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Hawkins, Lisa K.; Martin, Nicole M.; Bottomley, Diane; Shanahan, Brendan; Cooper, Jennifer – Literacy Research and Instruction, 2022
This mixed methods study sought to extend what is known about preservice teachers' [PSTs'] enactment of the core practice of reading and responding to students' writing by examining their reading of elementary students' writing at the start and end of writing-focused methods coursework. PSTs' reading of students' writing involves analysis of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Educational Needs, Childrens Writing
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Beauvais, Clémentine – Children's Literature in Education, 2019
This article explores child-authored texts, both real and fictional, and the adult discourse surrounding or commenting on such texts. It focuses on the example of young Marcel's writing in Proust's "In Search of Lost Time," and on the critical commentary on the juvenilia of child authors of the nineteenth and early twentieth century. I…
Descriptors: Children, Authors, Childrens Writing, Nineteenth Century Literature
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Alexandra Thrall; T. Philip Nichols; Kevin R. Magill – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine how young people imagine civic futures through speculative fiction writing about artificial intelligence (AI) technologies. The authors argue that young people's speculative fiction writing about AI not only helps make visible the ways they imagine the impacts of emerging technologies and the modes…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Information Technology, Futures (of Society), Fiction
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Furman, Cara – Schools: Studies in Education, 2019
Much has been written about the importance of giving personal attention to children's written work. The focus has been on the effect of this feedback on the writing and on the child. Drawing on the philosophical discourse of the care of the self, I argue that the ways in which a teacher gives feedback informs the development of the teacher.…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Feedback (Response), Teacher Student Relationship, Faculty Development
Auguste, Elizabeth – Educational Leadership, 2018
In elementary schools, writing instruction often includes a heavy emphasis on penmanship, cleanliness, and mechanics. While the importance of crafting a story and creating meaning are taught, these elements may not be stressed enough to young budding writers. In this article, Auguste suggests that elementary school teachers--especially…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Kindergarten, Preschool Teachers, Emergent Literacy
Rebecca L. Witte – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This ethnographically-oriented, multi-year study examined an epistolary writing relationship between third grade students and the teacher's uncle, known to them as Uncle Billy, who, at the time of the study, was corresponding from prison. Taking place within a Reformed Christian school, this study encapsulates the pedagogy of Ms. Thompson, the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Christianity, Religious Schools, School Community Relationship
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Lim, Donna – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2021
Writing is often considered one of the most difficult skills both to engage in and to teach. Many models of teaching writing have been offered over the years. However, the tendency is for one to enact these teaching frames solely within the confines of a single classroom or a grade level at best. In addition to this, terminology for the same…
Descriptors: Childrens Writing, Creative Writing, Writing Instruction, Elementary Schools
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Maguet, McKenna Lucille; Morrison, Timothy G.; Wilcox, Brad; Nixon, Ryan S.; Billen, Monica T. – Reading Psychology, 2020
Common Core State Standards emphasize the importance of informational writing in primary grades. In such writing, importance is placed on the writing being scholarly and scientific. However, such writing can be rote and dry, with little voice. The purpose of this article was to propose a working definition of voice in science writing for first…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Content Area Writing, Sciences
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Leigh, Jennifer – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2020
Reflection is a vital part of learning, and yet in early childhood, research work on reflection is most commonly on that undertaken by teachers, and not children. This article draws from a participatory study showing how creative research methods and somatic movement enabled 22 children aged 4-11 to reflect on their experiences and document their…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Movement Education, Reflection, Children
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Kucirkova, Natalia; Wells Rowe, Deborah; Oliver, Lucy; Piestrzynski, Laura E. – Literacy, 2019
Writing is part and parcel of children's active meaning-making on and with screens, but it has been relatively neglected in the literature focused on children's digital literacies. This study synthesises existing empirical evidence focused on young children's (aged between 2 and 8 years) writing on screen and identifies the relationships between…
Descriptors: Young Children, Educational Research, Childrens Writing, Technological Literacy
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Parry, Becky; Taylor, Lucy – Literacy, 2018
In this paper, we demonstrate the relationship between reading and writing for pleasure. Children read a wide range of media as well as books for pleasure and develop strong affective bonds with the artefacts of literacy they encounter. What remains less well understood is the relationship between the array of texts children engage with and the…
Descriptors: Children, Recreational Reading, Reader Text Relationship, Childrens Writing
Cross, Megan D. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
This study explored the many layers involved in young children's meaning-making as they digitally compose. Utilizing a multimodal, social semiotics theoretical framework to analyze children's digital compositions using a composing app, this study was designed around one research question: What is the nature of three and four-year-old children's…
Descriptors: Young Children, Computer Software, Laboratory Schools, Handheld Devices
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Ergül, Cevriye; Ökcün Akçamus, Meral Çilem; Akoglu, Gözde; Demir, Ergül; Tülü, Burcu Kiliç; Bahap Kudret, Zeynep – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
This study investigated endogenous and exogenous predictors of early literacy in Turkish-speaking children. Whether children's language and working memory performances (as the endogenous factors) and home literacy environment (as the exogenous factor) in the beginning of kindergarten predict the children's current and year-end early literacy…
Descriptors: Young Children, Kindergarten, Predictor Variables, Emergent Literacy
Thomas, Leiah J. G.; Gerde, Hope K.; Piasta, Shayne B.; Logan, Jessica A. R.; Bailet, Laura L.; Zettler-Greeley, Cynthia M. – Grantee Submission, 2020
Early writing is a foundational skill related to young children's literacy development and later reading and writing achievement. Examining children's early writing skills, particularly for those who have been identified as at-risk for later literacy difficulties, is critical to understanding potential differences in the early writing of these…
Descriptors: Writing Skills, Emergent Literacy, Reading Difficulties, Screening Tests
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Fischer, Jean-Paul – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2017
Recent research has established that 5- to 6-year-old typically developing children in a left-right writing culture spontaneously reverse left-oriented characters (e.g., they write a [reversed J] instead of J) when they write single characters. Thus, children seem to implicitly apply a right-writing rule (RWR: see Fischer & Koch, 2016a). In…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Handwriting, Writing Skills, Alphabets
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