Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective

Writing skills typically develop over a course of more than two decades as a child matures and learns the craft of composition through late adolescence and into early adulthood. The novice writer progresses from a stage of knowledge-telling to a stage of knowledgetransforming characteristic of adult...

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Main Author: Kellogg, Ronald T.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SIG Writing of EARLI 2008-01-01
Series:Journal of Writing Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jowr.org/articles/vol1_1/JoWR_2008_vol1_nr1_Kellogg.pdf
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spelling doaj-405ec1e3cf0d4257af15bc43b03838582020-11-25T01:36:30ZengSIG Writing of EARLIJournal of Writing Research 2030-10062008-01-0111126Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspectiveKellogg, Ronald T.Writing skills typically develop over a course of more than two decades as a child matures and learns the craft of composition through late adolescence and into early adulthood. The novice writer progresses from a stage of knowledge-telling to a stage of knowledgetransforming characteristic of adult writers. Professional writers advance further to an expert stage of knowledge-crafting in which representations of the author's planned content, the text itself, and the prospective reader's interpretation of the text are routinely manipulated in working memory. Knowledge-transforming, and especially knowledge-crafting, arguably occur only when sufficient executive attention is available to provide a high degree of cognitive control over the maintenance of multiple representations of the text as well as planning conceptual content, generating text, and reviewing content and text. Because executive attention is limited in capacity, such control depends on reducing the working memory demands of these writing processes through maturation and learning. It is suggested that students might best learn writing skills through cognitive apprenticeship training programs that emphasize deliberate practice.http://jowr.org/articles/vol1_1/JoWR_2008_vol1_nr1_Kellogg.pdfwriting skillsprofessional writerscognitive developmentworking memorytraining
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kellogg, Ronald T.
spellingShingle Kellogg, Ronald T.
Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
Journal of Writing Research
writing skills
professional writers
cognitive development
working memory
training
author_facet Kellogg, Ronald T.
author_sort Kellogg, Ronald T.
title Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
title_short Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
title_full Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
title_fullStr Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
title_full_unstemmed Training writing skills: A cognitive development perspective
title_sort training writing skills: a cognitive development perspective
publisher SIG Writing of EARLI
series Journal of Writing Research
issn 2030-1006
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Writing skills typically develop over a course of more than two decades as a child matures and learns the craft of composition through late adolescence and into early adulthood. The novice writer progresses from a stage of knowledge-telling to a stage of knowledgetransforming characteristic of adult writers. Professional writers advance further to an expert stage of knowledge-crafting in which representations of the author's planned content, the text itself, and the prospective reader's interpretation of the text are routinely manipulated in working memory. Knowledge-transforming, and especially knowledge-crafting, arguably occur only when sufficient executive attention is available to provide a high degree of cognitive control over the maintenance of multiple representations of the text as well as planning conceptual content, generating text, and reviewing content and text. Because executive attention is limited in capacity, such control depends on reducing the working memory demands of these writing processes through maturation and learning. It is suggested that students might best learn writing skills through cognitive apprenticeship training programs that emphasize deliberate practice.
topic writing skills
professional writers
cognitive development
working memory
training
url http://jowr.org/articles/vol1_1/JoWR_2008_vol1_nr1_Kellogg.pdf
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