"Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Few writing teachers will disagree that teaching writing conventions in isolation is a fruitless, even harmful, pedagogy which does little, if anything, to improve student writing. Teaching conventions, style, and usage (often collective...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bohney, Brandie Lee
Other Authors: Lovejoy, Kim B.
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1805/10786
id ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-10786
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-IUPUI-oai-scholarworks.iupui.edu-1805-107862019-05-10T15:21:40Z "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners Bohney, Brandie Lee Lovejoy, Kim B. Fox, Steve Brooks-Gillies, Marilee Elizabeth writing pedagogy composition discovery learning remediation grammar conventions style remedial metacognition collaboration critical thinking inquiry secondary education student-centered learning Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Few writing teachers will disagree that teaching writing conventions in isolation is a fruitless, even harmful, pedagogy which does little, if anything, to improve student writing. Teaching conventions, style, and usage (often collectively referred to as grammar) in context, however, proves difficult when struggling secondary students develop good ideas and evidence but fail to clearly articulate them because of their lack of understanding of various writing conventions. The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of a carefully designed discovery learning activity which intends to push students into metacognition about what they read, how it is structured, and how that structure affects the reader. Three sources of data were used to determine whether students who had learned by discovery were better able to avoid and revise run-on sentences than students who did not learn through discovery pedagogy. The data sources include two sets of essays, surveys taken by the students, and teacher analyses of essays for readability. The results of the data analysis indicate that use of run-on sentences, especially early in an essay, detrimentally affects the readability of student written work; discovery learning activities improve student understanding, application, and transfer of skill; and while students believe they understand more than their written work indicates, the results provide teachers direction for further instruction. The findings of this study indicate that use of discovery learning for writing instruction with struggling learners holds great promise: a group of students generally regarded as academically weak showed greater understanding and application of run-on sentence avoidance than slightly stronger students who learned without discovery methods. This indicates that discovery learning is a method that improves learning among reluctant secondary students, a population many teachers struggle to reach effectively. Discovery learning is not limited to conventions, though: the promise of its application potential extends into a variety of writing skills and concepts. In addition to the run-on sentence discovery activity studied here, discovery activities for various other skills—from semicolon use through creating characterization with dialogue—are included. 2016-08-30T13:37:21Z 2016-08-30T13:37:21Z 2016-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1805/10786 10.7912/C2N30C en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic writing
pedagogy
composition
discovery learning
remediation
grammar
conventions
style
remedial
metacognition
collaboration
critical thinking
inquiry
secondary education
student-centered learning
spellingShingle writing
pedagogy
composition
discovery learning
remediation
grammar
conventions
style
remedial
metacognition
collaboration
critical thinking
inquiry
secondary education
student-centered learning
Bohney, Brandie Lee
"Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
description Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) === Few writing teachers will disagree that teaching writing conventions in isolation is a fruitless, even harmful, pedagogy which does little, if anything, to improve student writing. Teaching conventions, style, and usage (often collectively referred to as grammar) in context, however, proves difficult when struggling secondary students develop good ideas and evidence but fail to clearly articulate them because of their lack of understanding of various writing conventions. The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of a carefully designed discovery learning activity which intends to push students into metacognition about what they read, how it is structured, and how that structure affects the reader. Three sources of data were used to determine whether students who had learned by discovery were better able to avoid and revise run-on sentences than students who did not learn through discovery pedagogy. The data sources include two sets of essays, surveys taken by the students, and teacher analyses of essays for readability. The results of the data analysis indicate that use of run-on sentences, especially early in an essay, detrimentally affects the readability of student written work; discovery learning activities improve student understanding, application, and transfer of skill; and while students believe they understand more than their written work indicates, the results provide teachers direction for further instruction. The findings of this study indicate that use of discovery learning for writing instruction with struggling learners holds great promise: a group of students generally regarded as academically weak showed greater understanding and application of run-on sentence avoidance than slightly stronger students who learned without discovery methods. This indicates that discovery learning is a method that improves learning among reluctant secondary students, a population many teachers struggle to reach effectively. Discovery learning is not limited to conventions, though: the promise of its application potential extends into a variety of writing skills and concepts. In addition to the run-on sentence discovery activity studied here, discovery activities for various other skills—from semicolon use through creating characterization with dialogue—are included.
author2 Lovejoy, Kim B.
author_facet Lovejoy, Kim B.
Bohney, Brandie Lee
author Bohney, Brandie Lee
author_sort Bohney, Brandie Lee
title "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
title_short "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
title_full "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
title_fullStr "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
title_full_unstemmed "Discovering" Writing With Struggling Students: Using Discovery Learning Pedagogy to Improve Writing Skills in Reluctant and Remedial Learners
title_sort "discovering" writing with struggling students: using discovery learning pedagogy to improve writing skills in reluctant and remedial learners
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1805/10786
work_keys_str_mv AT bohneybrandielee discoveringwritingwithstrugglingstudentsusingdiscoverylearningpedagogytoimprovewritingskillsinreluctantandremediallearners
_version_ 1719080035196862464