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Teaching Fifth-Grade Students With Specific Learning Disabilities to Explain Their Mathematical Reasoning Through Written Expression

Paul J. Riccomini, Elizabeth E. Hughes, Divya S. Deshpande, Joo Young Lee, Laura Fiveash, T.F. Lin

2024Learning Disability Quarterly10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The current study investigated the effectiveness of an intensive writing intervention focusing on mathematical reasoning through written expression. A group pretest–intervention–posttest comparison experimental design was used to implement a 12-lesson intervention, delivered through a combination of Google Classroom and in-person classroom teacher support, to fifth-grade students with specific learning disabilities ( n = 19). Although underpowered, our results indicated the intensive writing intervention led to all students in the intervention group ( n = 11) significantly outperforming the students in the control group ( n = 8) on subtraction and division word problems requiring an explanation of their solution in written form. Additionally, student treatment interviews revealed the strategy was both enjoyable and helpful in solving and explaining their word problem solutions and the teacher provided insight into potential additional scaffolds to support the most intensive students. Lessons learned and implications for research and practice are presented.

Topics & Concepts

Learning disabilityPsychologyExpression (computer science)Mathematics educationTeaching methodAbstract reasoningDevelopmental psychologyCognitive psychologyPedagogyCognitionComputer scienceProgramming languageNeuroscienceCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsWriting and Handwriting EducationReading and Literacy Development
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