"What you think, feel, and experience shape your writing: " Cognitive, affective, and contextual processes in ESL writing
College
Br. Andrew Gonzalez FSC College of Education
Department/Unit
Dept of English and Applied Linguistics
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Asia-Pacific Education Researcher
Volume
19
Issue
2
First Page
271
Last Page
285
Publication Date
10-1-2010
Abstract
The present study positions itself within the research tradition based on the cognitive process and focuses the research lens on young writers, investigating the composing processes of six students at three proficiency levels in their final year in high school. Cognitive-based previous research is generally limited to describing how cognitive strategies interact during writing and how these strategies spell the difference between good and poor writers. There is a need to look at the writing context and varying experiences among writers, which help account for the differences in the cognitive processes among writers and their sources of difficulty. Hence, the present study seeks to describe (1) how secondary graduating students in a product-oriented writing context approach the writing task; and (2) how they are different or similar in terms of cognitive strategies, metacognitve models, emotions while writing, and sources of difficulty. The study underscores that writing should be viewed as multiprocesses including cognitive and emotional processes analyzed within the classroom context and experiences of writers. The findings lead to tentative conclusions and suggest implications for pedagogy and research. © 2010 De La Salle University, Philippines.
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Recommended Citation
Gustilo, L. E. (2010). "What you think, feel, and experience shape your writing: " Cognitive, affective, and contextual processes in ESL writing. Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 19 (2), 271-285. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2785
Disciplines
Language and Literacy Education
Keywords
Cognition; English language—Rhetoric; English language—Study and teaching—Foreign speakers
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