Comparing Peer Review and Self-Review as Ways to Improve College Students' Writing

被引:10
|
作者
Covill, Amy E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Bloomsburg Univ, Dept Psychol, Bloomsburg, PA 17815 USA
关键词
RESPONSE GROUPS; WRITERS; REVISION; SKILLS;
D O I
10.1080/10862961003796207
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The effect of three approaches to revision instruction on 61 college students' revision behavior and writing quality was investigated for this article. Students wrote three 5-page papers and received one of three instructional approaches: Formal Peer Review (n = 19), Formal Self-Review (n = 20), or No Formal Review (n = 22). Formal Peer Review students had to outline and critique a peer's first draft, Formal Self-Review students had to outline and critique their own first draft, and No Formal Review students were simply instructed to revise their own first draft to improve clarity and completeness. No difference in writing quality was detected based on instructional approach. No Formal Review students made more revisions from first to final drafts than students in the other two groups, at both the global (summary) and local (sentence) levels of meaning. Students in the No Formal Review condition had the most positive attitude toward the instruction they received. Results suggest that using peer review in college psychology classes, and a formal approach to reviewing, may not improve the quality of students writing but does affect the timing of students' revision behavior (before, rather than after, handing in the first draft) and students' attitudes toward instruction.
引用
收藏
页码:199 / 226
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Research on the Influence of Peer Revision on Students' Writing Abilities in College English Writing
    Wang Sujuan
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2011 INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS AND ENGLISH LEARNING, 2012, : 164 - 171
  • [42] Improvements in Lifestyle from a Lifestyle Consecutive Self-Review at a Pharmacy
    Suzuki, Risyu
    Suzuki, Tadashi
    Kikuchi, Chigusa
    YAKUGAKU ZASSHI-JOURNAL OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN, 2019, 139 (07): : 1047 - 1054
  • [43] Creating inclusive schools: a self-review tool for educational practitioners
    Dimitrellou, Eleni
    Male, Dawn
    SUPPORT FOR LEARNING, 2022, 37 (02) : 263 - 284
  • [44] GUIDED USE OF WRITING PROMPTS TO IMPROVE ACADEMIC WRITING IN COLLEGE STUDENTS
    Trigos Carrillo, Lina Marcela
    Lopera Moreno, Jenniffer
    FORMA Y FUNCION, 2011, 24 (02): : 103 - 125
  • [45] Online Peer Review: Students' Experiences in a Writing-Intensive BSW Course
    Mirick, Rebecca G.
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION, 2020, 56 (02) : 394 - 400
  • [46] An Analysis on the Peer Review Comments in Writing for ESL Students in the Flipping Classroom Context
    Yi, Wang
    Xia, Wu
    Ying, Cui
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2017 NORTHEAST ASIA INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON LINGUSTICS, LITERATURE AND TEACHING (NALLTS), VOLS A-C, 2017, : 137 - 142
  • [47] TEACHING STUDENTS TO GIVE AND TO RECEIVE: IMPROVING DISCIPLINARY WRITING THROUGH PEER REVIEW
    Kidd, Jennifer
    Romberger, Julia
    Morris, Julia
    INTED2016: 10TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE, 2016, : 4755 - 4764
  • [49] Peer review in early academic writing: impact vs. students' beliefs
    Boillos, Mari Mar
    INNOVATION IN LANGUAGE LEARNING AND TEACHING, 2024, 18 (05) : 402 - 410
  • [50] METHODS OF TEACHING INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS STUDENTS WRITING SKILLS USING PEER REVIEW
    Sysoyev, P. V.
    Merzlyakov, K. A.
    YAZYK I KULTURA-LANGUAGE AND CULTURE, 2016, (34): : 195 - 206