Abstract

Writing is a complex skill and one of the most difficult to master. A teacher’s weak writing skills may negatively influence their students. Therefore, reinforcing teacher education by first determining pre-service teachers’ writing weaknesses is imperative. This mixed-methods error analysis study aims to examine the cohesive errors in the writing of English as a Second Language (ESL) pre-service teachers of differing language proficiency levels—Medium and High-level, as indicated by the band levels achieved in the Malaysian University English Test (MUET). 200-word narrative essays were collected from 30 final-year ESL pre-service teachers from UKM via email. The study found that the Medium-level pre-service teachers made the most errors in lexical cohesion, reference and conjunction cohesion categories. However, High-level pre-service teachers made more errors in lexical cohesion, ellipsis and reference. Collocation proved the most difficult form of cohesion for both groups of pre-service teachers, while High-level pre-service teachers made more errors in ellipsis than the Medium-level pre-service teachers. Nevertheless, this still indicates that the pre-service teachers’ overall mastery of cohesive writing is insufficient. Therefore, the teaching of these cohesive devices should be further fortified in the linguistic courses undertaken by ESL pre-service teachers to ensure that they are well-equipped in all aspects of cohesive writing.

Highlights

  • The Malaysian government has voiced a concern over the poor English language proficiency of the English teachers in the country

  • Reinforcing teacher education by first determining pre-service teachers’ writing weaknesses is imperative. This mixed-methods error analysis study aims to examine the cohesive errors in the writing of English as a Second Language (ESL) pre-service teachers of differing language proficiency levels—Medium and High-level, as indicated by the band levels achieved in the Malaysian University English Test (MUET). 200-word narrative essays were collected from 30 final-year ESL pre-service teachers from UKM via email

  • This study aims to examine the most frequent cohesive errors produced by ESL pre-service teachers of different proficiency levels, and explore the similarities and differences between them; from which implications for teacher education may be drawn

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Summary

Introduction

The Malaysian government has voiced a concern over the poor English language proficiency of the English teachers in the country. After the initial review prior to the Malaysian Education Blueprint (MEB) 2013-2025, Datuk Dr Khair Mohamad Yusof, Education Ministry deputy director-general said in the Star newspaper that two-thirds of English teachers in Malaysia did not meet the proficiency level (Jalleh, 2012). This means that about 47,000 teachers out of the 70,000 teachers who sat for the Cambridge Placement Test (CPT) did not possess the adequate level of proficiency as English teachers who teach the language. This includes writing skills, which are important for real-life and authentic communication (Lowry, Curtis, & Lowry, 2004)

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