The purpose of this study was to determine what students know about the process of writing and the characteristics of stories, persuasive arguments, and informational reports. Participants were 50 grade 5 students. Students responded to questions about writing process and the three different types of writing, and showed a nuanced but relatively unsophisticated understanding of the processes underlying writing and the characteristics of three types of writing. Most of their responses centered on procedures for writing and drafting texts as well as obtaining and organizing information for writing. They described each writing genre by referring to elements specific to it, but these descriptions were not complete for any of the three types of writing. Results of regression analyses revealed that students' knowledge about substantive writing processes predicted how much they knew about each type of writing after gender, writing achievement, and emphasis on production procedures during writing were first controlled statistically.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Fifth-Grade Students' Knowledge about Writing Process and Writing Genres
Amy Gillespie,
Vanderbilt University
Natalie G. Olinghouse, and
University of Connecticut
Steve Graham
Arizona State University
ARTICLE CITATION
Amy Gillespie, Natalie G. Olinghouse, and Steve Graham, "Fifth-Grade Students' Knowledge about Writing Process and Writing Genres," The Elementary School Journal 113, no. 4 (June 2013): 565-588.
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