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Teacher Self-Assessment of Feedback Practices in an EFL Academic Writing Class - A Reflective Case Study

Teacher Self-Assessment of Feedback Practices in an EFL Academic Writing Class - A Reflective Case Study
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Author(s): Eddy White (University of Arizona, USA)
Copyright: 2017
Pages: 26
Source title: Innovative Practices for Higher Education Assessment and Measurement
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Elena Cano (University of Barcelona, Spain)and Georgeta Ion (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-0531-0.ch009

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Abstract

Unlike studies of teacher feedback on student writing, research into teacher self-assessment of their own feedback practices is quite rare in the assessment literature. In this reflective case study, the researcher/teacher systematically analyzed feedback practices to clearly determine the form and kind of formative feedback being provided on student essays, and also to compare these feedback practices to recommended practice from the feedback literature. The research took place in an academic English writing course for third-year students at a Japanese university. A close examination of the teacher feedback on the first draft of 21 student essays was undertaken, and more than 800 feedback interventions were identified and coded. Results of this investigation show a number of patterns of practice in giving feedback, including; extensive use of questions in teacher commentary, very limited use of praise comments, and varying amounts of feedback provided on individual essays. Results also show that the feedback practices discovered through this investigation align well with recommended best practice. The case study positions the teacher as ‘learner' in this feedback process, and calls for similar published research describing in detail what teachers do when providing feedback to students on their work.

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