Back to Search Start Over

Contribution of an academic writing intervention on the micro-macrostructure skills of students with intellectual disability.

Authors :
Altman, Carmit
Dueck, Hadas
Shnitzer-Meirovich, Shlomit
Lifshitz, Hefziba
Source :
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics. Nov2024, p1-24. 24p. 3 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

\nLAY SUMMARYAcademic writing is a complex task involving microstructure (linguistic-level) and macrostructure (coherence structure) indices. Our goal was to examine the contribution of an academic writing intervention programme among students with intellectual disability at the microstructure and macrostructure levels while characterising the learning curves. Six students with mild intellectual disability studying for a BA (MCA = 30.43, MIQ = 69.17) participated in a spiral intervention programme of 32 lessons focusing on improving paragraph complexity and text structure measured at five time-points. Microstructure improvement in number of words, sentences, paragraphs, words per paragraph, lexical density, adjectives along with macrostructure improvement in text-paragraph structure, global-local linkage were found. A rapid increase in macrostructure indices was observed between the first and second testing points, after which a ceiling effect was reached. Concurrently, microstructure indices demonstrated a slower, more gradual learning curve throughout the intervention period. The discussion will focus on the improvement patterns in microstructure–macrostructure indices and the various learning curves observed. It explores the implications of these findings for cognitive modifiability in adults with intellectual disability and the potential of tailored academic writing interventions in post-secondary education programmes. A long-term, spiral intervention programme was effective at improving academic writing skills that require high cognitive involvement among individuals with intellectual disabilities in microstructure and macrostructure indices.Different types of linear learning curves showed a rapid increase in macrostructure indices, alongside a mixed rate of improvement in microstructure indices.The participants' thinking skills improved from focused thinking to transcendental thinking following the Structural Cognitive Modifiability (Feuerstein, 2003).The results can be explained via the Compensatory Trajectory theory (Lifshitz, 2020; 2015) which claims that chronological age plays an important role in determining the cognitive level and ability in adults with intellectual disabilities.A long-term, spiral intervention programme was effective at improving academic writing skills that require high cognitive involvement among individuals with intellectual disabilities in microstructure and macrostructure indices.Different types of linear learning curves showed a rapid increase in macrostructure indices, alongside a mixed rate of improvement in microstructure indices.The participants' thinking skills improved from focused thinking to transcendental thinking following the Structural Cognitive Modifiability (Feuerstein, 2003).The results can be explained via the Compensatory Trajectory theory (Lifshitz, 2020; 2015) which claims that chronological age plays an important role in determining the cognitive level and ability in adults with intellectual disabilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02699206
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180691792
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/02699206.2024.2421836