Mediation in a Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing for Elementary Students: Instructional Scaffolding
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Defining the Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing
1.2. Mediation through Scaffolding in Socio-Cognitive Writing Instruction
1.3. Mediating Learning to Write: Instructional Scaffolding and the Socio-Cognitive Approach
1.4. Proposed Model of Instructional Scaffolding for the Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing
- Modeling: Giving students clear examples of what is requested of them for imitation to complete the writing task and the teacher models “appropriate language use for the performance of specific academic functions” (p. 170). This can be done as a class activity first.
- Bridging: Helping students to activate prior knowledge or establish a personal link between students and the subject matter, such as asking students to share personal experiences related to the theme.
- Contextualising: Making academic language accessible and engaging for students through using authentic objects, sources of information, realia or analogies based on students’ experiences.
- Schema Building: Activating students’ schema and weaving new information into pre-existing structures of meaning to enable them to accept new connections and to organize knowledge and understanding. Giving general knowledge or the broad picture before studying the details.
- Re-presenting Text: Asking students to transform the linguistic constructions of one genre into another genre.
- Developing Metacognition: Helping students manage their thinking in terms of strategy application, strategy choice, monitoring, evaluating and adjusting performance during activity; and planning for future writing based on evaluation of performance.
2. Methodology
2.1. Research Focus
2.2. Context
2.3. Data Collection Procedure
2.4. Analytical Framework
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Explicit Outcomes and Expectations
3.2. Modelling
3.3. Bridging: Activating Students’ Prior Knowledge
3.4. Contextualising
3.5. Schema Building
3.6. Re-Presenting Text
3.7. Developing Metacognition
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Instructional Scaffolding Functions |
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Explicitoutcomes and expectations [3]: State what is being studied, why it is being studied, and what will be expected of students. |
Modeling [1]: Provide examples of expected writing. |
Bridging [1]: Personal link e.g., share personal experiences or activate prior knowledge (linking new contexts and understandings to what students already know about writing [3]). |
Contextualising [1]: Make academic language accessible and engaging for students through using authentic objects, sources of information, realia or analogies based on students’ experiences. |
Schema Building [1]: Activate students’ schema, weave new information into pre-existing structures of meaning, give general knowledge or the broad picture before details. |
Re-presenting Text [1]: Transform one genre into another. |
Developing Metacognition [1]: Thinking about strategy application/choice, monitoring, evaluating, planning for future writing. |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Occurrence of Function (n = 21 Lessons) |
---|---|
Explicit outcomes and expectations | 95% |
Modeling | 76% |
Bridging | 57% |
Contextualising | 100% |
Schema Building | 76% |
Re-presenting Text | 8% |
Developing Metacognition | 61% |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Explicit outcomes and expectations | Learning Outcome Example 1A Tr: For today’s lesson, you are required to construct your own story map … of your own parallel fairy tale … we are going to go through a quick identification of the story map behind this … story. SS: (listening) Learning Outcome Example 2A (Reiteration 1) Tr: Now the objective for today’s … again. You are to construct your own … story map, right? SS: (listening) Learning Outcome Example 3A (Reiteration 2) Tr: Again … (watching today’s objective) you are … to construct … a story map … on your own … parallel to what you have just … read (pointing to the story elements that they did on the board) the characters, the setting, the event, problem, solution and ending. SS: Yes (choral) Learning Outcome Example 4A (Reiteration 3) Tr: The lesson objective of today is for you to create your own story map … parallel to the once given, right? SS: Yes (choral) | Learning Outcome Example 1B Tr: We gonna do some continuous writing. Ss: Yes (Chorus) Learning Outcome Example 2B Tr: Can you try to create a story … with one of these themes over here … about “a positive or a happy experience” or, you can do something about “a surprise” ok? You can do it with both. Ss: Yes (Chorus) Learning Outcome Example 3B Tr: Our theme for the day is “a pleasant surprise”. This is what we gonna write today. Ok? SS: (Listening attentively) Learning Outcome Example 4B Tr: We gonna write the “Topic Blast” Do you remember the topic blast? Ss: Yes (Chorus) Learning Outcome Example 5B (Quick Writing) Tr: In case you forget … we gonna do the next part, which is about your … Quick writing. SS: (Listening attentively) |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B | |
---|---|---|---|
Modeling | Modelling Example 1A (stating provision of examples) I will show you some examples later on. Ok? SS: (listening) Modelling Example 2A (providing a sample story) Tr: I am gonna share with you … What my parallel … story would be like. The event. Now the setting would be … (Motion: so so) a palace I will say … The event, what happened? The princess was … on her way to a party SS: (listening) Teacher’s sample narrative | Modelling Example 1B (Topic Blast Activity) Tr: (Showing slide) Just a re-cap in case you forget. The Do, say, think and feel. Do is … What would you or the character do in that situation? Or what did the character do in that situation? Say is … something like what did the character say if they were in that situation? Think is … What about the character’s thought? What did he feel about the situation? And lastly, what was his emotion? That’s the feel point. Right? It is just re-cap. SS: Actually he is quite happy | |
Title: | The Frog Prince | ||
Characters: | A beautiful Princess A handsome Prince who is under an evil spell and became a Frog. | ||
Event: | Princess was on the way to a party. | ||
Problem: | She dropped her diamond necklace into a pond. She did not know how to get it back. | ||
Solution: | The frog will help her get back her necklace but under one condition. Allow the frog to sit on her head for one hour. | ||
Ending | The frog turned into a handsome prince and they lived happily ever after. |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Bridging | Bridging Example 1A Tr: Just a quick recap for what we just … what we did … on our last lesson … the first thing we did was introducing the fractured fairy tales to you, right? (Teacher recap story map and parallel story) SS: Yes (choral) Bridging Example 2A Tr: … based on the last exercise we did as a class. Prince Zak and The Wise Frog, do you still remember? SS: (Listening) | Bridging Example 1B Tr: We gonna do a bit of a revision for our composition SS: (Listening attentively) Bridging Example 2B Tr: … before that let’s do a very simple recap. So do you remember what did we do in out last writing? What was the topic? What strategy did we use? What was the topic about? SS: (Listening attentively) Bridging Example 3B (Topic Blast Activity) Tr: (Showing slide: Just a re-cap) In case you forget. The Do, say, think and feel. SS: (Listening attentively) |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Contextualising | Contextualising Example 1A Tr: What is the main idea here? Something actually? (Motion: grabbing & dropping) something? SS: I don’t know. Tr: (Motion: dropping) Something? (motion: dropping eraser) SS: Fell. Tr: The main idea is something fell … and … the person (motion: holding something) who drops this item … Can he or she retrieve the item? SS1,3,4: No (shaking head to express “no”) Contextualising Example 2A Tr: The idea is about … (picking up the eraser) someone … either the prince or the princess … what is it? (dropping the eraser) What happened? (dropping the highlighter) SS: Fell/drop | Contextualising Example 1B Tr: If you look at the next slide (showing the slide: tangible VS intangible), the things that surprise you … either tangible or “intangible. So what is this? What is tangible and intangible? So tangible is something that is physical … that you can touch. For example, a birthday gift. I got a gift, I got an X-box, I got a PSP. SS: Something that makes feel good (a few SS) S8: Give four people money Tr: Oh, you give four people money. That makes you … happy, right? … What do you think is another example of intangible surprise? S25: Someone shout [at] you with surprise that you are the best person in the world. Tr: He didn’t really give anything physical, but he says “Oh, you are actually the best person in the world.” |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Schema Building | Schema Building Example 1A (Pre activity) Tr: Just a quick recap for what we just … our last lesson. The first thing we did was introducing the fractured fairy tales to you, right? And ah … what we did next was we read the original version of Little Red Riding Hood and after which we watched the? (Tr pausing video) SS: Yes (choral) | Schema Building Example 1B Tr: Try also to create the story with a climax. Remember what is a climax? SS: Something exciting happening. Schema Building Example 2B (Topic Blast Activity) Tr: Look at the box for video one. Think about Do, Say, Think and Feel sentences. SS: (viewing attentively)Schema Building Example 3B (Quick Writing) Tr: (Showing slide): Just a recap … in case you forget. You just choose one of these three different scenarios, and you write down a sentence for each. And at the end you try to combine all these sentences into one paragraph. You did it before right? So let’s try it again. SS: (listening) |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Re-presenting text | Re-presenting Text Example 1A (Pre activity) Tr: We then moved on to construct a very simple parallel story by applying … What we have learned is the … ? (pointing to the board) STAR. What is S again? SS: Substitute (Choral) Re-presenting Text Example 2A (Group conference) Tr: The story we did? (pointing to the paper) this one? Do you remember the story? We changed a bit, right? SS: Yes Tr: Instead of the palace gardens, we changed to … Vista? Point. Ah, Vista park. SS: Park. |
Instructional Scaffolding Functions | Teacher A | Teacher B |
---|---|---|
Developing Metacognition | Metacognition Example 1A (Group conference—Joint construction) Tr: You are … to construct … a story map on your own … parallel to what you have just read. Discuss as a group. You may want to write down your ideas alright? (pointing to the story elements that they did on the board) the characters, the setting, the event, problem, solution and ending. Write … brainstorm … the idea first … scribe your ideas. SS: Yes. Metacognition Example 2A (Group conference) Tr: What are the problems? Was there a condition? SS: No. Metacognition Example 3A (Group conference) Tr: Your group, what are the ideas in your group? The characters? Who are the characters, what was the item that was dropped? Then what happened in the end? SS: Title? | Metacognition Example 1B Tr: Before that, let’s do a very simple recap. So do you remember what did we do in our last writing? What was the topic? What strategy did we use? SS: (listening attentively) Metacognition Example 2B (Topic Blast Activity) Tr: (to S28) Do you manage to write a complete sentence? Who is he? “He played with Cristiano Ronaldo” he refers to? SS: the boy Metacognition Example 3B (Quick Writing) (Showing slide: Just a recap) in case you forget. The quick writing. You can just write the gist of your story. So when you translate it to your composition, you may … you must include “introduction” you just also have your conclusion. This is just the gist of your story. The main part of your story. SS: (listening) |
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Ng, C.H.; Cheung, Y.L. Mediation in a Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing for Elementary Students: Instructional Scaffolding. Educ. Sci. 2018, 8, 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8030092
Ng CH, Cheung YL. Mediation in a Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing for Elementary Students: Instructional Scaffolding. Education Sciences. 2018; 8(3):92. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8030092
Chicago/Turabian StyleNg, Chiew Hong, and Yin Ling Cheung. 2018. "Mediation in a Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing for Elementary Students: Instructional Scaffolding" Education Sciences 8, no. 3: 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8030092
APA StyleNg, C. H., & Cheung, Y. L. (2018). Mediation in a Socio-Cognitive Approach to Writing for Elementary Students: Instructional Scaffolding. Education Sciences, 8(3), 92. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8030092