Understanding Interest and Self-Efficacy in the Reading and Writing of Students with Persisting Specific Learning Disabilities during Middle Childhood and Early Adolescence

Author:

Abbott Robert,Mickail Terry,Richards Todd,Ann K.,E. Suzanne,Beers Scott,Berninger Virginia

Abstract

<p style="text-align: justify;">Three methodological approaches were applied to understand the role of interest and self-efficacy in reading and/or writing in students without and with persisting specific learning disabilities (SLDs) in literacy. For each approach students in grades 4 to 9 completed a survey in which they rated 10 reading items and 10 writing items on a Scale 1 to 5; all items were the same but domain varied. The first approach applied Principal Component Analysis with Varimax Rotation to a sample that varied in specific kinds of literacy achievement. The second approach applied bidirectional multiple regressions in a sample of students with diagnosed SLDs-WL to (a) predict literacy achievement from ratings on interest and self-efficacy survey items; and (b) predict ratings on interest and self-efficacy survey items from literacy achievement. The third approach correlated ratings on the surveys with BOLD activation on an fMRI word reading/spelling task in a brain region associated with approach/avoidance and affect in a sample with diagnosed SLDs-WL. The first approach identified two components for the reading items (each correlated differently with reading skills) and two components for the writing items (each correlated differently with writing skills), but the components were not the same for both domains. Multiple regressions supported predicting interest and self-efficacy ratings from current reading achievement, rather than predicting reading achievement from interest and self-efficacy ratings, but also bidirectional relationships between interest or self-efficacy in writing and writing achievement.  The third approach found negative correlations with amygdala connectivity for 2 reading items, but 5 positive and 2 negative correlations with amygdala connectivity for writing items; negative correlations may reflect avoidance and positive correlations approach. Collectively results show the relevance and domain-specificity of interest and self-efficacy in reading and writing for students with persisting SLDs in literacy.</p>

Publisher

Eurasian Society of Educational Research

Cited by 7 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Relationships Among Reading Interest, Reading Self-Efficacy, And Reading Competency In The Junior High School;International Journal of Language and Literature;2023-07-13

2. Implementation of ICT literacy in STEAM project learning for measuring student’s interest and motivation;THE 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LIFE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (ICoLiST);2023

3. How Information-Seeking Behavior, Essential Technologies, and Resilience Enhance the Academic Performance of Students;Frontiers in Psychology;2021-08-26

4. Effects of a school-based program on Iranian students’ well-being;International Journal of School & Educational Psychology;2020-05-12

5. The self in self-regulated writing of fourth to ninth graders with dysgraphia;International Journal of School & Educational Psychology;2020-02-12

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