scholarly journals The Relationship Between Students’ Writing Process, Text Quality, and Thought Process Quality in 11th-Grade History and Philosophy Assignments

2021 ◽  
pp. 074108832110288
Author(s):  
Lieke Holdinga ◽  
Tanja Janssen ◽  
Gert Rijlaarsdam

Source-based writing is a common but difficult task in history and philosophy. Students are usually taught how to write a good text in language classes. However, it is also important to address discipline-specificity in writing, a topic likely to be taught by content teachers. In order to design discipline-specific writing instruction, research needs to identify which reading and writing activities during the source-based writing process affect students’ thought process quality and text quality, as assessed by content teachers. We conducted a think-aloud study with 15 (11th grade) students who performed two source-based writing assignments, each representative of its discipline. From the data, we derived 11 activities, which we analyzed for duration, frequency, and time of occurrence. Results showed that the disciplines required different approaches to writing. For philosophy, the writing process was dominant and influenced quality, leading us to conclude that philosophical thinking and writing are intertwined. For history, the planning process appeared to be paramount, but it influenced text quality only and not the quality of the thought process. In other words, historical thinking and writing appear to be separate processes. Our findings can be used to develop strategy instruction that reinforces better writing, adapted to discipline-specific writing processes.

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rick van der Kleij ◽  
Jameela T. E. Lijkwan ◽  
Peter C. Rasker ◽  
Carsten K. W. De Dreu

1988 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 91-102
Author(s):  
Rob Schoonen

The assessment of writing ability is problematic, insofar as it concerns reliable, valid and practical measurement. In this article the possibilities of reducing error in both the writer's production and the judge's scoring are discussed. Special attention is paid to the reduction of the writing process (as described by Hayes and Flower) by structuring the assignment. Reducing the writing process by eliminating subprocesses from the assignment results in a reduction of the number of possible sources of error in the writer's production. However, the validity of the structured writing assignments might be questioned. An example of a structured assignment and a revision task are given, and some preliminary results are discussed.


2002 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 227-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark J. Hallenbeck

Adolescents with learning disabilities (LD) often find expository writing among the most difficult academic skills to master. These students typically experience a great deal of failure with writing and become dependent upon others — mainly the teacher — for ideas and “quality control.” Such dependence on external sources hinders the development of higher-level cognitive skills required of effective writers. This study examined how a powerful writing strategy, Cognitive Strategy Instruction in Writing (CSIW), helped enable a group of seventh-graders with LD to take over responsibility for their own writing performance and to scaffold one another's writing development. Extensive teacher modeling and scaffolding, collaboration throughout the writing process, and a set of structuring think-sheets enabled these students to move beyond the “learned helplessness” so common among adolescents with learning disabilities; they came to see themselves as genuine writers and to employ the writing process as a tool for effective written expression.


There has been an ongoing debate about the value of providing corrective feedback in writing assignments in English as a foreign/second language classes. Despite the fact, corrective feedback in writing has been analyzed from various perspectives, learners’ expectations regarding feedback given by language instructors are still to be considered. This paper investigates the types of written feedback preferred by the Malaysian students. This study investigated how language learners perceive the usefulness of different types and amounts of written corrective feedback, and also the reasons they have for their preferences. Qualitative and quantitative data was collected from 103 ESL students by means of computer generated written questionnaires. The results showed that Malaysian learners react in favor of direct feedback to their written work, and yet they show little tolerance for simply marking the error without explanation. Moreover, considerable number of the respondents favored indirect corrective feedback with a clue. Possible explanations for the results were given with reference to the theoretical constructs of SLA.


2003 ◽  
pp. 143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chitose Asaoka ◽  
Yoshiko Usui

This longitudinal qualitative study investigated the kinds of problems identified by students while they completed their writing assignments as well as the ways in which they handled the problems in the writing component of an EAP program at a Japanese university. It also attempted to analyze the sources of the problems in order to find optimal ways to initiate the students into the new discourse community and give guidance along their writing process. 本研究は、ある日本の大学におけるEAPのライティングコースを受講する学生がライティング過程において何を問題視し、どのようにその問題を解決しているかについて質的リサーチ方法を用い、縦断的に観察した。又、学生の提示する問題の根源を分析し、今後どのように学生を新しいディスコースコミュニティーに導入し、ライティング過程でどのような指導をしていくことが適切か検討した。


2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Celine Sze

This case study investigated the revision process of a reluctant ESL student writer. It focused on revisions made at the in-process stage and at the between draft stage of the writing process in which the student revised in response to written feedback. Two writing assignments were given, and the topics varied in their degree of familiarity to the participant. Some findings corroborated those of earlier studies: the participant made more surface-level revisions than those related to structure and content; he made more revisions and high-level revisions in response to written feedback than when working on his own. Although familiarity with the topic seemed to have no effect on the revision patterns of the student, the classroom teacher's focus on form in responding to and evaluating his writing was seen to affect his attitude toward revision and use of revision strategies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 331-361
Author(s):  
Henk Pander Maat ◽  
Kay Raaijmakers ◽  
Dennis Vermeulen ◽  
Kees de Glopper

Abstract Text features and quality of learner text: an annotation studyManually annotated corpora of writing products may greatly contribute to writing research: they offer detailed insights in the quality of these texts, in the text features actually attended to by human text raters, in possibilities and difficulties for the use of automatic writing analytics and writing tools, and in the relations between different text quality dimensions. This paper presents the Utrecht System for Annotation of Learner text (USALT), that covers both general features (orthography, punctuation, wording, coherence) and genre-specific elements (such as openings, endings, structuring devices and politeness). The annotations contain up to three items (annotation unit; problem type; part-of-speech tag). USALT reflects various text quality dimensions, notably correctness, comprehensibility and appropriateness (both stylistically and in terms of genre conventions).We present an USALT analysis of 371 texts produced by Dutch students from grades 7-9 (aged 12-15 years), taken from the so-called Schrijfmeters-corpus. The assignment concerned a letter about ‘typically Dutch things’ to a Swedish girl about to emigrate to The Netherlands. USALT reliabilities were adequate. In terms of problem frequency, we were struck by the pervasiveness of punctuation problems. Furthermore, the orthography and punctuation problems together present considerable difficulties for automatic analysis of original learner texts at this level. A remarkable result regarding relations between various text quality dimensions is that the frequency of orthography problems correlates higher with genre convention problems than with lexico-grammatical problems. We also used the annotations as predictors of the holistic scores assigned to the texts by human raters. Standardized annotation frequencies by themselves may account for 45% of the score variance, with a prominent role for annotations regarding genre elements; text length by itself explains 52%. The best model includes both text length and annotations (65% explained variance). In ongoing work, USALT is being extended to handle argumentative writing assignments.


2014 ◽  
Vol 47 (03) ◽  
pp. 675-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allison Rank ◽  
Heather Pool

ABSTRACTAlthough most instructors care deeply about student writing, they often give little attention to the part of the writing process over which they maintain complete control: the assignment itself. Yet, the written prompt that we distribute is often where student confusion (and confused writing) begins. Using Bloom’s taxonomy as inspiration, we offer instructors a typology directly linked to course objectives, which we believe can be readily understood by student writers.


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