Executive Functions in Elementary School Children With and Without Problems in Written Expression
- 1 January 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 35 (1) , 57-68
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002221940203500105
Abstract
This study examined the executive functioning of 55 elementary school children with and without problems in written expression. Two groups reflecting children with and without significant writing problems were defined by an average primary trait rating across two separate narratives. The groups did not differ in terms of chronological age, ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, special education status, or presence of attention problems or receptive vocabulary capabilities; however, they did differ in reading decoding ability, and this variable was controlled for in all analyses. Dependent measures included tasks tapping an array of executive functions grouped conceptually in accordance with a model of executive functioning reflecting the following domains: initiate, sustain, set shifting, and inhibition/stopping. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) procedures revealed statistically significant group differences on the initiation and set shift domains, with the sustaining domain approaching significance. Children with writing problems performed more poorly in each of these domains, although the effect sizes were small. A multiple regression that employed these four factors and the reading decoding variable to predict the primary trait score from the written narratives revealed a statistically significant regression function; however, reading decoding contributed most of the unique variance to the writing outcome. These findings point out the importance of executive functions in the written language process for elementary school students, but highlight the need to examine other variables when studying elementary school-age children with written expression problems.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reading and Writing Relations and Their DevelopmentEducational Psychologist, 2000
- Coordinating Transcription and Text Generation in Working Memory during Composing: Automatic and Constructive ProcessesLearning Disability Quarterly, 1999
- Structural equation modeling of relationships among developmental skills and writing skills in primary- and intermediate-grade writers.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1993
- From Research to Clinical Assessment of Reading and Writing Disorders: The Unit of Analysis ProblemPublished by Springer Nature ,1993
- Lower-level developmental skills in beginning writingReading and Writing, 1992
- A Developmental Neuropsychological Perspective for Reading and Writing AcquisitionEducational Psychologist, 1992
- An empirical test of two opposing theoretical models of prefrontal functionBrain and Cognition, 1992
- Unraveling the Mysteries of Writing Through Strategy InstructionPublished by Springer Nature ,1990
- Research on Revision in WritingReview of Educational Research, 1987
- A Comparison of Classroom Writing Practices, Teachers' Perceptions of Their Writing Instruction, and Textbook Recommendations on Writing PracticesThe Elementary School Journal, 1985