Book review | Conceptualizing, designing, implementing, and evaluating writing interventions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17239/jowr-2024.16.02.06Keywords:
writing research interventions, research process, intervention design, evaluating interventionsAbstract
Conceptualizing, Designing, Implementing, and Evaluating Writing Interventions, edited by Fien De Smedt, Renske Bouwer, Teresa Limpo, and Steve Graham, emerges as a comprehensive guide for researchers navigating the many steps to developing a writing intervention. Writing interventions are changes to a writer’s traditional approach which are meant to improve a writer’s cognitive processes in order to become a more skilled writer. These interventions are often implemented in classrooms, from primary schools to post-secondary education. This volume offers a start-to-finish overview of the intervention research process. The structure mirrors its title, dividing its contents into four crucial stages of intervention research. These stages are grounded in previous volumes on writing intervention research in the Brill Studies in Writing Series, which provide insight into how writing interventions have changed over the years and demonstrate a pattern of research design. Additionally, the need for a shared framework is emphasized through both reports from the National Commission on Writing (2004) and influential writing models by Graham (2018a, 2018b) and Hayes (2012), which recognize the significance of motivational factors in writing.
References
Graham, S. (2018a). A revised Writer(s)-Within-Community Model of writing. Educational Psychologist, 53(4), 258–279. doi:10.1080/00461520.2018.1481406
Graham, S. (2018b). A writer(s)-within-community-model of writing. In C. Bazerman, A. Applebee, V. Berninger, D. Brandt, S. Graham, J. Jeffery, P. Matsuda, S. Murphy, D. Rowe, M. Schleppegrell, & K. Wilcox (Eds.), The lifespan development of writing (pp. 272–325): the National Council of Teachers of English.
Hayes, J. (2012). Modeling and remodeling writing. Written Communication, 29(3), 369–388. doi:10.1177/0741088312451260
The National Commission on Writing. (2004). Writing: A ticket to work … or a ticket out: A survey of business leaders. Retrieved from https://archive.nwp.org/cs/public/download/ nwp_file/21479/writing‑a‑ticket‑to‑work‑or‑a‑ticket‑out.pdf?x‑r=pcfile_d
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