Abstract

This paper describes the development of a software program that supports argumentative reading and writing, especially for novice students. The software helps readers create a graphic organizer from the text as a knowledge map while they are reading and use their prior knowledge to build their own opinion as new information while they think about writing their essays. Readers using this software can read a text, underline important words or sentences, pick up and dynamically cite the underlined portions of the text onto a knowledge map as quotation nodes, illustrate a knowledge map by linking the nodes, and later write their opinion as an essay while viewing the knowledge map; thus, the software bridges argumentative reading and writing. Sixty-three freshman and sophomore students with no prior argumentative reading and writing education participated in a design case study to evaluate the software in classrooms. Thirty-four students were assigned to a class in which each student developed a knowledge map after underlining and/or highlighting a text with the software, while twenty-nine students were assigned to a class in which they simply wrote their essays after underlining and/or highlighting the text without creating knowledge maps. After receiving an instruction regarding a simplified Toulmin’s model followed by instructions for the software usage in argumentative reading and writing along with reading one training text, the students read the target text and developed their essays. The results revealed that students who drew a knowledge map based on the underlining and/or highlighting of the target text developed more argumentative essays than those who did not draw maps. Further analyses revealed that developing knowledge maps fostered an ability to capture the target text’s argument, and linking students’ ideas to the text’s argument directly on the knowledge map helped students develop more constructive essays. Accordingly, we discussed additional necessary scaffolds, such as automatic argument detection and collaborative learning functions, for improving the students’ use of appropriate reading and writing strategies.

Highlights

  • Teaching and learning argumentative reading and writing is an essential educational topic in undergraduate educational programs, in the freshman year of university education worldwide (Muller Mirza and Perret-Clermont 2009; Newell et al 2011; Nakano and Maruno 2013)

  • Argumentative reading and writing require readers to go beyond analysis and skepticism while reading text(s), usually in the critical reading context (Ennis 1993), and to include knowledge creation based on their active engagement with the text so that they can question, explain, and connect ideas within and across texts and to their prior knowledge in order to write their argument based on the text

  • This study aimed to develop software to support students’ argumentative reading and writing and to explore the effectiveness of external strategies, such as underlining and/or highlighting and creating knowledge maps, for supporting students’ argumentative reading and writing

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Summary

Introduction

Teaching and learning argumentative reading and writing is an essential educational topic in undergraduate educational programs, in the freshman year of university education worldwide (Muller Mirza and Perret-Clermont 2009; Newell et al 2011; Nakano and Maruno 2013). In contrast to critical reading and writing, which aim to elicit a reader’s response and to promote taking the perspective of the text in a variety of ways (Douglas 2000; Tomasek 2009), argumentative reading and writing focus on prompting a reader to appropriately identify a thesis and any supportive information for the thesis, to assess relationships between the thesis and the supportive information in an argument, and to develop their new ideas based on the argument by connecting and reinterpreting the information in the text(s) in an argumentative manner (Crowhurst 1990; Gárate et al 2007; Parodi 2007; Newell et al 2011) Acquiring these skills is important for students to help them become good citizens in a knowledge-based society (Goldman 2004; Goldman and Scardamalia 2013; Westby 2004). For a novice student to achieve a desirable level of argumentative reading and “writing” in practice, it is necessary for them to develop scaffolds to assist them in building constructive arguments based on their interpretation and evaluation of the arguments in the text (Scardamalia et al 2012; Goldman and Scardamalia 2013)

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