Linda Flower Explained

Linda Flower (born March 3, 1944, in Wichita) is a composition theorist. She is best known for her emphasis on cognitive rhetoric, but has more recently published in the field of service learning. Flower currently serves Carnegie Mellon University as a professor of rhetoric.[1]

Biography

Flower graduated with a doctorate degree from Rutgers University. Her dissertation was on Charles Dickens.[2] Teaching professional writing to business students at Carnegie Mellon University inspired Flower to study more about problem-solving.[3] While studying linguistics, rhetoric, and psycholinguistics, Flower connected with John Richard Hayes, a cognitive psychologist also working at Carnegie Mellon. Flower and Hayes became frequent collaborators. They used think-aloud protocols to learn more about how writers problem-solve during writing tasks.[4] Together, they developed a cognitive model of the writing process.[5] This model prompted discussions of cognitive rhetoric and its role with social constructivism and meaning making processes, including critiques from Patricia Bizzell and Martin Nystrand.[6] [7]

Flower went on to serve in multiple roles promoting the study of writing. She served as co-director of the Center for the Study of Writing at the Carnegie Mellon. She also served on the Making Thinking Visible Project and developed Pittsburgh's Community Literacy Center.

Works

Independent works

Collaborative works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: University. Carnegie Mellon. Linda Flower - Department of English - Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences - Carnegie Mellon University. 2020-12-18. www.cmu.edu. en.
  2. Web site: Interview with Linda Flower at FSU .
  3. Wilson . Jill . 1991 . An Interview with Linda Flower: Helping Writers Build Mansions with More Rooms . Writing on the Edge . 3 . 1 . 9–22 . 1064-6051.
  4. Heller . Carol . 1991 . An Interview with Linda Flower . The Quarterly of the National Writing Project and Center for the Study of Writing and Literacy . 13 . 1 . 3-5, 28-30.
  5. Flower . Linda . Hayes . John R. . 1981 . A Cognitive Process Theory of Writing . College Composition and Communication . 32 . 4 . 365–387 . 10.2307/356600 . 0010-096X.
  6. Book: Bizzell, Patricia . Academic Discourse and Critical Consciousness . 1992 . University of Pittsburgh Press . 978-0-8229-5485-9 . 10.2307/j.ctt7zwb7k.7.
  7. Book: Nystrand, Martin . What writers know: the language, process, and structure of written discourse. . Academic Press . 1982.