Children’s Knowledge of Organization, Cohesion, and Voice in Written Exposition

Beverly E. Cox Purdue University West Lafayette ; Timothy Shanahan University of Illinois Chicago ; Margaret B. Tinzmann North Central College

Abstract

This study investigatest he abilityo f 48 children at two grades (3, 5) and reading ability levels (good, poor) to write functionally appropriate expository texts. Their texts (96 in all) were examined for appropriateness and complexity of organization; cohesion, including cohesive harmony; and voice. They were also ranked holistically for quality of writing by adult readers. The data were submitted to descriptive and parametric statistics that examined grade and reading level effects and relationships. Results suggest that nearly all these children understood the function and audience for exposition. Reading level was found to be significantly more related than grade level to sophisticated use of cohesion, organization, and a preference for lexical rather than coreferential cohesion devices. Adult rating of writing quality correlated significantly with those texts using more cohesive harmony and complex organization

Journal
Research in the Teaching of English
Published
1991-05-01
DOI
10.58680/rte199115469
Open Access
Closed
Topics

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