L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective

Despite the oft-cited preference for teacher feedback over peer feedback among L2 writers, it has not been established if this preference leads to its greater effectiveness in revising. This paper reports data from a multiple case study that investigated twelve L2 writers engaged in academic writing...

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Main Author: Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163010
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1630102023-03-11T20:07:02Z L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu School of Humanities Humanities::Language Preference of Feedback Teacher Feedback Despite the oft-cited preference for teacher feedback over peer feedback among L2 writers, it has not been established if this preference leads to its greater effectiveness in revising. This paper reports data from a multiple case study that investigated twelve L2 writers engaged in academic writing in their preference and use of feedback in revising. The participants had access to both peer and teacher feedback to their writing in a web-based feedback platform-SWoRD. Sources of data included stimulated recall interviews, questionnaires, focused diary entries, drafts of writing and records of feedback on writing. The theoretical lens of “contradictions” (Activity Theory) surfaced two contradictions in the activity system: that between the L2 writer (‘Subject’), teacher feedback (‘Tool’) and preference for teacher feedback (‘Rules’) and that between “Writer as Author” (‘Division of Labour’) and preference for teacher feedback (‘Rules’). The first uncovered students’ dissatisfaction with teacher feedback arising from perceived time constraint on the teacher’s part in giving feedback which could possibly explain the less-than-expected impact of teacher feedback on revisions. The second delineates three reasons why learners might reject teacher feedback: sense of text ownership, lack of understanding of and lack of proficiency to deal with teacher feedback. Published version 2022-11-15T07:17:50Z 2022-11-15T07:17:50Z 2022 Journal Article Lam, S. T. E. (2022). L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective. Journal of Asia TEFL, 19(1), 66-92. https://dx.doi.org/10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.1.5.66 2466-1511 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163010 10.18823/asiatefl.2022.19.1.5.66 2-s2.0-85129151871 1 19 66 92 en Journal of Asia TEFL © 2022 Asia TEFL. All rights reserved. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Language
Preference of Feedback
Teacher Feedback
spellingShingle Humanities::Language
Preference of Feedback
Teacher Feedback
Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu
L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
description Despite the oft-cited preference for teacher feedback over peer feedback among L2 writers, it has not been established if this preference leads to its greater effectiveness in revising. This paper reports data from a multiple case study that investigated twelve L2 writers engaged in academic writing in their preference and use of feedback in revising. The participants had access to both peer and teacher feedback to their writing in a web-based feedback platform-SWoRD. Sources of data included stimulated recall interviews, questionnaires, focused diary entries, drafts of writing and records of feedback on writing. The theoretical lens of “contradictions” (Activity Theory) surfaced two contradictions in the activity system: that between the L2 writer (‘Subject’), teacher feedback (‘Tool’) and preference for teacher feedback (‘Rules’) and that between “Writer as Author” (‘Division of Labour’) and preference for teacher feedback (‘Rules’). The first uncovered students’ dissatisfaction with teacher feedback arising from perceived time constraint on the teacher’s part in giving feedback which could possibly explain the less-than-expected impact of teacher feedback on revisions. The second delineates three reasons why learners might reject teacher feedback: sense of text ownership, lack of understanding of and lack of proficiency to deal with teacher feedback.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu
format Article
author Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu
author_sort Lam, Sandra Tsui Eu
title L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
title_short L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
title_full L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
title_fullStr L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
title_full_unstemmed L2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
title_sort l2 writers' response to and use of teacher feedback: an activity theory perspective
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163010
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