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Both handwriting speed and selective attention are important to lecture note-taking
Authors:Stephen T Peverly  Joanna K Garner  Pooja C Vekaria
Institution:1. Department of Health and Behavior Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY, 10027, USA
2. The Center for Educational Partnerships, Darden College of Education, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, USA
3. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, New York University Child Study Center, New York, NY, USA
Abstract:The primary purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the relationship of handwriting speed, fine motor fluency, speed of verbal access, language comprehension, working memory, and attention (executive control; selective) to note-taking and all of the aforementioned variables to test performance (written recall). A second purpose was to determine whether one or both of the hypothesized components of handwriting speed (as based in the children’s literature), fine motor speed or speed access to verbal codes (SAVCs), are responsible for the relationship of handwriting speed to notes. Results indicated that handwriting speed and selective attention were the only variables significantly related to notes and note-taking skill was the only variable that was significantly related to test performance. In a secondary analysis, we tested whether fine motor fluency and SAVC were related to handwriting speed. Handwriting speed was regressed on all of the other independent variables. Only fine motor fluency and SAVC were related to handwriting speed. The implications of these results for conceptualizations of note-taking and handwriting speed are discussed.
Keywords:
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