Title of article :
Grading, no longer an obstacle to learners’ attendance to teacher feedback
Author/Authors :
Nemati, Majid University of Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran , Azizi, Masoud University of Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Abstract :
Learners are often reported not to be motivated enough to attend to teacher feedback. Teachers
also tend to grade learners’ writing samples when providing them with corrective feedback
though they know it may divert their attention away from teacher feedback. However, not
grading learner writings does not seem to be an option due to both learners’ demands for it and
institutional regulations that require teachers to have summative evaluation. In order to
overcome such contradictions, a new technique called Draft-Specific Scoring (DSS) was
devised in order to use grading as a motivating, rather than demotivating, device in order to
encourage learners to attend to teacher feedback and apply it to their first drafts to improve the
quality of their writing accordingly. DSS is a grading system in which learners can improve
their received grade by applying teacher feedback to their writing samples in order to improve
its quality. The score they receive will improve as a result of the improvement in the quality of
the revisions they make. They have two opportunities to go through this procedure. Their final
score will be the mean score of all the grades they receive in their last drafts submitted. This
experimental study was an attempt to check the effect of the use of this technique in error
feedback provision on three measures of fluency, grammatical complexity, and accuracy. The
results showed that DSS could help learners improve in all three measures while the control
group receiving only error feedback without DSS could only improve in fluency.
Keywords :
Draft-Specific Scoring , Corrective Feedback , Writing , Fluency , grammatical complexity , Accuracy
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics