Tuesday, February 6, 2018

HAAS & FLOWERS

Haas & Flowers (Lab Outline)
Post Outline Below

7 comments:

  1. aspen aaron

    the first page discuses cognitive and literary theory
    the second page discuses students rhetorical reading strategies
    the third page discuses why students summarize and text

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  2. the readers change the meaning do to rhetorical context
    rethinking college level reading and writing pg167
    the way rhetorical shapes discussion of reading
    different methods to read and write pg168
    teaching problem solving skills
    teaches multiply representation thesis
    students must build a multiply faceted representation and different teaching stlyes

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  3. Haas and Linda Flower
    • Constructive vs. receptive: “this constructive view of reading is being vigorously put forth, in different ways, by both literary theory and cognitive research.” Pg. 167
    • Discourse act: “..when readers contrast meaning, they do so in the context of a discourse situation, which includes the writer of the original text, other readers the rhetorical context for reading, and the history of the discourse.
    • Constructive: rhetorical process/rapid, unexamined, inexpressible
    • Two questions: how does this constructive process play itself out in the actual, thinking process
    of reading?
    are all readers really aware of or in control of the discourse act which current theories describe?
    Think aloud procedure
    Knowledge of the world
    Infer
    Predict
    • We all have different interpretations of the same text
    • Mental representation: structure (conventional or unique), text function, beliefs, intentions in reading >>>>complex networks
    • Making a point: searching, inferencing, transforming ones knowledge
    • Multiple-representation thesis: mental representation not limited to verbally well-formed ideas and plans. Include abstract schema,
    • Reorganizing knowledge & creating new knowledge :

    Good reading: meets the needs of college students to take test assignments , build an equally sophisticated , complex representation of meaning.
    “we can observe their use of reading strategies and so infer something about the representations
    they build. “ pg.170


    Brisa Lara
    Oliver Felix

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  4. mariah mendoza
    christopher carmona
    the view of reading which we share with others in the field by raising two questions the first is how does this constructive process play itself out in the actual thinking process of reading and the second is are all readers really aware of or in control of the discourse act which current theories described

    the current text , prior texts and the reading context can exert varying degrees of influence on this process but it is the reader who must intergrate information into meaning we can began to piece together the way this constructive , cognitive process operates based on recent research and reading and comprehension and reading and writing .


    it suggests that readers and writers mental representation are not limited to verbally well formed ideas and plans but may include information coded as visual images or as emotions or as linguistic propositions that exist just above the level of specific words .

    To interpret any sophisticated text seems to require not only careful reading
    and prior knowledge, but the ability to read the text on several levels, to
    build multi-faceted representations. A text is understood not only as content
    and information, but also as the result of someone's intentions, as part of a
    larger discourse world, and as having real effects on real readers
    What we can do, however, is to
    watch the way that readers go about building representations: we can observe
    their use of reading strategies and so infer something about the representations
    they build

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  5. HAAS AND FLOWERS
    Constructing a rhetorical context for the text as a way of making sense of it.

    • Readers construct meaning by building multi-faceted, interwoven representations of knowledge.
    • Cognitive process operates based on recent research on reading and comprehension, and on reading and writing.

    The process of constructing
    • According to the author It suggests that readers' and writers' mental representations are not
    Limited to verbally well-formed ideas and plans, but may include information
    Coded as visual images, or as emotions, or as linguistic propositions that exist
    Just above the level of specific words.

    • Trying to construct a well-articulated statement of the "point" of a text may require active searching, inferencing, and transforming of one's own knowledge.

    • Reading is a process of responding to cues in the text and in the
    Reader’s context to build

    • Readers might construct radically different representations of the same text and might use very different strategies to do so.


    JUAN P. IBARRA
    ESMERALDA OVIEDO

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  6. Maria Valadez
    Juan Rocha
    Rhetorical Reading Strategies and
    the Construction of Meaning
    Christina Haas and Linda Flowers
    • Meaning: meant by a word, text, concept, or action.
    • Rhetoric: to write and speak in a persuasive way
    • Rhetorical Reading: An active attempt at constructing a rhetorical context for the text as a way of making sense of it. (think out loud procedure).
    • The first is,how does this constructive process play itself out in the actual, thinking processof reading?
    • the second is, are all readers really aware of or in control of the discourse act which current theories describe?
    • reading strategies and so infer something about the representations
    they build.(170)

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  7. Celeste Viera
    • “Reading should be thought of as a constructive rather than as a receptive process”
     Constructive process: serving to build up or to improve
     Receptive process: listening and reading (passive skills)
     Readers construct meaning within the text and make sense of what it says

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