Student engagement with teacher and automated written corrective feedback on L2 writing: A multiple case study

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Sara Afifi, Mohammad Rahimi, Joshua Wilson
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Abstract

The present multiple-case study, based on the multi-dimensional perspective on student engagement with Corrective Feedback (CF) proposed by Ellis (2010), set out to scrutinize students’ behavioral, cognitive, and affective engagement with written corrective feedback (WCF) provided by two different sources: teacher WCF and automated written corrective feedback (AWCF) provided by Writing Mentor. To this end, four Iranian EFL learners – two limited proficient and two modestly proficient writers – were selected purposefully from two sections of an academic writing course, one providing teacher WCF and the other AWCF. Participants in both sections wrote five argumentative essays during an academic term, received feedback on grammar, usage, and mechanics, and made revisions. The results demonstrated that the participants had different engagement levels and were categorized as highly engaged, moderately engaged, and minimally engaged students. In section 1, both participants who received teacher WCF were behaviorally and cognitively engaged with the feedback; however, one participant spent more time, used more resources, and showed more revision acts. Regardless of their behavioral and cognitive engagement level, they both demonstrated deep affective engagement with teacher feedback. In section 2, while one participant who received AWCF demonstrated deep and active engagement in all three dimensions, the other participant was reluctant to respond to the feedback and demonstrated a minimal level of engagement. Findings indicate that students’ engagement with WCF, whether provided by a teacher or automated writing evaluation system, is influenced by students’ beliefs and attitudes toward feedback and the sources of that feedback. Students’ writing proficiency was not clearly or consistently related to their degree of feedback engagement.
学生与教师的互动以及第二语言写作的自动书面纠正反馈:一个多案例研究
本多案例研究基于Ellis(2010)提出的学生参与纠正反馈(CF)的多维视角,旨在审视学生对两种不同来源的书面纠正反馈(WCF)的行为、认知和情感参与:教师WCF和写作导师提供的自动书面纠正反馈(AWCF)。为此,我们特意从学术写作课程的两个部分中选择了四名伊朗英语学习者——两名有限熟练和两名中等熟练的作家,一个提供教师WCF,另一个提供AWCF。这两个部分的参与者在一个学期内写了五篇议论文,收到了关于语法、用法和机制的反馈,并进行了修改。结果表明,参与者的参与程度不同,分为高度参与、中度参与和最低参与。在第1部分,接受教师WCF的两名参与者在行为和认知上都参与了反馈;然而,一个参与者花了更多的时间,使用了更多的资源,并表现出更多的复习行为。无论他们的行为和认知参与水平如何,他们都表现出对教师反馈的深刻情感参与。在第2部分中,虽然一个接受AWCF的参与者在所有三个维度上都表现出深度和积极的参与,但另一个参与者不愿意回应反馈,表现出最低程度的参与。研究结果表明,学生对WCF的参与,无论是由教师提供还是由自动写作评估系统提供,都受到学生对反馈和反馈来源的信念和态度的影响。学生的写作熟练程度与他们的反馈参与程度没有明显或一致的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JALT CALL Journal
JALT CALL Journal Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The JALT CALL Journal is an international refereed journal committed to excellence in research in all areas within the field of Computer Assisted Language Learning.
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