Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study

Abstract The variety of activities and techniques suggested for improving the writing skill shows that EFL/ESL learners need scaffolding to gain mastery over it. The present study employed the reader-response approach to provide the assistance EFL learners require for writing argumentative essays. F...

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Main Author: Mojgan Rashtchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-11-01
Series:Asian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40862-019-0078-2
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spelling doaj-0f0b18b4b50c42979666a9aaed8767292020-11-24T21:55:21ZengSpringerOpenAsian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education2363-51692019-11-014111710.1186/s40862-019-0078-2Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case studyMojgan Rashtchi0TEFL Department, Faculty of Foreign Languages, Islamic Azad UniversityAbstract The variety of activities and techniques suggested for improving the writing skill shows that EFL/ESL learners need scaffolding to gain mastery over it. The present study employed the reader-response approach to provide the assistance EFL learners require for writing argumentative essays. Five upper-intermediate EFL learners in a private class participated in the qualitative case study. The participants were not selected from the fields related to the English language and did not have any previous instruction on literary texts. During the treatment that took 20 sessions, each session 2 h, the participants read five short stories. Different classroom activities were used as sources of information, which helped the researcher to collect the required data. The classroom activities consisted of group discussions, writing tasks, and responses to the short stories that helped the learners to reflect on the short stories. Think-aloud protocols helped the researcher to learn about the participants’ mental processes during writing. The semi-structured interviews provided the researcher with the information necessary for a deeper understanding of the efficacy of the classroom procedure. As the results of the study showed, successful writing requires manipulation of meta-cognitive strategies and thought-provoking activities. Although the findings of the study cannot be generalized, they can inspire EFL/ESL teachers and material developers to seek a variety of procedures in their approaches to teaching writing.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40862-019-0078-2Argumentative essaysLiterary textsReader response approachShort storiesThinking skillsWriting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mojgan Rashtchi
spellingShingle Mojgan Rashtchi
Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
Asian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education
Argumentative essays
Literary texts
Reader response approach
Short stories
Thinking skills
Writing
author_facet Mojgan Rashtchi
author_sort Mojgan Rashtchi
title Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
title_short Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
title_full Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
title_fullStr Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
title_sort scaffolding argumentative essay writing via reader-response approach: a case study
publisher SpringerOpen
series Asian-Pacific Journal of Second and Foreign Language Education
issn 2363-5169
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract The variety of activities and techniques suggested for improving the writing skill shows that EFL/ESL learners need scaffolding to gain mastery over it. The present study employed the reader-response approach to provide the assistance EFL learners require for writing argumentative essays. Five upper-intermediate EFL learners in a private class participated in the qualitative case study. The participants were not selected from the fields related to the English language and did not have any previous instruction on literary texts. During the treatment that took 20 sessions, each session 2 h, the participants read five short stories. Different classroom activities were used as sources of information, which helped the researcher to collect the required data. The classroom activities consisted of group discussions, writing tasks, and responses to the short stories that helped the learners to reflect on the short stories. Think-aloud protocols helped the researcher to learn about the participants’ mental processes during writing. The semi-structured interviews provided the researcher with the information necessary for a deeper understanding of the efficacy of the classroom procedure. As the results of the study showed, successful writing requires manipulation of meta-cognitive strategies and thought-provoking activities. Although the findings of the study cannot be generalized, they can inspire EFL/ESL teachers and material developers to seek a variety of procedures in their approaches to teaching writing.
topic Argumentative essays
Literary texts
Reader response approach
Short stories
Thinking skills
Writing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40862-019-0078-2
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