Writing instruction improves students' writing skills differentially depending on focal instruction and children: A meta-analysis for primary grade students

2021
We investigated the effect of writing interventions on written composition for students in primary grades (K-G3) with a focus on whether effects vary as a function of different dimensions of composition outcomes (i.e., quality, productivity, fluency, and other), instructional focus (e.g., transcription, self-regulation strategies such as Self-Regulated Strategy Development [SRSD]), and student characteristics (i.e., initially weak writing skills). A total of 24 studies (number of effect sizes, k = 166; N = 5589 participants) met inclusion criteria. The overall mean effect size was moderate and positive (ES = 0.31) with some variation across the dimensions of composition: 0.32 in writing quality, 0.31 in writing productivity, 0.15 in writing fluency, and 0.34 in writing: other. SRSD had large and consistent effect sizes across the outcomes (0.59-1.04) whereas transcription instruction did not yield statistically significant effects on any dimensions of composition due to large variation of effects across studies. Variation in instructional dosage (total length of instruction) did not explain variation in the effect sizes. Lastly, the average effect on writing quality was larger for writers with weaker writing skills compared to those with typical skills.
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH REVIEW
卷号:34
ISSN:1747-938X
收录类型
SSCI
发表日期
2021
学科领域
循证教育学
国家
美国
语种
英语
DOI
10.1016/j.edurev.2021.100408
其他关键词
REGULATED STRATEGY-DEVELOPMENT; STRUGGLING YOUNG WRITERS; SPELLING INSTRUCTION; 2ND-GRADE STUDENTS; TIER 2; 1ST-GRADE; KNOWLEDGE; LITERACY; LANGUAGE; TEXT
EISSN
1878-0385
资助机构
National Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentUnited States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USANIH Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD) [P50HD052120]; Institute of Education SciencesUS Department of Education [R305A170113, R305A180055]
资助信息
The work reported here is supported by the following grants: National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (P50HD052120) and Institute of Education Sciences (R305A170113 & R305A180055). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding agencies.
被引频次(WOS)
1
被引更新日期
2022-01
来源机构
University of California System University of California Irvine
关键词
Writing Moderation Instruction Primary grade Meta-Analysis