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Full Description
Executive functions are a set of cognitive processes we use to act on information, manage resources, and plan and monitor our own behaviour, all with the aim of achieving an end goal. These are skills that develop from infancy. While 'reading' has been extensively studied in psychology literature, 'writing' has been somewhat neglected, despite a lack of capability in this area being linked to poverty and social exclusion.
This book is the first comprehensive and state-of-the-art review of the relationship between executive function skills and writing. It explores its role across the lifespan, addressing all groups of writers, from children and those with learning and language difficulties, to adults and elders. It considers theoretical viewpoints, assessment and methodological issues, and developmental disorders, and closes with insightful commentary chapters that draw future directions for investigating executive functions.
Written by internationally recognized scholars in the field, this is a new and innovative contribution which will provide essential reading among researchers, educators, and graduate students interested in understanding the cognitive underpinnings of writing throughout the lifespan
Contents
1. Introduction
1: Teresa Limpo and Thierry Olive: Why should we be looking at the relationship between executive functions and writing?
2. Models of executive functions and writing
2: Michael Willoughby and Kesha Hudson: Current issues in the conceptualization and measurement of executive function skills
3: Steve Graham: Executive control and the Writer(s)-Within-Community model
3. Methods for assessing executive functions and writing
4: Helen St Clair-Thompson and Yunhong Wen: Assessment of executive functions in children
5: Julie E. Dockrell and Vincent Connelly: Capturing the challenges in assessing writing: Development and writing dimensions
4. Executive functions and writing across the lifespan
6: Stephen R. Hooper, Lara Costa, Edmund Fernandez, Alexandra Barker, Courtney Valdes, Stephanie Catlett and Melissa Green: Executive functions and writing skills in children and adolescents: Developmental associations and dissociations
7: Marisa Filipe: How do executive functions issues affect writing in students with neurodevelopmental disorders?
8: Linda Mason and Stacie Brady: Promoting executive functions during the writing process
9: Thierry Olive: Executive functions in skilled writers
10: São Luís Castro and Regina Abreu: The aging writer
5. Conclusions and future directions
11: George McCLoskey: Broader approaches to defining, assessing, and strengthening executive control in writing
12: George Georgiou: Executive functions: Rediscovering their roots with the help of writing
13: Sam Goldstein and Keith D. McGoldrick: The future role of executive functions in education: From acquisition to knowledge and effective application