Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners

The purpose of this study was to examine the writing performance and motivational beliefs of students who were identified by their school district as English language learners. The study included 880 students (463 girls; 417 boys) in grades three to eight who wrote an informative/explanatory essay o...

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Main Author: Steve Graham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cranmore Publishing 2021-03-01
Series:International Journal of TESOL Studies
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-47e684d931464eefa58c5a7c3b5490492021-07-26T09:26:20ZengCranmore PublishingInternational Journal of TESOL Studies2632-67792633-68982021-03-013110.46451/ijts.2021.01.01Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language LearnersSteve Graham0Arizona State University, USAThe purpose of this study was to examine the writing performance and motivational beliefs of students who were identified by their school district as English language learners. The study included 880 students (463 girls; 417 boys) in grades three to eight who wrote an informative/explanatory essay on information technology and completed a motivational survey assessing their intrinsic, extrinsic, and self-regulation incentives for writing. Ninety-seven percent of students’ scores on the writing measure did not meet grade-level proficiency for writing, girls received higher scores than boys, and writing scores generally increased across the six grade-levels. A majority of students agreed that intrinsic and extrinsic incentives drive their writing behavior, but only 38% of students indicated that self-regulation incentives had such an effect. Gender was not related to students’ motivational scores, but scores for the three motivational incentives declined from lower to higher grades. Recommendations for future research and suggestions for classroom practice were provided.extrinsic motivationintrinsic motivationself-regulatory motivationwriting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steve Graham
spellingShingle Steve Graham
Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
International Journal of TESOL Studies
extrinsic motivation
intrinsic motivation
self-regulatory motivation
writing
author_facet Steve Graham
author_sort Steve Graham
title Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
title_short Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
title_full Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
title_fullStr Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
title_full_unstemmed Writing and Writing Motivation of Students Identified as English Language Learners
title_sort writing and writing motivation of students identified as english language learners
publisher Cranmore Publishing
series International Journal of TESOL Studies
issn 2632-6779
2633-6898
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The purpose of this study was to examine the writing performance and motivational beliefs of students who were identified by their school district as English language learners. The study included 880 students (463 girls; 417 boys) in grades three to eight who wrote an informative/explanatory essay on information technology and completed a motivational survey assessing their intrinsic, extrinsic, and self-regulation incentives for writing. Ninety-seven percent of students’ scores on the writing measure did not meet grade-level proficiency for writing, girls received higher scores than boys, and writing scores generally increased across the six grade-levels. A majority of students agreed that intrinsic and extrinsic incentives drive their writing behavior, but only 38% of students indicated that self-regulation incentives had such an effect. Gender was not related to students’ motivational scores, but scores for the three motivational incentives declined from lower to higher grades. Recommendations for future research and suggestions for classroom practice were provided.
topic extrinsic motivation
intrinsic motivation
self-regulatory motivation
writing
work_keys_str_mv AT stevegraham writingandwritingmotivationofstudentsidentifiedasenglishlanguagelearners
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