1. The passage describes Murray's surroundings as at a long white wooden table which looks out onto the New Hampshire woods and behind the desk sits a large framed poster of a small boy sitting on a bed and staring at a huge dragon leaning over the railing and staring at him. the poster was captioned "Donald imagined things." I think that where you write and what you write on tells something about you. For example if you write on desk or a flat surface or some sort then you probably are more strict or choosy with how you write. Or on the other hand if you write on the floor or on a bed or something then you're probably more relaxed or laid back with your writing. As for me, I have to have some sort of flat surface that I can write on.
3. Berkenkotter states that his study has one simple, yet elegant answer that lies in a principle that was formulated by Linda Flower and John R. Hayes. He says that writers move back and forth between planning translating and reviewing their work.
4. Berkenkotter found problems like understanding the writer's editing and revising processes perfectly because sometimes it is different.
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