4.0 Article

Effects of intervention on self-efficacy and text quality in elementary school students' narrative writing

Journal

LOGOPEDICS PHONIATRICS VOCOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 1-10

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14015439.2019.1709539

Keywords

Self-efficacy; observational learning; writing improvement; intervention; elementary education

Funding

  1. Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg foundation [2012.0038]

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The study found that elementary school students demonstrate strong self-efficacy, which significantly increases post-intervention. Despite potentially higher text quality among girls, both boys and girls show similar levels of self-efficacy. There are moderate correlations between self-efficacy and writing performance both pre- and post-intervention.
Aim: Self-efficacy for writing is an important motivational factor and considered to predict writing performance. Self-efficacy for narrative writing has been sparsely studied, and few studies focus on the effects of writing intervention on self-efficacy. Additionally, there is a lack of validated measures of self-efficacy for elementary school students. In a previous study, we found that a trained panel rated personal narrative text quality higher for girls than for boys, which led to our aim: to investigate boys' and girls' self-efficacy for narrative writing before and after an intervention, and to explore associations between self-efficacy and text quality. Methods: An 18-item self-efficacy scale was developed. Fifty-five fifth-grade students (M 11:2 years, SD 3.7 months) filled out the scale before and after a five-lesson observational learning intervention. Self-efficacy was then related to writing performance as measured by holistic text quality ratings. Results: The students demonstrated strong self-efficacy, which increased significantly post-intervention. Girls and boys demonstrated similar self-efficacy, despite girls' higher text quality. There were moderate correlations between self-efficacy and writing performance pre- and post-intervention. Conclusions: The results support previous findings of strong self-efficacy at this age. The interaction between writing self-efficacy and performance is complex. Young students may not be able to differentiate between self-efficacy, general writing skills, task performance, and self-regulation. Self-efficacy scales should thus be carefully constructed with respect to age, genre, instruction, and to students' general educational context.

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