinbach
Publication date
1984/4/1
Source
Cognitive science
Volume
8
Issue
2
Pages
173-190
Publisher
No longer published by Elsevier
Description
Reflective thought, as sustained in writing, is attributed to two-way communication between a content problem space and a rhetorical problem space. An instructional experiment involving sixth-graders aimed at helping them sustain such a two-way process independently, in place of the more typical one-way process of generating content and writing it out. Instruction included modeling of thinking aloud, both by instructors and students, use of cues to stimulate self-questioning during planning monologues, and direct strategy instruction emphasizing dialectical synthesis of conflicting ideas. Increased numbers of reflective statements in thinking-aloud protocols and rated reflectiveness of compositions indicate gains were made at the level of reflection on individual ideas.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Scardamalia, C Bereiter, R Steinbach - Cognitive science, 1984