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The Impact of Written Corrective Feedback on Student Writing Accuracy

The Impact of Written Corrective Feedback on Student Writing Accuracy. Preview: Language teachers spend hours to correct students’ writing in different ways:. Correcting grammatical errors. M arking. Grading. Commenting. Responding. The continuous debate:.

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The Impact of Written Corrective Feedback on Student Writing Accuracy

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  1. The Impact of Written Corrective Feedback on Student Writing Accuracy

  2. Preview: Language teachers spend hours to correct students’ writing in different ways: Correcting grammatical errors Marking Grading Commenting Responding

  3. The continuous debate: There have been different approaches to error correction, but there is not still a sense of certainty about how best to provide such corrective feedback on writing and the debate has continued for several years between the advocates and opponents of corrective feedback.

  4. John Truscott (1996) rejected the practice for grammar correction in his review essay. ‘ … that correction is harmful rather than simply ineffective…[and] that no valid reasons have been offered for continuing the practice in spite of these overwhelming problems…thus, for the foreseeable future my conclusion stands: Grammar correction has no place in writing classes and should be abandoned’ (pp. 360-367)

  5. Truscott’s reasons for such a strong claim: Error correction neglects the learners developmental sequence of acquisition This practice suffers from a range of practical problems such as teachers’ ability and willingness to give and students’ motivation to receive error .correction It wastes time and energy while this amount of time can be spent on more productive aspects of a writing program.

  6. Truscott’s claim has faced a great deal of criticism in different reviews (e.g. Chandler, 2003, Ferris, 1999), but he has not withdrawn his case against grammar correction and grammar correction is, in general a bad idea until future research prove that there are particular cases in which it might not be a misguided activity (Truscott 2007).

  7. Direct CF Indirect CF Narrativewriting Short term Long term

  8. Theoretical definitions: • Feedback: Penny Ur (1996) defines it as ‘type of information which is provided for the learners about his or her performance of a learning task, usually with the aim of improving this performance (p.242)

  9. Feedback Assessment: The learner is informed how well or badly has performed. Correction: some specific information is provided on what the learners perform.

  10. Direct feedback: It refers to overt correction of errors. All the error in the students’ written assignments are corrected by the instructor. Indirect feedback: It refers to prompting students about the location or type of errors and leaves monitoring and correction to the students themselves.

  11. Narrative writing: It tells a story. It can be whether true or fictional. Avoidance strategy: A common communication strategy which learners use to avoid a difficult word or structure and use a simpler word and structure instead.

  12. Statement of the problem: Although teachers give feedback, their feedback on form and content are often vague, contradictory, unsystematic and inconsistent. This leads to various reactions by students including frustration, confusion and inattention to comments. Many teachers still tend to respond to their students’ written works by using the traditional method of correcting all grammatical errors.

  13. Research questions: 1. Does the Indirect CF decrease the number of grammatical errors of both total and specific error categories in Iranian EFL narrative writing and thus contribute to their grammatical accuracy both in the short and long-run? 2. Does the direct CF decrease the number of grammatical errors of both total and specific error categories in Iranian EFL narrative writing and thus contribute to their grammatical accuracy both in the short and long-run? 3. Does CF provision encourage the learners to avoid the treated grammatical errors?

  14. Method: Participants: Number & gender:41 students (13 males, 18 females) majoring in English literature. Age average:18.7 The writing classes met for one and half hour once a week over 16 sessions.

  15. They were randomly divided into three groups with two different types of provided feedback. The first group which received the direct feedback was named group A. Participants in this group received teacher's correction. Participants in second group which is named group B, received indirect feedback. They were just informed about the location of the error by the errors being underlined. The third group's (named group C) participants were those who did not receive any kinds of feedback.

  16. Instruments: Narrative writing tasks Cloze tests

  17. Narrative Writing Topics:

  18. Spotting and measuring the errors: Contributing to the fact that different linguistic categories should not be treated in the same way (Bitchener et al., 2005; Ferris, 1995 a; Ferris et al, 2000; Liu, 2008; Lalande, 1982, Sheppard, 1992), the present study dealt with six linguistic categories to investigate the effects of the two types of CF on them.

  19. Linguistic errors are divided into two groups: Treatable Untreatable Verb tense and form, Articles, Noun endings, sentence fragment Word choice, Prepositions, Unidiomatic sentence structure

  20. To investigate the effects of the provided feedback, the errors, considering their linguistic category, were counted in each individual writing task. As the text length of the drafts varied, the means of errors were calculated by dividing number of errors by number of words and multiplying by a standard which was set at 1000. .

  21. Procedure:

  22. :Results & Discussion Three writings out of five ( the first, fourth, and fifth) were analyzed and marked concerning the six linguistic error categories to measure and compare the means of errors before and after CF provision. The fifth writing included the same topic of the first writing task with a six week interval to see the long term effect of corrective feedback. Statistical procedures used to analyze the data included descriptive (percentages, means, and standard deviations) and ANOVAs to analyze error reduction across the three groups.

  23. The control group did not show an significant difference in error reduction both in posttest 1 and 2. on the other hand, the two treatment groups revealed significant reduction but the changes were not in the same pattern for each grammatical category.

  24. Verb errors

  25. Verb errors

  26. Noun ending errors

  27. Noun ending errors

  28. Wrong words

  29. Wrong words

  30. Sentence structure errors

  31. Sentence structure error

  32. Article errors

  33. Article errors

  34. Preposition error

  35. Preposition error

  36. Total errors

  37. Total errors

  38. :Cloze tests analysis & results It has been argued that learners tend to avoid the categories that have been the subject of CF(e.g. Sheppard, 1992; Truscott, 1996, 2004).

  39. Based on the evidence of using avoidance strategy it could be concluded that the significant error reduction was due to the use of avoidance strategy and the provided CF did not result in self correction and accuracy in writing.

  40. As a result cloze tests were constructed based on students’ committed errors on the first writing to compensate for the use of avoidance strategy. In this way, they could not ignore their errors any more.

  41. Example of the cloze test

  42. Percentages were derived by dividing right answers (i.e. the number of errors corrected) by the number of blanks of the cloze test (number of committed errors of each individual on the pretest)

  43. The percentages revealed that although the use of avoidance strategy is inevitable, the effects of CF can not be underestimated.

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