Detailed Information

Cited 0 time in webofscience Cited 0 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

How EFL Students Strategically Facilitate Their Writing Processes: A Sociocultural ApproachHow EFL Students Strategically Facilitate Their Writing Processes: A Sociocultural Approach

Other Titles
How EFL Students Strategically Facilitate Their Writing Processes: A Sociocultural Approach
Authors
허명혜김민경
Issue Date
2013
Publisher
새한영어영문학회
Keywords
writing strategies; Vygotsky; sociocultural approach; mediation; activity theory; Engeström; writing strategies; Vygotsky; sociocultural approach; mediation; activity theory; Engeström
Citation
새한영어영문학, v.55, no.1, pp.301 - 326
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
새한영어영문학
Volume
55
Number
1
Start Page
301
End Page
326
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/104830
DOI
10.25151/nkje.2013.55.1.014
ISSN
1598-7124
Abstract
This study explored how EFL students strategically mediated their writing with a multitude of resources in writing activities. The participants were 49 Korean-speaking EFL students. These students all took a course, entitled “Teaching EFL Writing,” an in-service teacher training course, offered at the Graduate School of Education in a large university in Seoul, Korea. Once the writing was completed, they filled out the questionnaire. The questionnaire consists of open-ended questions to ask about the writing process, including use of writing strategies. Four types of writing strategies were identified: artifact-mediated, rule-mediated, community-mediated, and role-mediated strategies. Subcategories were specified within each category to further explain the students’ strategy use. The most frequently used strategy was artifact-mediated strategy with 157 occurrences in total, whereas the least frequently used strategy was community-mediated strategy with 34 occurrences in total. Strategy use actually involves the strategic mediation of various resources. These resources, ranging from artifacts to people, from rules to roles, belong to the sociocultural context and thus strategy use is always socioculturally situated and distributed. While mediating resources facilitated students’ writing processes, their use caused tensions and contradictions within an individual’s activity system as well.
Files in This Item
There are no files associated with this item.
Appears in
Collections
College of Education > Department of English Language Education > 1. Journal Articles

qrcode

Items in ScholarWorks are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Altmetrics

Total Views & Downloads

BROWSE