Abstract

In order to promote the sustainable development of students’ learning capabilities, students are expected to take an active role in the feedback process. Ideally, students should not only actively interpret and act on the feedback received from their teachers, but they should also serve as feedback generators for their peers and themselves. Our study aimed to explore Chinese university English-as-a-Foreign-Language (EFL) students’ perceptions of the feedback practices in their classrooms and their feelings about teacher feedback, peer review and self-review as credible feedback sources. Adopting a qualitative research design, we recruited three teachers together with seven to eight of their students (in total 23 students) from two universities in Northwest China. Data were collected by using focus group interviews and classroom observations. Findings indicated that students relied on teachers to provide informative feedback to help them progress. They also attached limited value to either peer or self-review. Our interview data revealed three possible reasons for students’ devaluation of peers and themselves as feedback sources: insufficient understanding of students’ roles and responsibilities in the feedback process, perceived limited capability and capacity to generate quality feedback; and affective and relational concerns if engaging in the feedback process. These findings highlight the need for teachers to foster student feedback literacy, and hence help them utilize different feedback sources to enhance their learning and sustainable development.

Highlights

  • Published: 7 May 2021There is a growing consensus that education should aim to foster lifelong learners who can learn and develop sustainably after schooling [1,2]

  • We found that our Chinese University EFL student participants relied on teacher feedback and in doing so devalued peer and self-review as possible additional sources of feedback information

  • Attitudes towards feedback and their feedback literacy, supporting the claim of Carless and Bound [8] that for students to utilise feedback effectively, especially that provided by their peers and themselves, they need to develop sound understanding of students’ roles in the feedback process, be equipped with the capabilities to provide quality feedback, and be cognitively and emotionally prepared to shoulder their responsibilities in the feedback process, along with a willingness to take action based on the feedback generated

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Summary

Introduction

Published: 7 May 2021There is a growing consensus that education should aim to foster lifelong learners who can learn and develop sustainably after schooling [1,2]. Feedback can exist in a variety of forms such as written comments, grades, oral remarks or gestures, our study mainly focused on oral feedback as it occurred in the context of the classroom. As such it addresses a gap in the literature given a large body of existing literature on feedback in Chinese EFL classes mainly focuses on how students felt about, engaged with, and responded to written feedback (e.g., [10,11,12]). Our study aimed to investigate students’ attitudes towards not Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

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