Abstract

This study draws on mediated learning experience (MLE) theory to contextualize the correcting process within the sociocultural dimension of the teacher’s intervention and collaborative learning to facilitate student engagement with discovering, correcting, and rewriting practices. This correcting process was administered to eight mixed-ability groups of Vietnamese secondary students (n = 31) to investigate students’ perceptions of their engagement in the process from both quantitative and qualitative perspectives that have been under-researched so far. The statistical analysis of a closed-ended questionnaire shows that students strongly agreed with the practices and effectiveness of the process, accuracy improvement, approach preferences, and learning motivation. Eight students’ responses to semi-structured interviews elaborated on the benefits and disadvantages of group-correction and the significance of targeting errors, and on each correcting phase. While students’ responses satisfied MLE’s criteria, their perceptions of the limitations of group-correction somewhat qualified the way reciprocity occurred. The findings suggest offering students opportunities to act on language issues in their writing and confirm the usefulness of engagement with correction-feedback practices from which implications for L2 writing and further research are discussed.

Highlights

  • Feedback practices have been a central focus of numerous second language (L2) writing studies

  • As the second research question further explored the students’ opinions about the collaborative correcting process (CP), examples of their responses to the interview are used to expand on the results of the questionnaire that are presented according to themes below

  • The study has drawn on the socially mediated learning framework to operationalize teacher and peer feedback incorporated into the collaborative correcting process in EFL writing classrooms to facilitate student engagement

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Summary

Introduction

Feedback practices have been a central focus of numerous second language (L2) writing studies. Various opinions about the role of feedback have extended research into students’ perceptions of teacher and peer feedback (Ferris, 1995, 2003, 2011; Lee, 2005, 2008, 2015; Ruegg, 2017). A few studies have recently explored student beliefs and engagement with feedback and written corrective feedback (WCF) (Han, 2017; Storch & Wigglesworth, 2010), little research has investigated students’ perceptions of their engagement in a correcting process. Previous research conducted in university contexts has reported that engagement with WCF is affected by students’ beliefs, learning experiences and context (Han & Hyland, 2015), and their language ability (Zheng & Yu, 2018). The present study draws on mediated learning experience (MLE) theory to operationalize the correcting process (CP) in a scaffolded learning environment in which student engagement is facilitated by the teacher’s intervention and collaboration with peers

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