JOURNAL ARTICLE

Comparing students’ responses to synchronous written corrective feedback during individual and collaborative writing tasks

Hyejin ChoYouJin KimSeyoung Park

Year: 2021 Journal:   Language Awareness Vol: 31 (1)Pages: 1-20   Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Abstract

The present study examined students' attention to linguistic forms during writing tasks and compared individual and collaborative writing conditions. Furthermore, the ways students in both conditions process indirect synchronous written corrective feedback (SWCF) and the ways they respond to it (i.e., uptake) were investigated. The target linguistic forms were Korean honorifics, which are closely related to Korean culture, honoring the elderly by using a different set of linguistic features. Twenty-nine learners of Korean were divided into two groups: collaborative and individual writing groups. The collaborative group completed e-mail writing tasks in pairs, whereas students in the individual group carried out the same tasks alone. During the tasks, indirect SWCF was provided on the target pragmatic features (i.e., honorifics). Think-aloud protocols and pair talk were audio-recorded. Students' attention to linguistic forms was operationalized as the occurrence of language-related episodes (LREs), and their processing of SWCF was determined using feedback-related episodes (FREs). Uptake was identified based on students' final writing output. The findings suggest that the collaborative group resolved linguistic errors more accurately than the individual group. In terms of the linguistic target features and uptake of SWCF, both groups demonstrated similar patterns, suggesting mediating effects of SWCF on students' task performance.

Keywords:
Corrective feedback Operationalization Collaborative writing Psychology Task (project management) Set (abstract data type) Linguistics Writing process Think aloud protocol Peer feedback Written language Cognitive psychology Computer science Mathematics education Human–computer interaction

Metrics

18
Cited By
10.64
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
57
Refs
0.98
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

EFL/ESL Teaching and Learning
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Language and Linguistics
Writing and Handwriting Education
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  Education
Discourse Analysis in Language Studies
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Literature and Literary Theory

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