Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency

This study investigated whether reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension significantly predicts writing proficiency in English. The sample is composed of 159 college students taking up their English course. Five instruments were administered for each of the pr...

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Main Author: Magno, Carlo P.
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Published: Animo Repository 2008
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8187
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-87862023-01-26T03:55:51Z Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency Magno, Carlo P. This study investigated whether reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension significantly predicts writing proficiency in English. The sample is composed of 159 college students taking up their English course. Five instruments were administered for each of the predictor variables of written proficiency. The participants were asked to make an essay as measure of their written proficiency and were rated using the Test of Written English (TWE) scoring guide. The pearson r was used to correlate the predictor variables with written proficiency. A multiple regression analysis was used to determine which predictor is significant. The intercorrelations revealed that all seven variables (reading strategy, amount of writing, knowledge of cognition, regulation of cognition, MMQ-contentment, MMQ-ability, MMQ-strategy, and apprehension) were significant and had high correlations with written proficiency. Correlation coefficient values ranged from .41 to .76 and significant at α=.001. The multiple regression revealed that reading strategy, metamemory strategy, and regulation of cognition are significant predictors and when combined explained 58% of the variance in written proficiency. The semipartial correlations indicated that metamemory strategy as the best predictor, explaining 5% of the variance in written proficiency. Reading strategy, the nest best predictor, explained 4% of the variance, and regulation of cognition explains 3.5% of the variance. Pedagogical implications include using the strategies in teaching student to write English compositions. 2008-07-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8187 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository English language—Rhetoric Creative writing Creative Writing
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic English language—Rhetoric
Creative writing
Creative Writing
spellingShingle English language—Rhetoric
Creative writing
Creative Writing
Magno, Carlo P.
Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
description This study investigated whether reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension significantly predicts writing proficiency in English. The sample is composed of 159 college students taking up their English course. Five instruments were administered for each of the predictor variables of written proficiency. The participants were asked to make an essay as measure of their written proficiency and were rated using the Test of Written English (TWE) scoring guide. The pearson r was used to correlate the predictor variables with written proficiency. A multiple regression analysis was used to determine which predictor is significant. The intercorrelations revealed that all seven variables (reading strategy, amount of writing, knowledge of cognition, regulation of cognition, MMQ-contentment, MMQ-ability, MMQ-strategy, and apprehension) were significant and had high correlations with written proficiency. Correlation coefficient values ranged from .41 to .76 and significant at α=.001. The multiple regression revealed that reading strategy, metamemory strategy, and regulation of cognition are significant predictors and when combined explained 58% of the variance in written proficiency. The semipartial correlations indicated that metamemory strategy as the best predictor, explaining 5% of the variance in written proficiency. Reading strategy, the nest best predictor, explained 4% of the variance, and regulation of cognition explains 3.5% of the variance. Pedagogical implications include using the strategies in teaching student to write English compositions.
format text
author Magno, Carlo P.
author_facet Magno, Carlo P.
author_sort Magno, Carlo P.
title Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
title_short Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
title_full Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
title_fullStr Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
title_full_unstemmed Reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of English written proficiency
title_sort reading strategy, amount of writing, metacognition, metamemory, and apprehension as predictors of english written proficiency
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2008
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/8187
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