Abstract
In this study of third grade school children, we investigated the association between writing process measures recorded with key stroke logging and the final written product. Moreover, we examined the cognitive predictors of writing process and product measures. Analyses of key strokes showed that while most children spontaneously made local online revisions while writing, few revised previously written text. Children with good reading and spelling abilities made more online revisions than their peers. Two process factors, transcription fluency and online revision activity, contributed to explaining variance in narrative macrostructural quality and story length. As for cognitive predictors, spelling was the only factor that gave a unique contribution to explaining variance in writing process factors. Better spelling was associated with more revisions and faster transcription. The results show that developing writers’ ability to make online revisions in creative writing tasks is related to both the quality of the final written product and to individual literacy skills. More generally, the findings indicate that investigations of the dynamics of the writing process may provide insights into the factors that contribute to creative writing during early stages of literacy.
Highlights
Writing can be studied from two main perspectives: a product or a process perspective (Berninger, Fuller, & Whitaker, 1996)
In this study of third grade school children, we investigated the association between writing process measures recorded with key stroke logging and the final written product
Results from the present study indicate that primary school children’s revision behavior during narrative writing predicts the quality of the final written product
Summary
Writing can be studied from two main perspectives: a product or a process perspective (Berninger, Fuller, & Whitaker, 1996). Studies of the writing process may investigate factors such as the speed of transcription and revisions made to the text. We know relatively little about how children produce their earliest texts and how their actions during writing relate to the final product. It is unclear whether the cognitive factors that children draw on during the writing process differ from the factors which have been found to be important to product measures. The present study set out to investigate how writing process factors relate to product measures and key cognitive skills in Norwegian 8-year-olds
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