https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/issue/feed Journal of Writing Research 2024-06-12T21:09:13+02:00 Luuk Van Waes luuk.vanwaes@uantwerpen.be Open Journal Systems <p>Welcome!</p> <p><em>Journal of Writing Research</em> <em>(JoWR)</em> is an international peer reviewed journal publishing scientific research exploring the cognitive and social processes underlying written production, how writing is learned, and how it can be effectively taught, across all ages and educational contexts.</p> <p><em>Journal of Writing Research</em> is diamond open access with no fees for either authors or readers. We publish 3 issues per year, with papers also available for <a href="https://www.jowr.org/pkp/ojs/index.php/jowr/issue/view/113">early view</a>.</p> <p><strong>Scopus CiteScore ranks</strong>: Top 10% in Education. Top 5% in Language and Linguistics.</p> <p>If you <strong><a class="linkintext" href="https://www.jowr.org/pkp/ojs/index.php/jowr/user/register">register</a></strong><a class="linkintext" href="https://www.jowr.org/pkp/ojs/index.php/jowr/user/register">,</a> you will automatically receive a notification when a new issue of the <em>Journal of Writing Research</em> is published.</p> https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1468 Book review: The Routledge International Handbook of Research on Writing 2024-05-14T18:19:40+02:00 Gustaf B. Skar gustaf.b.skar@ntnu.no 2024-05-14T00:00:00+02:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Gustaf B. Skar https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1021 Effects of teacher-implemented explicit writing instruction on the writing self-efficacy and writing performance of 5th grade students 2023-11-08T16:59:50+01:00 Erick Falardeau erick.falardeau@fse.ulaval.ca Frederic Guay frederic.guay@fse.ulaval.ca Pascale Dubois pascale.dubois.1@ulaval.ca Daisy Pelletier Daisy.Pelletier@fse.ulaval.ca <p>Meta-analyses indicate that explicit writing instruction (EWI) is an effective method for improving student writing self-efficacy and writing performance. EWI relies on explicit instruction of writing strategies through modeling, scaffolding and self-regulation. Most EWI-based interventions have been conducted by researchers, generally with subgroups of students or on a one-on-one basis, and very few have been conducted in other languages than English. Our quasi-experimental study aims to address these limits by testing EWI’s effects when teachers themselves intervene using peer feedback during the writing of opinion letters. We used practice-based professional development to teach teachers how to use EWI, and compared two experimental conditions (EWI with and without peer feedback) to a control group (Business as Usual). A total of 483 French-speaking 5th grade students participated in the study. Results from repeated measure analyses showed that, with or without peer feedback, the EWI intervention produced better writing performance and higher self-efficacy compared to the control group. We discuss the role of EWI for writing performance and self-efficacy.</p> 2024-04-16T00:00:00+02:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Erick Falardeau, Frederic Guay, Pascale Dubois, Daisy Pelletier https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1231 Fostering philosophy teachers' disciplinary writing practice: A multiple-case design study 2024-01-15T16:16:41+01:00 Lieke Holdinga c.c.holdinga@uva.nl Jannet van Drie j.p.vandrie@uva.nl Gert Rijlaarsdam g.c.w.rijlaarsdam@uva.nl <p class="abstract" style="margin: 0cm;"><span lang="EN-US">In this design study, we designed an instructional unit open to contextual modifications with the aim of fostering secondary school students' philosophical writing. Three philosophy teachers developed innovative source-based writing tasks and provided discipline-specific writing strategy instruction in their 10<sup>th</sup> grade class. </span></p> <p class="abstract" style="margin: 0cm; text-indent: 14.2pt;"><span lang="EN-US">In this study, we focused on change. We explored teachers' interaction with the instructional design and studied teachers' views on how the intervention had changed their practice since a change of beliefs is crucial to successful, durable innovation of teaching. Moreover, we studied the effects of the changed practice, by exploring change in students' writing. An external jury analyzed students' texts to determine students' actual learning achievements. Teachers' insights into student progress were obtained from reflective interviews that featured comparisons between the observed and expected results.</span></p> <p class="abstract" style="margin: 0cm; text-indent: 14.2pt;"><span lang="EN-US">The results showed that teachers judged the design to be feasible, valid, and effective for students' philosophical writing development. After the intervention, students' texts showed similar or even more independent philosophical thinking than before, while the tasks became more complex. Implementation drove teachers to contemplate writing instruction, indicating a change in their belief system, which is necessary for genuine improvement in teacher practice.</span></p> 2024-03-19T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Lieke Holdinga, Jannet van Drie, Gert Rijlaarsdam https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1116 Early handwriting performance among Arabic kindergarten children: The effects of phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge, graphomotor skills, and fine-motor skills 2024-01-04T10:09:33+01:00 Abeer Salameh-Matar abeermatar6@gmail.com Afnan Khoury Metanis afnan38@gmail.com Asaid Khateb akhateb@edu.haifa.ac.il <p class="abstract"><span lang="EN-US">This study aimed to delve into the under-explored domain of early handwriting performance among Arabic-speaking kindergarten children, focusing on the potential factors influencing early handwriting competency. The research encompassed 218 children from diverse socio-economic backgrounds in Israel. The underlying skills assessed were divided into linguistic skills (phonological awareness and orthographic knowledge) and graphomotor and fine-motor skills. Hierarchical regression analyses were utilized to evaluate the contributions of these skills. Results indicated that, within the Arabic orthographic context, orthographic knowledge stood out as a paramount contributor to early handwriting performance, more so than phonological awareness. Furthermore, graphomotor and fine motor skills significantly influenced letter-copying speed and legibility, but not the accuracy of letter-writing to dictation. In conclusion, while orthographic knowledge is paramount, the importance of graphomotor and fine motor skills for early handwriting performance in Arabic cannot be understated. The study suggests that a focused approach to these skills can lead to more effective interventions and teaching methodologies tailored for Arabic-speaking kindergarteners.</span></p> 2024-03-13T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Abeer Salameh-Matar, Afnan Khoury Metanis, Asaid Khateb https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1151 Project-based Learning in EFL educational settings: A meta-analysis study in EFL/ESL writing 2023-09-28T15:06:56+02:00 Bambang Yudi Cahyono bambang.yudi.fs@um.ac.id Rika Irawati rika82irawati@gmail.com Suci Nugrah Amalia suci.nugrahamalia@gmail.com Luki Emiliya Hidayat luki.hidayat@gmail.com <p>As project-based learning (PjBL) has become very popular in education over the past few years, this study conducted a comprehensive meta-analysis to synthesize the effectiveness of PjBL in EFL/ESL writing by examining 11 articles based on databases of Scopus and Google Scholar from 2013 to 2023. The result reveals that PjBL had a significant positive effect size in EFL/ESL writing. Moreover, the effect sizes of some moderating variables were analyzed, including educational levels, sample size, research design, intervention duration, and group size. It was found that the most important moderating variable that affects the effectiveness of PjBL in EFL/ESL writing is intervention duration. The significant overall effect of PjBL on ESL/EFL writing implies the need for educators to consider using PjBL in language teaching and learning. Meanwhile future researchers might consider applying other moderating variables such as research design, instructional strategies, and student characteristics, to identify the best practices for implementing PjBL in ESL/EFL writing.</p> 2024-03-21T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Bambang Yudi Cahyono, Rika Irawati, Suci Nugrah Amalia, Luki Emiliya Hidayat https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/1050 Problem-solving activity during the foreign language writing process: A proposal for categorisation and visualisation of source use and a new take on fluency in multilingual writing 2023-10-25T18:44:39+02:00 Mari Kruse mari.kruse@ut.ee <p>Writing processes constitute a complex interplay of planning, formulation and revision. Ideas take shape through the activation of previous knowledge and, when permitted, also its synthesis with information from sources that help to complement it and resolve doubts and shortcomings arising during writing. The possibility to use external help can be especially useful to those writing in a foreign language, and questions about the nature of the sources consulted can contribute new insights into language processing in the multilingual mind, as well as expand our notion of fluency. While leaving the target text is often considered a distraction, a ‘breakdown’ in fluency, it is, in fact, a part of language processing and text creation.</p> <p> This article proposes a novel way to use keylogging data from Inputlog (Leijten and Van Waes 2013) to visualise the crosslinguistic nature of solving language and content problems in L3+ writing: creating process graphs to display the temporal dynamics of different types of sources used. The example data comes from a university-level course on Spanish linguistics, where Spanish was a third or subsequent language for the participants. Evidently, the vast majority of their external activity was language-related and brief, and, interestingly, a great part of it recurs to a <em>lingua franca</em>, English. Some social context and reasoning is offered to explain such an observation.</p> 2024-02-22T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Mari Kruse https://jowr.org/index.php/jowr/article/view/975 Learning from comPA(I)Ring exemplars: Enhancing genre knowledge of argumentative texts 2023-06-26T12:56:05+02:00 Tine Mombaers tine.mombaers@uantwerpen.be Roos Van Gasse roos.vangasse@uantwerpen.be Sven De Maeyer sven.demaeyer@uantwerpen.be <p class="abstract"><span lang="EN-US">Poor writing skills are problematic in today’s society where writing expertise is essential in personal, academic and professional contexts. Students struggle most with argumentative writing. To write a good argumentative text, students need genre knowledge on this type of text. After all, genre knowledge has been proven to be related to writing quality. Considering its relevance, in this study we investigated whether learning from (comparing) text exemplars could be an effective method to enhance genre knowledge. This study aims to investigate whether learning from (comparing) text exemplars can enhance genre knowledge. A quasi-experimental study with 77 11<sup>th</sup> grade students was carried out to test the effects of four conditions on genre knowledge of argumentative texts. Findings show that genre knowledge increases through single and analogue text examples. In addition, learning from comparing text exemplars does not seem to increase genre knowledge more than learning from single, sequential exemplars.</span></p> 2024-03-02T00:00:00+01:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Tine Mombaers, Roos Van Gasse, Sven De Maeyer