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Effects of teaching planning strategies to first‐grade writers
Author(s) -
Arrimada María,
Torrance Mark,
Fidalgo Raquel
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
british journal of educational psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.557
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 2044-8279
pISSN - 0007-0998
DOI - 10.1111/bjep.12251
Subject(s) - spelling , handwriting , psychology , intervention (counseling) , narrative , mathematics education , spell , quality (philosophy) , teaching method , linguistics , philosophy , epistemology , psychiatry , sociology , anthropology
Background Traditionally writing instruction at the start of school has focused on developing students’ ability to spell and handwrite. Teaching children explicit self‐regulatory strategies for developing content and structure for their text has proved effective for students in later grades of primary (elementary) education. Aims The present study aims to determine whether first‐grade students benefit from learning higher‐level self‐regulating strategies for explicit planning of content and structure. Sample Five mixed‐ability Spanish first‐grade classes were randomly assigned either to an experimental condition that received strategy‐focused instruction (three classes, N  = 62), or to a practice‐matched control condition (two classes, N  = 39). Method Over 10, 50‐min sessions, the intervention taught strategies for writing stories. Writing performance was assessed prior to intervention, immediately after intervention and 7 weeks post‐intervention, in terms of both text features associated with written narratives and by holistic quality ratings. Results Students who received the intervention subsequently produced texts with better structure, coherence, and quality, and a larger number of features associated with narrative texts. These effects remained at follow‐up and were not present in the control condition. Conclusion Our findings indicate that teaching explicit strategies for planning text content and structure benefits young writers even when spelling and handwriting skills are not yet well established.

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