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Community Advocacy: Composing for Action The instructional study involved 30 summer interns at the community center who read community arguments and wrote persuasive responses. This exploratory study analyzed the interns' think-aloud protocols during composing and their final written arguments. The study examines the effects of different types of instruction upon the interns' written arguments and writing process. The interns were randomly assigned to one of three groups: (1) no explicit instruction, but opportunities to practice, (2) instruction that used a text-based prompt, (3) instruction that used a rhetorical/social prompt. The question asked, "When the written responses of interns were evaluated by independent raters, which form of instruction (practice, text, or rhetorical/social) would yield written community arguments judged as being clearer in their rhetorical purpose(s), more coherently organized, and more persuasive?" Findings from the analysis of the interns' written arguments indicate that the rhetorical/social method of instruction had the most powerful effect on the ways interns wrote in terms of rhetorical purpose. The text- based instruction had the greatest effect in terms of interns writing in a well-organized manner. Comments from protocols showed striking differences in the interns' representations of the tasks, texts, and rhetorical situations while composing. |