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      The Effects of Writing on Learning in Science, Social Studies, and Mathematics: A Meta-Analysis

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          Abstract

          This meta-analysis examined if students writing about content material in science, social studies, and mathematics facilitated learning ( k = 56 experiments). Studies in this review were true or quasi-experiments (with pretests), written in English, and conducted with students in Grades 1 to 12 in which the writing-to-learn activity was part of instruction. Studies were not included if the control condition used writing to support learning (except when treatment students spent more time engaging in writing-to-learn activities), study attrition exceeded 20%, instructional time and content coverage differed between treatment and control conditions, pretest scores approached ceiling levels, letter grades were the learning outcome, and students attended a special school for students with disabilities. As predicted, writing about content reliably enhanced learning (effect size = 0.30). It was equally effective at improving learning in science, social studies, and mathematics as well as the learning of elementary, middle, and high school students. Writing-to-learn effects were not moderated by the features of writing activities, instruction, or assessment. Furthermore, variability in obtained effects were not related to features of study quality. Directions for future research and implications for practice are provided.

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          The Impact on Incorporating Collaborative Concept Mapping with Coteaching Techniques in Elementary Science Classes

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Review of Educational Research
            Review of Educational Research
            American Educational Research Association (AERA)
            0034-6543
            1935-1046
            April 2020
            March 19 2020
            April 2020
            : 90
            : 2
            : 179-226
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Arizona State University
            [2 ]Institute for Learning Sciences & Teacher Education, Australian Catholic University, Brisbane
            [3 ]University of Utah
            Article
            10.3102/0034654320914744
            37229504
            91e3639f-162f-473b-9fff-fb9e8a9eef98
            © 2020

            http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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