Implicit writing beliefs and their relation to writing quality

TitreImplicit writing beliefs and their relation to writing quality
Type de publicationArticle de périodique
Année de publication2005
AuteurWhite, M. J., and R. Bruning
JournalContemporary Educational Psychology
Volume30
Parution2
Nombre de pages166-189
Date de publicationApr
Type d'articleArticle
Numéro ISBN0361-476X
Mots-clésbeliefs, motivation, writing, writing education, writing efficacy, writing quality
Résumé

Writers have beliefs that may influence engagement during writing and consequently effect writing quality. Students completed a writing beliefs inventory that identified transmissional and transactional beliefs. Transmissional beliefs reflect limited cognitive and affective engagement during writing whereas transactional beliefs reflect higher engagement. Relations between writing beliefs and writing quality were examined with a different group of students. ANOVA results indicated that students with low transactional beliefs scored low on organization and overall writing quality and students with high transactional beliefs scored high on idea-content development, organization, voice, sentence fluency, conventions.. and overall writing quality. Results indicate that individuals hold implicit writing beliefs that can be measured and that relate in stable and predictable ways to writing quality. (c) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Titre alternatif du journalContemp. Educ. Psychol.
la diffusion des idées borgésiennes