Linguistic metaconcepts can improve grammatical understanding in L1 education:evidence from a Dutch quasi-experimental study

This mixed-method quasi-experimental study examined whether metaconceptual grammar teaching impacts on (a) students’ L1 grammatical understanding, (b) their ‘blind’ use of grammatical concepts and (c) their preference of using explicit grammatical concepts over everyday concepts in explaining grammatical problems. Previous research, involving single group pre-postintervention designs, found positive effects for metaconceptual interventions on secondary school students’ grammatical reasoning ability, although a negative side effect seemed to be that some students started using grammatical conce... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van Rijt, Jimmy
Myhill, Debra
De Maeyer, Sven
Coppen, Peter-Arno
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Reihe/Periodikum: van Rijt , J , Myhill , D , De Maeyer , S & Coppen , P-A 2022 , ' Linguistic metaconcepts can improve grammatical understanding in L1 education : evidence from a Dutch quasi-experimental study ' , PLOS ONE , vol. 17 , no. 2 , e0263123 , pp. 1-25 . https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263123
Schlagwörter: Adolescent / Bayes Theorem / Educational Status / Female / Humans / Language / Linguistics/methods / Male / Netherlands / Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic / Students/statistics & numerical data / Teaching/standards
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26827416
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://research.tilburguniversity.edu/en/publications/47415ac4-61a6-4a67-9681-87fe95d6fc97

This mixed-method quasi-experimental study examined whether metaconceptual grammar teaching impacts on (a) students’ L1 grammatical understanding, (b) their ‘blind’ use of grammatical concepts and (c) their preference of using explicit grammatical concepts over everyday concepts in explaining grammatical problems. Previous research, involving single group pre-postintervention designs, found positive effects for metaconceptual interventions on secondary school students’ grammatical reasoning ability, although a negative side effect seemed to be that some students started using grammatical concepts ‘blindly’ (i.e., in an inaccurate way). While there are thus important clues that metaconceptual grammar teaching may lead to increased grammatical understanding, there is a great need for more robust empirical research. The current study, involving 196 Dutch 14-year old pre-university students, is a methodological improvement of previous work, adopting a switching replications design. Bayesian multivariate analyses indicate medium to large effects from the metaconceptual intervention on students’ grammatical understanding. The study found a similar effect of the intervention on students’ ability to use explicit grammatical concepts over everyday concepts in tackling grammatical problems. No evidence for increased ‘blind’ concept use as a negative byproduct of the intervention was found. Additional qualitative analyses of in-intervention tasks provided further evidence for the effectiveness of metaconceptual interventions, and seemed to indicate that cases of blind concept use, rather than being a negative side effect, might actually be part of a gradual process of students’ growing understanding of grammatical (meta)concepts. We discuss these findings in relation to previous work and conclude that linguistic metaconcepts can improve L1 grammatical understanding.