Author/Authors :
Yu-Fen Yang، نويسنده , , Hui-Chin Yeh and Wing-Kwong Wong، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
As proposed by social constructive theorists, meaningful learning and individual
development were achieved through social interaction. To foster social
interaction among students, this study formed an online learning community
in which they played multiple roles as writers, editors and commentators. In
playing different roles, they read peers’ texts, edited peers’ errors, evaluated
peer editors’ corrections and finally reconstructed their own texts. Results of
this study showed that the multiple roles they played allowed them to have
opportunities to view their own texts from others’ perspectives. Based on these
perspectives, they were more willing to acquire information from and contribute
information to peers. All of this extensive information acquisition and
contribution resulted in meaning construction of texts as active students
improved their final drafts in both local revision (grammatical correction) and
global revision (the style, organisation and development of a text) after receiving
and evaluating feedback from peer editors. Their final drafts were very
different from those of passive students whose first and final drafts were almost
the same despite some grammatical revisions. This study suggests that, rather
than relying only on an examination of students’ final drafts, there may be
benefits in teachers encouraging students to actively participate in social interaction
by reading peers’ texts, editing peers’ errors and evaluating peer editors’
corrections during text revisions.