Title of article :
The Impact of Multiple Intelligence-Oriented Writing Tasks on the Accuracy, Fluency, and Organization of ELT Students’ Writing
Author/Authors :
Zeraatpishe, Mitra Department of English - Islamic Azad University Mashhad Branch, Iran , Seifoori, Zohreh Department of English - Islamic Azad University Tabriz Branch, Iran , Hadidi Tamjid, Nasrin Department of English - Islamic Azad University Tabriz Branch, Iran
Abstract :
Correlational studies supporting the link between learners’ multiple
intelligences and their learning are superseded by interventionist attempts to
explore direct applications of Multiple Intelligence (MI) Theory in language
teaching and learning. This quasi-experimental study examined the extent to
which engaging ELT major university students in writing tasks, compatible to
their dominant intelligences, might enhance the accuracy, organization, and
fluency of their writing. The participants were 64 male and female English
major sophomores. They were in three intact classes, randomly assigned to a
control no task (NT) group, a task-supported (TS) group, and an MI-oriented
task (MIT) group after their initial homogeneity was assessed. The fifteensession treatment comprised pre-writing brainstorming activities in the NT
group and a set of pre-writing tasks performed by the TS group. In the MIT
group, however, individuals with the same dominant intelligences were
grouped together to perform tasks that were compatible with their dominant
intelligences. The one-way ANOVA analysis of the research data obtained
from the post-test writing scores revealed that the MIT group surpassed the
other groups in accuracy, fluency and organization. The findings underscore
the necessity of taking learners’ intelligences into consideration as a criterion
for task selection and offer important pedagogical implications for teaching
writing.
Keywords :
accuracy , fluency , MI-oriented writing tasks , organization , writing , task-supported instruction
Journal title :
The Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Paractice