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Writing as a Learning Tool: Testing the Role of Students' Writing Strategies

Authors :
Kieft, Marleen
Rijlaarsdam, Gert
van den Bergh, Huub
Source :
European Journal of Psychology of Education. 2006 21(1):17-34.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

The claim that writing facilitates students' learning, although widely accepted, has little support from empirical research. A possible explanation for the lack of empirical evidence is that writing-to-learn research has disregarded that students use different writing strategies. The purpose of the present experimental study is to test whether it is effective to adapt writing-to-learn tasks to different writing strategies when teaching literature. A course "Learning to write argumentative texts about literature" was developed in two different versions: one adapted to a planning writing strategy, the other to a revising writing strategy. Participants were 113 tenth-grade high school students in the Netherlands. Our hypothesis is an adaptation hypothesis: we expect that the more a student will use a planning writing strategy, the more the student will profit from the lessons in the planning condition, and that the more a student uses a revising writing strategy, the more beneficial the revising condition will be. However, results show that for improving literary interpretation skill, a course adapted to the planning writing strategy is more effective for almost all students. (Contains 9 tables, 2 figures and 2 notes.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0256-2928
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
European Journal of Psychology of Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ755517
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research