Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing

This study investigated the nature of self-assessment and blind peer- and teacher-assessment in L2 writing. The type of feedback students gave to themselves and peers, the type of feedback used in the revision process, and the source of the feedback used were all analyzed. Additionally, student perc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meghan Odsliv Bratkovich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2015-02-01
Series:Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
Subjects:
L2
Online Access:https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8DV1WQX/download
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spelling doaj-38da7cea4a574f4f985df922d256fded2020-11-25T02:22:04ZengColumbia University LibrariesWorking Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL2576-29072576-29072015-02-0114210012710.7916/D8VX0V64Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL WritingMeghan Odsliv Bratkovich0Teachers College, Columbia UniversityThis study investigated the nature of self-assessment and blind peer- and teacher-assessment in L2 writing. The type of feedback students gave to themselves and peers, the type of feedback used in the revision process, and the source of the feedback used were all analyzed. Additionally, student perceptions of self- and peer-assessment, feedback, and their relationships to perceived writing improvement were also studied. Findings revealed that students in this study did not use teacher feedback significantly more than feedback from themselves or their peers, but they did give different types of feedback than the teacher and favored using feedback related to language use in the revision process. Students perceived their writing abilities to have increased due to self- and peer-assessment but responded more positively to peer-assessment than self-assessment. Surprisingly, students also perceived their abilities to have increased in rubric areas in which the feedback they received was not used and not regarded as useful, and the highest perceived gains in writing ability were in areas which accounted for the lowest amounts of feedback given.https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8DV1WQX/downloadEnglish languageStudy and teachingForeign speakersEvaluationEducational evaluationMethodologyFeedbackEducationSecond languageL2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meghan Odsliv Bratkovich
spellingShingle Meghan Odsliv Bratkovich
Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
English language
Study and teaching
Foreign speakers
Evaluation
Educational evaluation
Methodology
Feedback
Education
Second language
L2
author_facet Meghan Odsliv Bratkovich
author_sort Meghan Odsliv Bratkovich
title Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
title_short Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
title_full Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
title_fullStr Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
title_full_unstemmed Assessment and Feedback: Examining the Relationship Between Self-assessment and Blind Peer- and Teacher-assessment in TOEFL Writing
title_sort assessment and feedback: examining the relationship between self-assessment and blind peer- and teacher-assessment in toefl writing
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
issn 2576-2907
2576-2907
publishDate 2015-02-01
description This study investigated the nature of self-assessment and blind peer- and teacher-assessment in L2 writing. The type of feedback students gave to themselves and peers, the type of feedback used in the revision process, and the source of the feedback used were all analyzed. Additionally, student perceptions of self- and peer-assessment, feedback, and their relationships to perceived writing improvement were also studied. Findings revealed that students in this study did not use teacher feedback significantly more than feedback from themselves or their peers, but they did give different types of feedback than the teacher and favored using feedback related to language use in the revision process. Students perceived their writing abilities to have increased due to self- and peer-assessment but responded more positively to peer-assessment than self-assessment. Surprisingly, students also perceived their abilities to have increased in rubric areas in which the feedback they received was not used and not regarded as useful, and the highest perceived gains in writing ability were in areas which accounted for the lowest amounts of feedback given.
topic English language
Study and teaching
Foreign speakers
Evaluation
Educational evaluation
Methodology
Feedback
Education
Second language
L2
url https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8DV1WQX/download
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