Metacognition in student academic writing: A longitudinal study of metacognitive awareness and its relation to task perception and evaluation of performance.
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2012

This article proposes a novel approach to the investigation of student academic writing. It applies theories of metacognition and self-regulated learning to understand how beginning academic writers develop the ability to participate in the communicative practices of academic written communication and develop rhetorical consciousness. The study investigates how this awareness changes over time and how it relates to students’ perceptions of the writing task, metacognitive awareness of strategic choices, and evaluation of their writing. Through a constructivist grounded theory approach, journals collected throughout a semester from students of beginning academic composition were analysed to determine qualitative changes. The data suggest a link between task perception and students’ conditional metacognitive awareness—their understanding of how to adapt writing strategies to specific rhetorical requirements of the task, and why—and performance evaluation. Metacognitive awareness also seems to have a reciprocal relationship with self-regulation and students’ development of individual writing approaches.

monitoring

rhetorical awareness

composition

English for academic purposes

self-regulated learning

Författare

Raffaella Negretti

Stockholms universitet

Written Communication

0741-0883 (ISSN) 15528472 (eISSN)

Vol. 29 2 142-179

Styrkeområden

Informations- och kommunikationsteknik

Ämneskategorier

Lärande

Tillämpad psykologi

Studier av enskilda språk

Lärande och undervisning

Pedagogiskt arbete

DOI

10.1177/0741088312438529

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2018-08-25