Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context

Due to recent developments in Web 2.0 technologies, computer-mediated collaborative writing has captured the growing attention of second language researchers and instructors. The affordance of wikis for collaborative writing has been hailed, but few studies have explored the nature of wiki collabora...

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Main Author: Li, Mimi
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5254
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6450&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-64502019-10-04T05:11:15Z Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context Li, Mimi Due to recent developments in Web 2.0 technologies, computer-mediated collaborative writing has captured the growing attention of second language researchers and instructors. The affordance of wikis for collaborative writing has been hailed, but few studies have explored the nature of wiki collaboration and interaction during small group writing using wikis. This dissertation investigated dynamic group interactions in wiki-based collaborative writing tasks in an English for Academic Purposes (EAP) course at a southeastern public research university in the U.S. A total of twenty-nine English as a Second Language graduate students collaboratively worked on two writing tasks within small groups in Wikispaces sites. By adopting a multiple-case study approach, I closely examined four small groups that had diverse L1 background composites and presented a comprehensive picture of students' wiki-based collaborative writing. Informed by sociocultural theory, particularly the notions of scaffolding and zone of proximal development, I explored small group interactions to derive how they negotiated writing tasks, co-constructed writing, and mutually scaffolded wiki writing processes. I also examined what factors mediated the dynamic interactions, and in what ways the interactions influenced wiki writing products and connected with students' reflections about wiki collaborative writing. The triangulated data sources included archived wiki "Discussion," "Comments," "History," and "Page" records, pre-task and post-task questionnaire surveys, post-task and follow-up interviews, students' reflection papers, instructors' assessment of students' wiki group writing, and my research logs. In terms of the data analysis, I mainly conducted qualitative procedures using constant comparative method and content analysis, supplemented with descriptive analysis. The results revealed that the four small groups demonstrated four characteristic patterns of interaction. The patterns were not static across two wiki writing tasks. Mixed patterns were found in Group 1 (Collective-- Active/withdrawn) and Group 3 (Dominant/defensive-- Collaborative). Group dynamics were also evident in Group 2 (Expert/novice) and Group 4 (Cooperating in parallel). These patterns were featured with language functions that small groups performed while negotiating writing tasks, writing change functions that they performed while constructing joint texts, and scaffolding strategies that they applied throughout collaborative writing processes. In addition, multiple factors mediated small groups' wiki interactions: motives/goals, agency and emotion, and prior experiences in such aspects of cultural background, small group work, and technology use. Moreover, the group interactions had influences on joint wiki writing products and also connected with students' reflections about wiki affordances and their learning experiences. This study bridged the gap in computer-mediated collaborative writing research, and also shed new light on the networked writing pedagogy in the EAP context. 2014-04-18T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5254 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6450&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons collaboration second language writing small groups sociocultural theory wiki Other Education
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic collaboration
second language writing
small groups
sociocultural theory
wiki
Other Education
spellingShingle collaboration
second language writing
small groups
sociocultural theory
wiki
Other Education
Li, Mimi
Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
description Due to recent developments in Web 2.0 technologies, computer-mediated collaborative writing has captured the growing attention of second language researchers and instructors. The affordance of wikis for collaborative writing has been hailed, but few studies have explored the nature of wiki collaboration and interaction during small group writing using wikis. This dissertation investigated dynamic group interactions in wiki-based collaborative writing tasks in an English for Academic Purposes (EAP) course at a southeastern public research university in the U.S. A total of twenty-nine English as a Second Language graduate students collaboratively worked on two writing tasks within small groups in Wikispaces sites. By adopting a multiple-case study approach, I closely examined four small groups that had diverse L1 background composites and presented a comprehensive picture of students' wiki-based collaborative writing. Informed by sociocultural theory, particularly the notions of scaffolding and zone of proximal development, I explored small group interactions to derive how they negotiated writing tasks, co-constructed writing, and mutually scaffolded wiki writing processes. I also examined what factors mediated the dynamic interactions, and in what ways the interactions influenced wiki writing products and connected with students' reflections about wiki collaborative writing. The triangulated data sources included archived wiki "Discussion," "Comments," "History," and "Page" records, pre-task and post-task questionnaire surveys, post-task and follow-up interviews, students' reflection papers, instructors' assessment of students' wiki group writing, and my research logs. In terms of the data analysis, I mainly conducted qualitative procedures using constant comparative method and content analysis, supplemented with descriptive analysis. The results revealed that the four small groups demonstrated four characteristic patterns of interaction. The patterns were not static across two wiki writing tasks. Mixed patterns were found in Group 1 (Collective-- Active/withdrawn) and Group 3 (Dominant/defensive-- Collaborative). Group dynamics were also evident in Group 2 (Expert/novice) and Group 4 (Cooperating in parallel). These patterns were featured with language functions that small groups performed while negotiating writing tasks, writing change functions that they performed while constructing joint texts, and scaffolding strategies that they applied throughout collaborative writing processes. In addition, multiple factors mediated small groups' wiki interactions: motives/goals, agency and emotion, and prior experiences in such aspects of cultural background, small group work, and technology use. Moreover, the group interactions had influences on joint wiki writing products and also connected with students' reflections about wiki affordances and their learning experiences. This study bridged the gap in computer-mediated collaborative writing research, and also shed new light on the networked writing pedagogy in the EAP context.
author Li, Mimi
author_facet Li, Mimi
author_sort Li, Mimi
title Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
title_short Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
title_full Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
title_fullStr Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
title_full_unstemmed Small Group Interactions in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing in the EAP Context
title_sort small group interactions in wiki-based collaborative writing in the eap context
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2014
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/5254
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6450&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT limimi smallgroupinteractionsinwikibasedcollaborativewritingintheeapcontext
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