Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
by
Alexandra Anastasiadou
at
School of English
VOLUME 1
November 2010
To my husband
Θάνο Γκιάτα
I would like to express my deepest thanks to the many people who have contributed di-
rectly or indirectly to the completion of this thesis:
• The headmasters of the schools where the research took place.
• The teachers of English and the teachers of Greek whose classes participated in
the research.
• My colleague Exarchou Chrysoula for accepting to be the second examiner of
the pre- and post-writing test of this study.
• Mr Tzanas Konstantinos for providing guidance with the statistical analysis of
the research.
• My colleagues Bikiaropoulos Nikos, Papageorgiou Ioannis and Papahristou
Stergios for their technical support during the whole process of organising this
work.
• My colleagues Blakou Theodora, Exarchou Chrysoula, Zambiadou Katerina,
Tsertikidou Kiki and Vrettou Athina for their support and commiseration
throughout the whole process.
• The students who participated in this research and all my students so far from
whom I have learnt so much.
• The colleagues who participated in the interviews.
• Mrs Moira Hill, my tutor on the MA course and my personal mentor, for her
constant encouragement, helpful suggestions and psychological support during
my whole postgraduate studies. Finally, I thank her for always being willing to
offer me time that well exceeded her obligation.
List of Abbreviations
FL Foreign Language
IQ Intelligence Quotient
L1 First/Native language
L2 Second language
SL Second Language
List of Figures
Figure 1 Identifying the organisation of the writing process (Hayes & 18
Flower, 1980: 11)
Figure 2 The knowledge-telling model of the writing process (Bereiter & 21
Scardamalia, 1987: 8)
Figure 3 The knowledge-transforming model of the writing process (Be- 23
reiter & Scardamalia, 1987: 12)
Figure 4 The suggested model of the writing procedure based on Bereiter 24
& Scardamalia, 1987
Figure 5 Integrated skills model (Burgess, 1994: 309, 310) 45
Figure 7 Comparison of pre- and post- scores of the two genders of the 213
control group
Figure 8 Comparison of pre- and post- scores of the two genders of the 213
experimental group
iii
List of tables
Table 1 Independent samples t-test for marks at pre-test according to group 211
Table 12.4 Brainstorm some ideas alone or with the whole class before writ- 225
ing
Table 12.6 Draft and redraft the text and try to improve before presenting the 225
final product
Table 12.8 Student participation in the correction of their text 226
Table 12.10 The contribution of one’s partner to the correction of one’s errors 226
Table 13 Attitudes towards teacher correction of the experimental and con- 228
trol group in the beginning of the study
Table 14 Attitudes towards teacher correction of the experimental and con- 229
trol group at the end of the study
Table 15 General attitudes towards writing of the experimental group in the 231
beginning and at the end of the study
Table 16 General attitudes towards writing of the control group in the be- 232
ginning and at the end of the study
Table 17 Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental and control 233
group at the entry point of the study
Table 18 Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental and control 234
group at the exit point of the study
Table 19 Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental group at the 234
entry and the exit point of the study
Table 20 Attitudes towards peer correction of the control group at the entry 236
and exit point of the study
Table 21 Overall proficiency in English as compared with the proficiency of 237
classmates
Table 22 Importance of becoming proficient in English 237
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate whether the process writing (White & Arndt,
1991) approach to teaching writing, which focuses on the process rather than the prod-
uct of writing, can enable young learners of the sixth grade of the Greek state primary
The present research was conducted in two state schools in a town in northern Greece
during the school year 2007- 2008, addressing the main hypothesis:
► The process approach to writing helps sixth grade students of the Greek state primary
To this end, two experimental and two control groups were randomly chosen in
the two participating schools. The students’ level was specified through the Oxford
Quick Placement test, which is a standardised test, and a pre-test defined their original
writing performance, while a post-test detected their writing attainment at the end of the
study. A questionnaire was administered to students in the beginning and the end of the
research to trace their attitudes towards writing at the entry point and explore any altera-
The control group followed the materials assigned by the Ministry of Education
for this grade, whereas the experimental group members attended a supplementary writ-
ing syllabus designed by the researcher under the philosophy of process writing.
The results indicated that the present research verified the aforementioned hy-
pothesis that the process approach to writing aids sixth grade students of the Greek state
primary schools to develop their writing skills in English. To be more specific, the term
writing skills is used to imply both the students’ writing proficiency and their attitudes
ing framework can support the students of this level whose linguistic resources are still
limited, since it instills favourable attitudes towards writing. The thesis concludes with
Chapter 1
1.1 Aim and scope of the present thesis: application of process writing
in teaching young learners
“Writing has been a central topic in applied linguistics for over half a century and re-
mains an area of lively intellectual research and debate. Its complex, multifaceted nature
seems constantly to evade adequate description and many forms of enquiry have been
summoned to help clarify both how writing works and how it should be taught.” (Hyl-
Many researchers (Kroll, 1990; Brookes & Grundy, 1990; Grabe & Kaplan,
1996; Tribble, 1996; O’Brien, 1999; Hyland, 2002a) agree that the teaching of writing
has always been a key issue in all educational systems, and many, often contradictory,
attitudes have been articulated about the best ways of teaching it. This emphasis on
teaching writing cannot be appropriately applied in the Greek state primary school,
since only three 45-minute periods are allocated for the teaching of English in the 3rd,
4th, 5th and 6th grades. This allocation leaves little time to prioritise the teaching of writ-
Having in mind the significance of teaching writing, and taking into account the
fact that little time is devoted to writing in the sixth grade of the Greek state primary
school and considering the poor quality of the produced written texts at this level, the
decision was taken to initiate the present research so as to find appropriate methods to
Having worked at the Greek state primary education for thirteen years, it has be-
come apparent to the present researcher that the materials set by the Ministry of Educa-
tion for the sixth grade - at the time of the conduct of the study - that is, coursebook and
4
workbook Fun Way English 3, do not promote the teaching of writing. The selection to
concentrate on the teaching and improvement of writing skills was based on two reaF-
sons. On the one hand, writing is considered by Nunan (1989: 35), among others, as the
most difficult of the four skills to master, making it necessary to assign enough class-
room time to boost the students’ writing capacity; on the other hand, the students of this
grade enroll to high school the next year, where there is excessive preoccupation with
correct written expression, because it is through the written medium that students will
continue their school progress, since all major exams in Greece demand advanced writ-
ing skills. Therefore, it is a prerequisite to aid our learners to write legibly, fluently and
coherently.
Thus, the original assumption of the present research is that it is the syllabus and
the lack of active student participation in the writing process which deprives learners of
developing writing skills in English. Consequently, a new syllabus was suggested by the
present writer for the purposes of the present research based on the “process-focused”
(White & Arndt, 1991) approach to writing, which aims to familiarise students with the
process of writing and on approaches about correct learning methodologies for young
learners. The current study compares the existing syllabus at the state primary schools,
which prioritises the product of writing, with the experimental syllabus focusing on the
process of writing on three parameters: 1) the performance parameter: whether the pa-
rallel syllabus will manage to ameliorate the students’ written attainment, 2) the atti-
tude parameter: how much the applied syllabus will influence the students’ perceptions
about writing, that is, general attitudes towards writing, attitudes towards specific tech-
niques which can help students improve their writing, and perceptions about teacher and
peer correction, and 3) the gender parameter: whether the gender affects the students’
pedagogy to writing and investigate its application and efficacy was reached after a sys-
tematic literature review about the nature of writing, the principles employed in the
teaching of writing, the theories about how young learners think and learn, as well as
the investigation of the main approaches to teaching writing. This literature exploration
revealed that, rather than following a fixed, linear procedure, writing is a recursive,
problem-solving process during which the writers move backwards and forwards with a
view to reformulating their text. The writers need knowledge of the social situation
whereby writing takes place, the topic they are dealing with, the target reader, the pur-
pose of their writing and the discourse type of the demanded text. Furthermore, it is
through experimenting with errors and participating in correcting their own and their
partners’ writings that students can recognise their deficiencies and manage to ameli-
orate their performance. As far as how young learners think and learn, the literature ex-
amination showed that they mature both linguistically and cognitively through the help
of their teacher and partners, and active involvement in the learning process by using
plied in this framework, then they can become independent writers who can reflect on
their own learning and thinking strategies. Finally, the overview of the main approaches
to teaching writing singled out the process writing approach as the most appropriate in
The process writing paradigm encompasses all the above mentioned elements
highlighted in the literature review and aids students to generate ideas and relevant vo-
cabulary for a specific topic, audience, purpose and context, experiment with the cha-
racteristics of various generic text types, plan and replan their ideas so as to produce a
first draft. This first draft is corrected through the feedback of the teacher or their peers,
6
a second draft is produced, commented on, reread and rewritten until the final product is
produced. The employment of process writing offers the proper milieu for the learners
of this age to participate actively in learning how to write successfully benefiting from
the aid of their classmates or the teacher, who is more knowledgeable than them. This is
whole or its stages in various contexts with a view to establishing similarities and diver-
sities with the current research. Finally, a small scale research entailed gender-related
differences as far as SLA is concerned with a view to justifying the performance and
reaction of the two sexes to the introduction of the process writing approach.
will be fully analysed in sections (3.5.1 – 3.5.7) of this thesis, centred on the following
issues:
Pennington, Brock & Yue (1996) in Hong Kong, Akyel, & Kamisli, (1996) in
Turkey, Kern & Shultz (1992), Gallego De Blibeche (1993) and Gomez, R.,
(2005) in France.
lamil & De Guerrero (1996, 1998) in Puerto Rico, and Jacobs, Curtis, Brain &
Zamel (1985), Truscott (1996, 1999, 2007), Ferris (1999, 2004) and Chandler
(2003) in U.S.A., Cohen & Cavalcanti (1990) in Brazil, Truscott & Hsu (2008)
& Huang (1998) in Hong Kong and Taiwan, and Tsui & Ng (2000) in Hong
Kong.
Hyland (2001) in New Zealand, and Nelson & Carson (1998) in U.S.A.
Hong Kong.
Few studies have been carried out in Greece regarding early primary students
gopoulou, 2007; Drepanioti, 2009) or process writing through the use of computers (Ni-
kolaki, 2005; Simou, 2006; Takou, 2007). Since there is a scarcity of studies on the em-
ployment of process writing in L2 contexts at the upper state primary school both in
Greece and internationally, the present writer has decided to initiate this research in the
Greek state primary school milieu to explore the applicability and efficiency of the
process paradigm to improve the students’ performance and cognition at this level.
► The process approach to writing helps sixth grade students of the Greek state primary
In order to render the research more specific, three research questions were established:
8
• Will the students of the experimental group of the sixth grade of state primary
schools, who receive process writing tuition, outperform the students of the con-
• Will there be any gender differences, as previous research has suggested? More
specifically, will the girls of the experimental group respond more positively to
• Will the application of process writing positively influence the attitudes and per-
Chapter one is the introduction to the aim and the content of the present thesis. It
establishes the theoretical setting of the research, articulates the hypothesis and research
questions, and justifies the conduct of the research by referring to similar studies in dif-
ferent contexts and highlighting the scarcity of relevant studies in the Greek primary
school context.
Chapter two discusses the nature of writing and the most famous cognitive mod-
els describing the process of writing. The theoretical foundation of the Communicative
Approach concerning the teaching of writing is presented coupled with the basic prin-
ciples of teaching writing. An overview of the main approaches to teaching writing are
described with the aim of justifying the selection of the process-approach as the most
process writers go through is proposed by the present researcher (Figure 4). This sug-
gested framework encompasses all the necessary information for the completion of a
task, that is, knowledge of the topic, the purpose, the reader and the genre of the text.
9
The text knowledge and discourse knowledge refer to the appropriate register, content
knowledge involves activation of relevant ideas and social context knowledge takes into
account the social environment where the writing takes place. As soon as all the pre-
vious types of information are mobilised, data stored in memory are drawn, tested and
written down in the form of a first draft which is revised, reread and rewritten. This pro-
Chapter three explicitly demonstrates the philosophy and the stages of the proc-
ess approach. As the target group of the present thesis is the primary school learners, the
theories of how young learners think and learn are referred to and the efficiency of the
process paradigm for this level is explored with reference to the conceptual develop-
ment of the students of this age. Studies referring to procedures used in both L1 and L2
writing are presented. Researches carried out in L2 contexts about the various stages of
the process paradigm are demonstrated. Finally, a schematic representation of the proc-
ess writing approach, which is deemed as appropriate for young learners, is offered by
the current writer (Figure 5) encompassing all the components entailed in writing,
Chapter four presents the goals of education nowadays in general and the educa-
tional reality in Greece in specific. The philosophy of the general national curriculum is
discussed along with the curriculum of teaching English and an evaluation of the
equivalent syllabus for the teaching of English in the sixth grade of the Greek state pri-
mary schools focusing on writing. The inadequacies of this framework in the teaching
of writing are highlighted and an experimental syllabus is suggested in line with process
writing.
10
Chapter five provides the context and the methodology of the research. The ad-
dressed hypothesis and research questions are articulated and a justification for their
choice is provided. The participants and instrumentation of the study are analytically
introduced.
Chapter six discusses and accounts for the results of the research. A qualitative
and a quantitative analysis of the findings is involved. The qualitative one entails the
evaluation of the students’ produced texts, according to criteria set in the marking
scheme which was designed by the writer, and the teachers’ attitudes towards writing.
The quantitative analysis refers to the students’ performance at the entry and the exit
point of the study along with their responses to the questionnaires, reflecting their per-
ceptions regarding successful techniques for learning how to write efficiently. These
data aspire to demonstrate whether the process writing approach can help young learn-
ers to enhance their writing proficiency and affect their stances towards writing.
Chapter seven presents the extracted results and discusses them with reference to
the hypothesis and research questions, so as to show whether these hypotheses have
been verified. The findings are interpreted and compared with the results of similar
studies, which are mentioned in chapter three, in order to trace similarities and differ-
ences. The employment of the cognitive model proposed in chapter two (Figure 4) is
discussed and the application of the process writing schematic representation (Figure 6),
suggested in chapter three, is verified within the greater context of the crosscurricular
the findings are pondered about and useful recommendations are provided.
Chapter eight presents the final conclusions of the whole thesis. Ways of foster-
ing autonomy in L2 writing are provided and the contribution of the present thesis to the
11
Greek state language classroom reality is discussed. Finally, the limitations of the pre-
sent research are provided and explained, and proposals for further research are offered.
can aid the students of the sixth grade of Greek state primary schools become better
classroom reality, the students can be encouraged to become more active participants in
the learning process, and acquire practical skills as well as metacognitive and metalin-
guistic abilities.
background, which led to the decision of researching the efficacy of the “process writ-
ing” approach to writing in the sixth grade students of the Greek state primary school,
was established. Relevant studies were mentioned with the aim of justifying the origi-
nality and necessity of the present thesis. The general hypothesis of the study and the
research questions were articulated. Finally, the organisation of the thesis in its various
Chapter 2
2.1 Introduction
This chapter will investigate the nature of writing and the differences between the writ-
ten and spoken mode. The most prevalent cognitive models of the process of writing
will be presented and an attempt will be made to produce a revised framework which
encompasses all the vital aspects of writing. The theoretical assumptions of the Com-
municative Approach in language teaching and their application to writing will be pre-
sented alongside with the basic principles employed in the teaching of writing. The sig-
nificance of integrating writing with the other skills in the classroom will also be
pointed out. Finally, an overview of the main approaches to teaching writing will be
presented with a view to selecting the one that is considered to be the most suitable for
in the Greek state primary English language classroom through the application of proc-
ess writing, it is necessary for our discussion first to provide a definition of writing and
second to examine what it entails and which basic assumptions underlie its nature. As
loaded” word (Colgan, 1996: 23) influenced by beliefs about literacy and culture, edu-
cational setting and prevailing pedagogical trends. It carries both “informative and af-
fective connotations” (Colgan, ibid), the former showing the need for a clear explana-
13
tion, while the latter exhibit our commitment to students to find the pedagogy which
Concerning the second preoccupation of what writing involves, Kroll (1990) al-
leges that in order to be effective teachers of writing, EFL professionals are in need of
skill in general. They require specific perspectives, principles and tools so as to reach a
Brookes and Grundy (1990) acknowledge that there are difficulties in teaching writing
for two important reasons, which are: (a) although all teachers realise the significance of
writing and its incorporation in their teaching programme, they confess being unable to
find interesting methods to teach it and boost their students’ motivation, and (b) a major
obstacle during writing is to make decisions about presenting different ways of express-
ing ideas. It is self-evident that this second difficulty is more insurmountable for non-
native speakers, who need extra practice in order to equal the performance of their na-
tive counterparts. Other difficulties in teaching writing skills arise from the specific fea-
tures of writing, which will be fully exemplified in the following section where writing
is analysed in contrast with speaking, since they represent the oral channel and the writ-
In order to put forward the characteristics of writing, the difference between the written
and oral language must be first highlighted. We all learn to speak before we learn to
physical impairment, acquires his/her mother tongue in the first years of life, but not
everybody, who possesses the ability to speak, learns to read and write. In this sense,
mastery of certain skills which, rather than being automatic, require specific practice
and teaching. Written language is different from spoken discourse and learning to write
is not a logical extension of speaking a language, because the two processes are not
Grabe & Kaplan (1996) summarise the differences of the spoken and the written
guistic traits, diverse limitations in production and functions and finally dissimilar em-
ployment of various versions of oral and written texts. Having analysed the previously
mentioned differences between the spoken and written mode, various authors (Brookes
& Grundy, 1990; O’Brien, 1999) claim that we use speech mainly to establish human
relationships, the most important function of speech being interaction. Written lan-
guage, on the other hand, mostly exhibits a transactional function by conveying factual
information. Written language can be stored so that communication can take place over
space and time. It is slow to reflect change in structure, well-organised, takes time and
gives us the opportunity to go back and amend what we have written, whereas the spo-
ken version is usually spontaneous and unrehearsed, has many varieties and is changing
continually. Another divergence is that of formality. Speech takes place mostly in in-
formal contexts in everyday life, while writing is usually connected to formal settings.
There is a higher proportion of lexical words to grammatical ones in writing, as well as,
Furthermore, Byrne (1988) draws a clear distinction between the written and
speakers and listeners are in physical contact interacting and exchanging roles. Speakers
can backtrack or clarify their ideas guided by the listener’s reaction and intervention. In
15
this way, the spoken mode is transitory, intended to be understood immediately, requir-
ing thus less planning. Sentences are often incomplete and ungrammatical exhibiting
“prosodic features” (Tribble, 1996: 16), which are non-verbal characteristics of spoken
English employed to encompass utterances with meaning. The most important of these
features are rhythm, pauses, repetition and redundancy. On the contrary, writing has its
own context and therefore has to be fully explicit. The reader is not present and some-
times is not known to the writer. Writing is permanent and can be reread as often as
Analysing this difference of context between the oral and written language,
Hedge (1988) points out that there are a lot of devices available to a speaker to convey
meaning. These features are called “paralinguistic” (Tribble, 1996: 16), because they do
not constitute a systematic part of the language, even though they add meaning to our
utterances. The paralinguistic characteristics include the way we speak, for example
loudly or softly, the use of gestures, facial expressions, stress, hesitations and above all
immediate feedback from the listener in order to clarify the message. A writer has to
bridge the lack of immediate interaction with the readers trying to anticipate their reac-
tions in order to embed them into the text. Effective writing requires organisation of
ideas and information and a careful selection of language and grammatical structures to
formulate a style appropriate to the topic and the intended readership. Sentences are ex-
pected to be carefully formed and organised in order to construct a text, using devices
such as punctuation, capitals, and other types of typology like bold, underlined or itali-
cised text and linking words to convey meaning, since writing cannot directly replicate
the aforementioned non verbal features employed in speech. As writing and speaking
are quite disparate from each other, and, because the written mode is a different channel
the spoken and written forms of language exhibit so many diversities, “they are not in-
dependent but interrelated forms, embodied, at the level of phonology and graphology,
in two different mediums” (Byrne, 1988: 14). This implies that they should not be sepa-
rated but their differences must be accommodated in teaching through the integration of
Having presented the dissimilarities between writing and speaking, the next sec-
tion will discuss the most prevalent cognitive models of writing in order to select the
In this section, an attempt will be made to analyse the process of writing and introduce
and examine the most-widely accepted cognitive models with a view to highlighting
their elements and revising them so as to embrace the procedures both elementary and
Previous research on the nature of writing (Flower & Hayes, 1980; Byrne, 1988;
Hedge, 1988; White & Arndt, 1991; Ellis & Brewster, 1991; Brewster, Ellis & Girard,
1991; Philips, 1993; Tribble, 1996; Hyland, 2002a; Hyland, 2003b) has shown that writ-
ing is not only different from spoken discourse for both young and adult learners, but it
is also far from being a simple matter of transcribing language into written symbols.
Moreover, as cognitive skills are involved while writing, adequate mastery of language
does not automatically lead to success in writing. White & Arndt (1991) support the
ideas, planning, gauging what is going to be written as well as what has been written.
Posed like this, writing is a recursive, not a linear process enabling writers to look back
over what they have produced so far. Hence, writers move not only forwards in their
piece of writing but also backwards revisiting prior stages before completing their text.
17
Writers encounter a sequence of problems starting from the high level of deciding on a
purpose and a message to be transmitted to the lower level of organising sentences, vo-
cabulary and spelling. So good writers plan for longer time and can create better plans,
which, then, they revise and reorganise focusing on both global and local level, and, as a
result, this process guarantees a better outcome. O’Brien (1999) points out that it is
clear that writing entails thinking, and, if teachers want students to write well, they must
are the Hayes & Flower (1980) model and the Bereiter & Scardamalia (1987) model,
Hayes & Flower (1980: 11) divide the writer’s world into three major parts, that is the
“long-term memory”, “the task environment” and “the writing process” presenting the
Three kinds of knowledge are needed in our Long Term Memory (LTM) in or-
der to write, which are “knowledge of topic”, “knowledge of audience” and “stored
writing plans”. In order to expect students to cover a wide range of topics, we must be
sure that they already have or that they obtain the relevant information about a theme
before they start writing meaning that they need knowledge about the concepts included
Besides, knowing who the reader is makes writing easier, because the writer is
familiar with the context in which the text will be read, since he/she is aware of the in-
terests and degree of knowledge he/she shares with the person he/she is writing for. The
writing plans refer to previous experience of writing that the writer has stored in his/her
18
memory. These plans entail knowledge of written language from the level of spelling,
through morphology, syntax and vocabulary to the higher levels of register and genre.
In other words, they include all aspects of the language system that are deemed neces-
TASK ENVIRONMENT
Topic
Audience PRODUCED
Motivating Cues
SO FAR
Knowledge of
Audience GOAL
SETTING EDITING
Stored Writing Plans
MONITOR
Figure 1: Identifying the organisation of the writing process (Hayes & Flower 1980:
11)
The “task environment” includes all the elements “outside the writer’s skin”
(Hayes & Flower, 1980: 12) that influence the performance of writing. It consists of two
parts, that is the “writing assignment” and “the text produced so far”. The former in-
cludes the given “topic”, the intended “audience” and “motivating cues”, which in a
classroom situation can be in the form of visuals, a brainstorming activity or class dis-
cussion about the theme, to mention but a few. The latter is the passage that is formu-
19
lated as writing proceeds. The writer rereads this text occasionally, and this reading has
“Planning” is the first step of the writing process during which the writer draws
the required information from ‘the task environment’ and from his/her LTM in order to
design his/her writing. A vital part of “planning” is “generating” ideas for the specific
topic having in mind the intended audience. The second element of the planning process
is “goal setting” that is deciding on the main messages the writer wants to communicate
and why. Once the writer has defined his/her targets for writing, he/she proceeds to “or-
ganising” the material he/she wants to present. “Organising” operates at two levels: the
global and the local. The first involves the organisation of the ideas, while the second
and the use of cohesive links among the various parts of the text. In the stage of “trans-
lating” the writer transfers all his/her previous thinking on to paper in the form of a first
draft. Then he/she “reviews” this draft in order to reassess it, he/she “rereads” it at-
tempting to view his/her own work with the eyes of an unknown audience and finally
he/she “edits” it. During the whole writing process, the writer “monitors” his/her deci-
Hyland (2003b) contends that the model proposed by Hayes & Flower (1980) is
probably the most widely accepted model by L2 writing teachers. By developing this
cognitive model of the writing process, Hayes & Flower showed that composing is an
interactive activity aiming at a certain target. In order to support their theory with re-
search, they used protocols, transcripts and videotapes of students thinking aloud while
composing. These data analysed the mental processes advanced writers go through in
Initially, this model provoked both approval and criticism. Speaking in favour of
the model, Grabe & Kaplan (1996) point out that despite the critique, it is valid and jus-
tified through the findings from Hayes & Flowers’ research programme. This evidence
demonstrated the recursiveness of writing and the interaction among parallel processes.
Moreover, new horizons were opened for viable hypotheses and explicitly designed
methods. On the contrary, North (1987) describes it as vague, while Dobrin (1986) and
Smagorinsky (1994), all of them cited in Grabe & Kaplan, 1996) question the reliability
of the protocol analysis as a methodology for the study of the procedures of writing.
Later, Flower (1989, 1994) complemented the model by adding the social context which
functions together with the cognitive attempts of the writer extending this writing model
with the prevalent notions of the 1990s, which prioritised the social element. Neverthe-
less, this revised framework did not have the same impact as the original as it was not
exhibits a shortcoming in its notion that all writers follow the same process, the only
difference being that skilled writers do it in a better way than inexperienced ones. Bere-
iter and Scardamalia (1987) tried to fill this vacuum by developing a new model of the
writing process, which was based on the assumption that there cannot be a single pattern
for all writers but diverse models are employed at different levels of writing develop-
ment. They claim that the skilled performers do not just use the same model with novice
writers in a more effective way, but they can apply a superior kind of writing process,
which the unskilled writers have not mastered yet. Their theory, which proposes two
models instead of a universal one, gives scope for more thinking. Based on research
findings, they reached the conclusion that novice writers begin writing sooner, thus de-
21
voting less time to planning. These writers present less sophisticated notes, make simple
revisions and concentrate on content neglecting writing objectives and problems which
arise when composing. They try to keep the task as less complex as possible in order to
propriate for them, especially when writing about concrete things, such as describing
personal feelings or experiences, journal and diary writing, and narratives. More spe-
cifically this model is deemed as suitable for primary school students (ibid: 10), who are
MENTAL REPRESENTATION
OF ASSIGNMENT
CONSTRUCT
MEMORY PROBES
RUN TESTS OF
APPROPRIATENESS
PASS
WRITE
(NOTES, DRAFTS, ETC)
UPDATE MENTAL
REPRESENTATION OF TEXT
Figure 2: The knowledge-telling model of the writing process (Bereiter & Scardamalia,
1987: 8)
As can be seen from this model, the information needed for the completion of a
writing task is retrieved from the nature of the assignment, the topic and the genre.
Relevant ideas are drawn from memory and tested for their appropriateness. If they are
found proper, they are written down, otherwise another search into memory is initiated.
22
Nevertheless, this pattern is not suitable for more complicated tasks, which presuppose
more sophisticated organisation of ideas to meet the expectations of the audience and
analyse the problems of composing and define the targets, so as to overcome the emerg-
ing obstacles, such as content production, readership expectations, writer purpose, suit-
able genre, and lexical and organisational appropriateness. As one problem is encoun-
tered, another may arise, so the expert writer turns to either the content problem space
or the rhetorical problem space in order to confront the problems of composing. The
information of one area is used as feedback for the other and vice versa. The outcome of
the solution of the encountered problems is used for the initiation of the “knowledge-
telling” process, which is now only a part of the overall pattern. This component acti-
vates writing, and, when new problems emerge, the problem-solving procedure is
As with all theories, the Bereiter & Scardamalia model presents certain limita-
tions, as well. Firstly, the context must be specified through the elaboration of the vari-
ous sub-sections of the model. Grabe & Kaplan (1996) also argue that there is no indi-
cation when or how the transition to the more complicated process is accomplished and
whether it can be acquired by all writers. In an attempt to defend their model, Bereiter &
motivating writing programmes, which do not promote the complex writing process.
skills, objectives and feelings. Augmented motivation will lead students to the intention
to learn and the development of more complex writing ability. As a result, learners will
23
deploy an active problem-solving system, which goes beyond the school writing tasks
MENTAL REPRESENTATION
OF ASSIGNMENT
CONTENT DISCOURSE
KNOWLEDGE KNOWLEDGE
PROBLEM
CONTENT TRANSLATION RHETORICAL
PROBLEM PROBLEM
SPACE PROBLEM SPACE
TRANSLATION
KNOWLEDGE-
TELLING
PROCESS
Figure 3: The knowledge-transforming model of the writing process (Bereiter & Scar-
damalia, 1987: 12)
Having analysed the constituent parts of the two most referred to schematic rep-
resentations of the cognitive processes that writers go through, while striving to produce
a text, a revised, more comprehensive framework of the writing process will be pre-
although the Hayes & Flower’s original version of 1980 was greatly improved by
Flower through incorporating the contextual component, the Bereiter & Scardamalia
proposal is more complete as it accounts for the differences between skilled and less-
24
skilled performers. In this thesis the “knowledge-telling” model is opted for, since the
focus is on young learners who are less experienced writers. In an effort to complement
the Bereiter & Scardamalia (1987) model and include all the elements of writing, certain
dimensions have been added presenting the organisation of the writing process, which
The following components have been added to the original: First of all, the task
component including all the subcomponents of the audience, purpose, and generic and
topical selection. All these dimensions are very important elements in defining the type
of the required text. Moreover, rereading and revising have also been encompassed
MENTAL REPRESENTATION
OF ASSIGNMENT
KNOWLEDGE-
CONTENT DISCOURSE
KNOWLEDGE TELLING KNOWLEDGE
PROCESS
TASK
CONSTRUCT
MEMORY PROBES
RUN TESTS OF
APPROPRIATENESS
PASS
WRITE
(NOTES, DRAFTS, ETC.)
FAIL
REREAD - REVISE
PASS
UPDATE MENTAL SOCIAL
TEXT REPRESENTATION OF TEXT CONTEXT
KNOWLEDGE KNOWLEDGE
Figure 4. The suggested model of the writing procedure based on Bereiter & Scardama-
lia( 1987)
25
as substantial metacognitive processes, which will either lead to the production of the
text or initiate repair strategies to reformulate it. The new element of text knowledge
integrating the textual factors in the model. Finally, the social context knowledge, which
has also been incorporated in Figure 4, accounts for the type of the text according to the
communication purpose and channel, and the social situation where the writing takes
place. These modifications in the model are made with the aim of presenting a pattern,
which embodies the mental processes of the writers, the linguistic and textual elements
that determine the writing and the socially contextual variables, which influence the
kind of writing. The present researcher believes that this model is appropriate for teach-
ing writing to different writers in diverse situations and especially for young learners
who attempt to master the strenuous skills of articulating their ideas in written form in
L2. This revised model is open to new investigation, criticism and further elaboration
and after presenting the most influential models of the cognitive processes that take
place during composition, the next section of this chapter (2.3) will consider the impor-
teachers to teach their students the creative activity of writing in English (Raimes,
1983a). Different theoreticians have presented various reasons for including the teach-
(1988) puts forward certain advocacy statements why teachers should teach writing. In
styles and students’ needs. Some learners, especially the ones who are not very
competent at the oral linguistic form, feel more secure if they are allowed to read
2. Writing provides the learners with some tangible proof that they are making
dents can check their writing more easily than they monitor their spoken output,
tary level, there are many opportunities to capitalise on activities that integrate
4. Writing provides variety in classroom tasks, serving as a break from oral work.
It gives students the opportunity to work at their own pace, making them feel
more relaxed. This is very significant especially for young learners, since they
exhibit great variations of capacities and actual performance at this age, as they
5. Written language can present contexts for learning, that is, the students will both
“learn how to write” and “write in order to learn”. Seen in this sense, writing
Moreover, O’Brien (1999) provides some more justifications for including the
teaching of writing in the EFL classroom. Writing gives teachers and students a perma-
nent evidence of written work, which can be used to assess learners and diagnose prob-
lematic areas in order to design follow-up work. Writing skills are sometimes neglected
in L1 and if we integrate them in L2, this may help students develop their writing ca-
pacities in L1 as well. Learning to write promotes creative thinking, and all education
should aim to develop students cognitively. Learning to write presupposes to take into
account the students’ wants and preferences, which will improve their communicative
skills.
Finally, Davis (1995) also supports the importance of writing training following
tence”, which is a person’s knowledge of language and “performance” that is the actual
use of language, Krashen, in his language acquisition theory (which will be fully pre-
sented in the following chapter), supported the view that our deep conscious knowledge
performance is more difficult to be achieved in both L1 and L2. Hence, Davis (ibid) ad-
quately, rather than being an inborn talent, is an ability that can be devel-
• Knowledge of the process of writing, the steps that must be followed and
their progress.
It is evident from the above discussion that writing training can make writers
constant effort to improve the students’ writing skills. Therefore, it is advisable to in-
written language, many linguists (Raimes, 1983b; Hedge, 1988; Kroll, 1990; White &
Arndt, 1991) corroborate devoting classroom time to writing both in L1 and L2 settings.
Raimes (1985), in particular, advises teachers to help their students to exploit this ex-
traordinary power of language, adding that the time the students need to write has to
take precedence over the time teachers need to complete a syllabus or cover course ma-
terials. In order to become a good writer, a student has to produce many pieces of writ-
ing, this being especially true of low performing writers, who require a lot of practice.
These students can benefit from working in the classroom on writing tasks that the
teacher has carefully planned to fulfil the needs of both the whole class and the indi-
viduals. If low performers feel some signs of success through the teacher’s and their
peers’ support, they will begin to develop self-confidence in writing and so start “on the
Krashen (1977, 1981, 1982) in his monitor model stressed the importance of
time on one aspect of writing, which is grammatical accuracy. He claimed that under
certain conditions, the learners can apply internalised grammatical rules to change and
improve their spoken and written output. One of the necessary variables is considered to
29
be the time allotted to a task. Time is also a key presupposition in other elements of
Similarly, Kroll (1990) adds that more time must be given to writing and an ef-
fort should be made to make the best of this extra time by maximising students’ strate-
gies for composing and enabling them to locate the attributes of successful writing.
Only in this way will the extra time employed for writing be spent more productively.
Finally, Tribble (1996) summarises the benefits of teaching our students writing
in three aspects, the first being to give them opportunities for creative language use.
Second, writing has a general educational value, as our students will have to sit written
in the written mode that the students will succeed or fail in the educational system. Con-
sequently, if teachers help learners to become better writers, then they aid them to gain
success in the educational system. Third, apart from the educational setting, instructors
prepare their students for life beyond school. Posed like this, if students are deprived of
the opportunity to write well, they may be excluded from a wide range of social roles
foreign/second language classroom were analysed in sections 2.2 and 2.3. The princi-
ples employed in the teaching of writing will be presented in part 2.4.2. These princi-
ples derive from the characteristics of writing specified so far and the theory of the
Language teaching model, which was the major approach to teaching English as a for-
eign language in Britain, supporting the view that language is taught by practising struc-
vance his view of “competence”, which primarily refers to abstract grammatical abili-
ties, Hymes (1972: 281) introduced the term “communicative competence”, which is the
ability to use language according to the context. Following this thread of thought, other
British applied linguists (Halliday, 1975; Candlin, 1976; Widdowson, 1972, 1978) sin-
gled out the communicative dimension of language, which is based on the tenet that ut-
terances carry meaning. As a result, there was a shift of emphasis from the what is
taught to how it should be taught. Even though the Communicative Approach appeared
first in Great Britain, it soon expanded all over Europe and in America, presenting dif-
ferent ramifications which, however, all agree that communicative competence is the
target of language teaching, and all four skills must be emphasised in an effort to relate
offering whole-task practice by employing various tasks designed to suit the learners’
level. One example is to ask students in class to interview each other, then write a report
and present it in class activating, thus, not only speaking, listening, writing and reading,
but their thinking skills, as well. In such an environment, natural learning is achieved,
and positive relationships are established among the students and between the students
and the teachers. Moreover, Senior (2000) contends that a classroom with this warm
31
atmosphere fulfils the social needs of students, who support each other, rendering this
it puts emphasis on both functional (in the sense of use) and structural (i.e. organisation)
Finocchiaro and Brumfit (1983) present the main characteristics of the Communicative
cate through reading and writing can be encouraged from the very beginning. In EFL
settings, L1 can be used in the classroom, where students may need or even profit from
it. Mistakes are seen as routes, leading learners to self discovery of correct forms. Even
though fluency is the primary goal, accuracy is not neglected, but it is always embedded
in context. In this regard, the teaching of grammar is not incompatible with the Com-
especially for weaker students who need help to augment their language competence. A
(Thompson, 1996; cited in Tan, 2004) in which learners are first exposed to new lan-
guage in meaningful milieu to assimilate its function before they focus on the gram-
matical forms. Swan (1985) also emphasises form by claiming that an enriched vocabu-
Krashen (1982), presenting his theory of second language acquisition and learn-
ing, was also in favour of the communicative tenets. Acquisition implies the uncon-
cation, while learning is the purposeful presentation of the acquired language. The learnt
system acts as the monitor of the output of the acquired data. In this light, Krashen sup-
ports the view that second language learning derives from using language communica-
In practice this means that in order to promote second language learning, teach-
ers need to employ tasks, which involve real communication in meaningful texts using
meaning and communication, it, nevertheless, does not undervalue the linguistic, social,
cognitive and individual aspects in both L1 and L2 acquisition. Furthermore, the needs
of the learners are of primary significance. Referring to the students’ needs, expecta-
tions and motivation, Tan (2004) argues that they should be seriously considered along
Furthermore, McGroaty & Galvan (1985) contend that culture affects our notions of
language and education and these views influence our expectations of language teach-
ing. In this perspective, Tan (ibid) theorises that the benefits of the Communicative Ap-
proach can be maximised, if it is introduced gradually to certain cultures like the Asian
ones, where the students are not expected to express themselves freely.
Morrow (1981) presents the following principles for the application of the
a) Know what you are doing. This implies that each activity should have an
b) The whole is more than the sum of the parts. The concept of communica-
tion lies beyond the level of the sentence in longer chunks of language and
ered along with appropriacy, which means that the application of structures
work.
d) To learn it, do it. The learners are actively involved in the communicative
some mistakes, teachers must at least credit them for using whatever re-
the stance that teachers must ignore mistakes, because many times they
may impede communication rather than promote it. Moreover, not attend-
(ibid) advocates that the best way to assist students to avoid mistakes is by
teaching them not only the correct forms but also their appropriate use.
McDonough & Shaw (2003) add another equally important principle, which is
that the communicative framework applies to all four language skills. There are plenty
of activities compatible with the Communicative Approach as long as they require in-
teraction, negotiation of meaning and information sharing in the form of providing some
clues to certain students, while concealing them from the others urging them thus to in-
teract in real life situations where a person possesses some information which the others
ignore.
Applied in writing especially, according to Brookes & Grundy (1990), the char-
acteristics of the Communicative Approach imply that students have something mean-
34
ingful to say and try to communicate this message to someone else. Learners work in
groups promoting, therefore, communication and at the same time have the opportunity
to gauge their own performance and that of their partners gaining double benefits in this
way. Finally, students develop register consciousness by raising their awareness of the
interdependence between texts and context, which in turn defines the power of the par-
ticipants and determines the distance or the intimacy of the language they use.
Useful writing activities for the EFL classroom within the communicative
1. Information gap activities: They are very efficient for the teaching of writing
for two reasons. The first is that they ease the conveying of a message, while
the second is the genuine flow of information, since the students write to
each other about things they do not already know. The teacher creates infor-
(ibid: 98) with student A being the “producer” and student B the “receiver”.
2. Jigsaw activities: The teacher organises such activities in a way that all stu-
dents are both producers and receivers. So, student A is given some informa-
when they write to each other there appears the need to exchange informa-
analysed and justified later in section 2.5, and provide contextualisation for
the following tasks, supplying, in this way, a purpose for writing. The most
1982: 170 - 171) principle, whereby the learner is required to utilise the data
The description of the nature of writing and the processes that skilled writers follow,
which were presented in sections 2.2 and 2.3, as well as the tenets of the Communica-
tive Approach, which were specified in part 2.4.1, lead to four principles of writing as
The first principle in writing is that writing teachers should be aware of the difficulties
students encounter when creating a text in order to help learners become effective writ-
ers. These difficulties must be taken into consideration and be incorporated in teaching
and in the assessment of the students’ work. This awareness has the following four im-
plications in practice:
that knowing who the writer is, that is, the age, level, and cultural background rather
than his or her individual character is of great importance in the kind of writing that will
be employed in classroom. For example, the beginner who has no experience in writing
in L2 has different needs than another student who has received more years of formal
The second preoccupation is that writing tasks must have a defined audience.
Byrne (1988) claims that who the students are writing for influences how they write and
what to write about, while Hayes & Flower (1980: 12) use the term “task environment”
to refer to the target, audience and layout of the final text. As in real life there is always
36
reader, in that they establish and maintain contact with him/her. They think about what
the reader is interested in or needs to know through shared information. They consider
how much of the knowledge is common with the addressee and how much needs to be
made more explicit. Less skilled writers produce what is called “writer based” (Hayes &
Flower, 1980) rather than “reader based” texts, that is, writing which prioritises topic
ignoring the reader, resulting thus in ambiguity. Consequently, their writing does not
The written text will be affected by the amount of topical knowledge common to
the writer and reader. This common knowledge or lack thereof determines the details,
directs writers in selecting the content they should include and the way they must pre-
sent it. Any piece of writing must have the target to communicate something. Grabe &
Kaplan (1996) claim that according to the Gricean maxims the objectives of writing
light, the purpose of writing must serve the structural and functional dimension of the
text. On the structural aspect, the purpose is related to the notion of genre, that is the
accepted organisation of the text type, which represents “how writers typically use lan-
functional level, the purpose of writing is not relevant to a specific genre. Rather it de-
pends on the kind of informational content the writers want to convey. Trying to present
37
from genre and audience, Grabe & Kaplan (ibid) give the example that a writer could
write two texts to the same recipients and in the same genre i.e. a letter, each text having
The students need a firm grounding about the purpose of the communication.
145) contends that different writing assignments have different targets and some of
them may be “multi-purpose”. He also considers the element of interest and unpredict-
ability as of great importance for the students, which implies describing something that
the reader does not already know, giving an opinion or solving a problem.
discussion, it is vital to mention the various terms used to refer to students’ deficiencies
while writing. Talking about errors, Edge (1989: 11) divides “mistakes up into different
categories according to the teacher’s opinion of how a mistake fits in with an individual
student’s stage of learning in his or her class”. Slips are the types of mistaken forms that
a student can easily self-correct. Errors are mistakes, which a student cannot correct
alone, but where it is clear which form he/she wanted to use, and where the class is fa-
miliar with that form. Attempts are the kinds of mistakes, which are made, because the
learners have not yet mastered the language necessary to express what they want to say,
or where the intended meaning and the structure being used are not clear.
This research will be concerned with errors and attempts, since the former sig-
nify deficient forms that lead students to get engaged in challenging correction proce-
dure, which is a little bit above their cognitive and linguistic ability, while the latter help
38
boost the learners’ performance. For the sake of uniformity, the term error will be used
Shaughnessy (1977; cited in Kroll, 1990) indicates that the errors learners make
are not purposeful efforts to violate language or indifference to details. In contrast, er-
rors are mistaken interpretations of language. Moreover, White (1988: 95) points out
that in the Chomskyan view of language the role of error in both native and second lan-
guage learning has been reassessed. Instead of being viewed as “vicious tendencies”,
errors can be regarded as evidence of improvement. As a result, errors are seen both as
inevitable and as a natural part of learning a language. In this sense, they must be seen
positively in writing, because they can become useful tools to help pupils understand
their inadequacies and try to improve their performance. Many researchers (Edge, 1989;
Lee, 1997; Frankenberg-Garcia, 1999) propose that students participate in the correction
class both during writing and after the text has been produced, after receiving enough
training in viewing their own written work and the writings of their peers critically as
readers. This will help them locate and correct their errors and, at the same time, acquire
good writing strategies for their future texts ensuring that they will become “learners
In selecting which errors to rectify, White & Arndt (1991) propose the estab-
lishment of some priorities. Two criteria may be followed: communicative effect and
frequency. Global errors detracting effective communication must be dealt with, while
the recurrent ones also need special attention. This selective error treatment according to
the needs and proficiency of the students is preferable to a comprehensive one, because
it may confuse and discourage the learners. Besides, Byrne (1988) supports the tenet
that teachers must also provide students with positive feedback indicating not only their
39
defects but their good points, too. In this way, the learners will recognise that they make
progress, on the one hand, and the other hand, their interest in writing will be rein-
forced. The identification of the errors will shape the form of the remedial work.
(d) Editing
Students must be encouraged to proof-read their writings for spelling, capitalisation,
punctuation and grammar, as suggested by Jacobs (1986) with the aim of rectifying
these distracting characteristics and disambiguating the structures in the sentences. Ac-
curacy in written work must be highlighted from the early stages in an effort to stress
that the students are responsible for their own texts. If teachers do not insist on it from
the very beginning, it will be difficult to encourage the pupils to correct their work accu-
rately later. A simple code for correction, which all the students understand, should be
used.
The second principle in teaching writing is that becoming able to write in EFL/ESL en-
tails much more than simply mastering a linguistic base to convey meaning. Familiari-
sation with the conventional structures of different kinds of texts in the target language
is also necessary. Various researchers (Berkenkotter & Huckin, 1995; Cazden & Gray,
1992, cited in Grabe & Kaplan, 1996), having conducted studies on the importance of
written texts in promoting writing, alleged the need to provide learners with various
models of writing. Only in this way will the students recognise the techniques in which
quently, teachers should expose their students to examples of the text types they want
Learners should be aware that each discourse type has its own special character-
istics. Hyland (2002b) believes that teachers must provide students with the structural
40
understanding of texts and metalanguage to analyse them, rendering thus the learners
independent in criticising and finally producing texts. One way of achieving this is to
(1988) presents a list of the features of the different discourse modes offering scope for
1. The typographical, in the sense of how the information is arranged by the author.
4. The sentence structure and length: Sentences can be simple, compound and
tences following the norm: old then new. However, in narratives we sometimes
use the flashback technique starting from current events and moving backwards
7. Verbs and verb forms: Different verbs can be used to match the desired effect
like stative or dynamic in different tenses, namely simple past in narrative and
imperative in instructions.
When teachers expose students to different text types, the latter will form
“schemata” or plans for these discourse types in their long-term memory. Carrell &
Eisterhold (1988: 79) make a distinction between “content” and “formal” schemata.
“Content schemata” are associated with the content area of the text, while “formal” ones
41
more “writing plans” the learners have stored in their memory, the easier it will be for
them to present a text that fits a particular text type. A communicative furtherance of the
“schema theory” corroborates the notion of mastery and recognition of the formal and
content schemata by the reader, too. Coherence of a text is hence achieved through the
shared background knowledge between the writer and the reader. More specifically,
there must be a match between the schemata of the audience and the layout and content
of a text.
Summarising this principle, Grabe & Kaplan (1996: 205-207) use the term
“what is written” which encompasses content, genre and register. Content is the back-
ground knowledge that enables students to express their ideas better when the topic is
familiar to them. Genres are discourse types having predictable characteristics, purpose
and layout. Finally, register is the kind of language used to fit the topic of writing and
interpersonal relationships between the writer and the reader. For example, different
style and lexes are used when writing an article about a famous star from an article
about medicine. Moreover, the correlation with the audience determines the register.
The third principle is that, when teachers choose texts representing various genres, they
have to bear in mind that learners can read more advanced language than the one they
can produce. Cabrera & Bazo (2002) support the view that the level of the language in-
put should be higher than the level we expect learners to present. This criterion dis-
suades teachers from having excessive expectations from the learners. Teachers must
carefully select texts to expose students to correct forms. These texts should provide
learners with “superior data” (Prabhu, 1987; cited in White, 1988: 107), which will help
them improve their internal systems of language. This principle is in accordance with
42
Krashen’s (1985) input hypothesis claiming that input texts must be comprehensive and
above the learners’ level of proficiency in order to improve their performance. This is
achieved due to the fact that students can understand new language with the help of con-
text, knowledge of the world and background linguistic competence. Instructors, never-
theless, should be aware that learners can form less sophisticated texts than the ones
they encounter.
The fourth principle is to encourage students to produce complete texts rather than iso-
lated sentences from the early stages. Since the teachers’ goal is to promote the stu-
dents’ ability to write a text, one way of providing the appropriate guidance is by em-
ploying whole passages for practice from the very beginning. Grabe & Kaplan (1996)
tion with the organisation of texts and language. In the early stages these texts need not
be long. Rather they will be “basic minimum” (Wingard 1981: 146) texts with a set
goal. Moreover instructors are advised to give their pupils enough practice in the impor-
tant features, which make a text coherent, such as textual arrangement, logical distribu-
identifiable patterns if the writer intends to make it reader-friendly. A very useful tech-
nique for planning a text is by using metastatements. These are statements that help the
writers to recapitulate what they have already said and predispose their readers for the
forthcoming parts. Even if students are quite young, they can receive practice in using
some simple phrases. In the packaging of information, O’Brien (1999: 29) talks about
the “given-new contract” or the “given-new principle” to stress that comprehension and
recall is easier if a text follows this principle. The writer begins from “given” or
43
“shared” (ibid: 28) information which he/she has already supplied in the text or sup-
poses that the readers possess from their knowledge of the world. After ensuring that the
text includes all the necessary information he/she proceeds to present new things. This
Halliday & Hasan (1976) mention five types of cohesive devices which help
and lexis. Reference devices are grammatical words like pronouns, possessive and de-
ously or afterwards. Three types of substitution are distinguished: nominal, verbal and
clausal. In nominal substitution the words one and ones substitute a noun. In verbal, the
verb do replaces a previously mentioned verb, whereas clausal substitution occurs when
so or not are used instead of a whole clause. While in substitution an item is replaced, in
hesion includes four types: 1. additive (and, or, nor, not… either) 2. adversative in pre-
senting something which is against expectations (i.e. yet, though, but, however, on the
contrary…) 3. causal (so, thus, for this reason, consequently, if…then, etc) 4. temporal,
that is, those referring to time (next, earlier, meanwhile, until then, at last etc). Two
categories are listed in lexical cohesion: reiteration and collocation. Reiteration entails
the repetition of the same item or the use of a synonym or a subordinate. Collocation
means the use of complementary terms, antonyms and pairs from an ordered series. A
careful application of lexical cohesion renders a text more interesting and readable.
Summarising the significance of cohesive devices, Hedge (1988) points out that
these are the means by which parts of a piece of writing are linked as logically related
sentences. These linking words signal the relationship between ideas making the
writer’s intentions obvious. They present clearly the development of meaning that the
44
writer is trying to convey and help readers predict what will follow. Another strategy to
check coherence is “topical structure analysis” which deals with both global and local
coherence (Connor & Farmer 1990: 126-128). While this analysis does not ignore the
rhetorical roles of sentences, it also takes into account the semantic meaning of sen-
tences, and their relation and sequencing to build meaning. Therefore, students focus on
global coherence, that is, what the text is about and local connections in the way the
sentences are related to each other and to the overall discourse topic.
enough to make a piece of writing coherent. Other factors are also needed to render a
written passage understandable such as its content, the reader’s background knowledge
in the form of stored “schemata” and finally the purpose of a text which makes it mean-
Following the discussion of the two previous sections (2.3 and 2.4), the tenet
adopted in this thesis is the one expressed by O’Brien (1999) that a well-balanced Eng-
lish course must include both writing to learn and learning to write with a little more
ing writing with the other skills in the English language classroom in the current sec-
tion.
In real life, we very seldom use only one skill at a time. Instead, we exercise two
or more skills at the same time. Talking about this simultaneous practice of skills,
Brookes & Grundy (1990) present an example of people taking a telephone message.
45
These people listen, speak, write the information down and then read it in an integrated
McDonough & Shaw (1993) contend that the classroom situation can never be
exactly the same as real life but every effort should be made to replicate it. If instructors
want the learners’ performance in classroom setting to mirror real world, they must fol-
low an integrated approach, the aim of which is to enable students to transfer naturally
between one mode and another. Thus, the occasions of a student’s unbalanced second
language performance which results from teaching each skill separately are minimised.
Particularly, in order to find out appropriate contexts for teaching written work, students
must also be provided with opportunities for combining it effectively with other class-
(1985: 144) clarify that it is “ the teaching of the language skills of reading, writing, lis-
tening and speaking in conjunction with each other as when a lesson involves activities
gling of the four major aspects of language so as to reflect real world communication.
skills of reading and listening precede and lead to the output ones of speaking and writ-
ing is suggested. An integrated skills model is represented (Burgess, 1994: 309, 310) in
Listening
and / or → Speaking → Writing
Reading
Figure 5 Integrated skills model (Burgess, 1994: 309, 310)
46
The use of certain knowledge structures such as grids, flow charts and tree dia-
grams under the name of “ideational frameworks” (Burgess, 1994: 310), which facilitate
the processing of information and its transmission from the receptive to the productive
With respect to integrated skills, Byrne (1981: 108-112) makes a distinction be-
tween two different approaches to be used in the classroom. In the first approach, inte-
gration is seen as “reinforcement” in the sense that the skills are linked in a way that
what has been learnt and practised is further reinforced and “extended” through more
activities that require the use of the other skills, too. This method of connecting skills is
to employ and has influenced the organisation of teaching materials into units and les-
sons. The prevalent motif is transition from the spoken channel to the written one in the
beginning and vice versa in later stages. However, as easily usable as this approach may
Thus, Byrne (1981: 108, 109) provides another approach in which the skills are
mends not to follow a specific pattern but to try to incorporate the skills normally as in
real life, where there is not a predetermined sequence of the skills. In the real world,
there is always a reason to exercise a skill instead of another. To word it differently, the
learners speak, listen, read and write in any order that the situation requires and only
when it is appropriate to do so. This notion of “open-endedness” (ibid: 112) gives the
students freedom to make some decisions about the most suitable ordering of the skills,
hence contributing actively to their learning procedure. This second approach, which
47
attracts the students’ motivation in that they can acquire a better insight of the mecha-
tends that EFL teaching resembles a tapestry created from many strands such as the
mentality of the teacher, the students, the educational setting and the mother tongue of
the learners and the teacher. Another substantial strand in this tapestry is the employ-
ment of the four skills. Only if all the strands are interwoven smoothly, will the tapestry
be strong and beautiful. In the classroom reality, this means that the integrated-skill ap-
students to interact naturally in and through the language. On the other end is the segre-
for language sake rather than prepare learners for real life communication.
tion may be, the nature of content differs according to the students’ linguistic
level.
ploys pair and group work, is applicable to all levels of language proficiency
by adjusting the tasks to fit the abilities of the pupils and is especially suit-
48
a. If the four skills are analysed, an overlap among the vital elements involved
economy in learning.
b. There are different types of learners in the way they perceive information:
the “visual” who need to see in order to learn, the “auditory” who require to
ers to make their lessons more efficient and holistic, so as to help all types of
c. Output skills acquired through more than one channel are more likely to be
learnt well, because the channels support each other. As a result, practice in
The above arguments show the need for a multi-skill approach to the teaching of
writing. The implication for the classroom is that writing work should develop from
reading, listening and speaking. This can be best attained when learners read or listen to
various discourse types, discuss about ideas and the format of the required text, and fi-
nally give feedback to each other. A key factor for offering students more opportunities
for combining skills is to get them to work in pairs and groups. Holding class discus-
sions is an advisable method to discover lexes and ideas for writing. Students create
lists, which are a useful vocabulary resource for them. Furthermore, through talking to
49
each other and the teacher, they extend their ideas and the content of their writing. In
this regard, speaking facilitates and shapes writing. Moreover, writing helps the devel-
opment of the other skills. Zamel (1983; cited in Grabe & Kaplan, 1996), argues that
Having highlighted the reasons for integrating writing with the other skills in a
communicative lesson, the principles for an “integrated lesson” (Nunan, 1989: 130 -
1. Authenticity. Authentic input texts should be used for learners to read or lis-
ten to.
one. In practice, this may mean that a reading activity can lead to class dis-
4. Language focus. This principle is founded on the notion that students im-
5. Learning focus. Tasks following the integrated skills model enable students
focusing on the writing skills have been stressed in the present chapter so far, it is nec-
essary to make reference to the main methods of teaching writing. Particularly, Silva
(1990) points out that professionals who teach English as a foreign or second language
Teachers have to be familiar with principles and models about SL writing and develop
an ability to analyse and evaluate different approaches. This part focuses on the ap-
proaches to ESL writing in an effort to highlight their strong and weak points. In par-
ticular, this section presents the prevalent pedagogies in ESL writing instruction from
1945 up till now, describes their strengths and weaknesses and singles out the most effi-
cient model. When describing these pedagogies and selecting the most appropriate
model for teaching writing, the emphasis will mostly lie on writing in general, while the
appropriacy of the selected approach to enable young learners to become better writers
The first model which prevailed in the years 1945-1965 was controlled or guided com-
position which, as Silva (1990) suggests, seems to have its roots in Charles Fries’
(1945) oral approach, the predecessor of the audiolingual method of second language
teaching, which requires students to repeat the oral model language produced by the
teacher. Underlying controlled composition are the beliefs that language is speech and
that learning is habit formation influenced by behavioural linguistics. When its basic
tenets are examined, it is not surprising that from this perspective writing was regarded
tematic imitation which leads to originality. Thus, learning to write in a second lan-
guage is deemed as an exercise in habit formation. In this sense, the text becomes a col-
lection of sentence patterns and lexical items, that is, a linguistic artifact and a means
for language practice. In the writing context in the ESL classroom (ibid: 13) there is
negligible concern for audience or purpose. Seen from this angle, writing is a decontex-
The mid-sixties brought an increasing awareness of ESL students’ needs regarding the
production of written discourse. Therefore, there was a shift of focus to product and the
main components are attention to the composed product in contrast to the composing
process and emphasis on words, sentences and paragraphs. Students were given artifi-
cial topics for writing, producing only one piece of writing. Teachers were considered to
have a professional obligation to rectify errors, instilling the concept of correctness and
conformity. All errors concerning surface grammar were corrected by the teacher with-
out designing any follow-up work to remedy them, though. An essay was regarded as an
extension of paragraphs into a larger chunk of discourse. Model texts were presented to
learners as authoritative texts in order to blindly apply their structure to another piece of
writing. Seen from this perspective, writing was considered as simply arranging sen-
tences and paragraphs following a specific layout. Similarly, Badger & White (2000)
present this approach as being concerned with knowledge of the structure of language,
Raimes (1983a, 1991; cited in Grabe & Kaplan, 1996) stressed that emphasis on
organisation and usage was considered as crucial for L2 students in order to develop
writing ability. The product pedagogy was based on Byrne’s (1986) PPP model. Ac-
cording to this model, a writing lesson is best developed through three stages:
aim of this phase is to develop mastery of the generic structures and the or-
on accuracy.
• Production. During this phase, the learners try to produce texts freely in or-
Nevertheless, Skehan (1996) contends that the theory for a PPP approach has
been discredited. The belief that a systematic focus on a particular form leads to learn-
ing and automatisation, that is, students will learn what is taught in the order in which
they are exposed to it no longer carries much value in linguistics or psychology. Break-
ing subject matter down and sequencing it in a series does not guarantee mastery. Spe-
cifically, Ellis (1994; cited in Nunan, 2004) outlines, that in the case of second language
acquisition, learners seldom acquire one item perfectly one at a time, therefore, there
arises the need to readdress the various items that have been taught before.
The linearity in text production, which entailed adding sentences in a sequence, as well
as, the concern with form and predetermined patterns of the product-approach invoked
dissatisfaction from various theorists in the early 1980s (Taylor, 1981; Zamel, 1982;
Raimes, 1983b) who supported the view that writing is not the cut-out plan that was be-
53
lieved to be the prevalent model until then. Rather, it was a circular, generative process
to discover and convey meaning. Seen in this light, the form is the means to depict ideas
and content rather than the dominant preoccupation of the writer. So, the text is a prod-
uct whose organisation and final presentation is determined by its content and purpose,
constituting the origin of the process approach. Speaking about the written product,
Steele (2005) argues that the process approach does not avert all interest from the prod-
uct. On the contrary, it aims at the best final product possible, the differentiation being
that the outcome of writing is not preconceived. Taking this stance a step further, Hedge
(1994) claims that process writing takes equal consideration of both the written form
and the writers concentrating on their level and needs for writing.
came as a “reaction to earlier” (Grabe & Kaplan, 1996: 86) instruction, as it freed tui-
tion from the prevailing model consisting of three or five paragraphs and the unques-
tionable uniformity to the ordering of the text. Furthermore, it questioned the exagger-
ated emphasis on grammar and the belief that each student should work individually,
the only contact being the teacher providing summative feedback, which requires the
teacher to provide comments at the end of writing, only after the texts have been pro-
that the latter according to Campell (1990) abandons the tenet that writing is a separate
skill in itself. In the process-oriented class, writing is integrated with the other skills es-
pecially reading as the class works with authentic or specially written texts in an attempt
to analyse them and embed their features in their writing. The process writing approach
has been recommended to all writing milieux from kindergarten to academic writing.
Other linguists instead of the “process approach” used the term “writer-based”
(Hyland 2002a: 22) approach, while others (Edelsky and Smith, 1989; Gomez et al.,
54
1996) named it ‘free writing’. Of primary interest is the writer, the reader and the nego-
tiation of meaning between them. As can be seen, the process theory was influenced by
the Communicative Approach to language teaching. Although the process approach had
been prevailing in L1 writing since 1970, it was Zamel (1976) who first introduced
process writing to the ESL/EFL context with her article “Teaching Composition in the
ESL Classroom: What can we learn from the research in the teaching of English?”. Af-
ter its introduction to L2 writing, the process approach has been championed as the ideal
pedagogy for teaching children and non-native speakers of English to write (Murray,
Another key factor that promoted the development of the process approach was
the shift of interest to the writing process. Researchers wanted to know how good writ-
ers differed from weak writers with the aim of designing a model that can help students
improve their writing ability. So, theorists focused their attention on how students gen-
erate ideas, plan their text, revise and rewrite it to produce the emergent text. Matsuda
(2003) influenced by Susser (1994) points out that the two essential traits of the process
paradigm are student awareness of the writing procedure and intervention by the teacher
and peers, and regards the process method as the most successful pedagogical shift in
Specifically, Faigley (1986) identified two groups in the process pedagogy: the
expressivists (Elbow, 1973; Berlin, 1988) who viewed writing as a creative art and the
cognitivists (Flower, 1985, 1989; Spack, 1984; Zamel, 1983; Raimes, 1987) who re-
garded writing as a problem-solving activity. Moreover, Faigley (1986) added the social
Later other linguists (Hedge, 1988; Byrne, 1988; White & Arndt, 1991, Grabe
& Kaplan, 1996; Trimmer, 1998) elaborated more on the approach keeping its creative
55
thinking aspect but also embedding other vital elements such as purpose and audience,
context and the organisational pattern of the text type. In other words, they incorporated
the interactive, structural and social angles in writing. Another advocate of the social
perspective of the process method is Smith (2001) who regards this approach as sociali-
sation rather than mere cognition. This socialisation is realised through the active rela-
tionship of the learners with background knowledge and experience, and the collabora-
Hence, the process approach started as a cognitive one but soon it encompassed
the social perspective, by focusing on audience, which is a vital social aspect. Apart
from the cognitive and social, the writing-as-a-process approach also focuses on linguis-
tic skills in the form of planning, drafting and text organisation, as well as, employing
specific language to signal and arrange opinion (White & Arndt, 1991).
When the social element became salient in the process pedagogy some theorists
tried to use different terminology. Trimbur (1994: 109) first coined the term “post-
process” era in an effort to embrace the “social turn” (ibid: 109) in teaching writing.
Trimbur even questioned the role of the teacher as a facilitator as expressed in the proc-
ess paradigm claiming that, since it is the teacher who finally judges the students’ texts,
he/she keeps the old role of the omnipotent evaluator. Much as the teacher’s role was
structor assists students with generating ideas, organising and revising their texts.
He/She tries to teach them strategies rather than simply be the recipient of their final
product. The fact that he/she assesses the learners’ writings does not undervalue his/her
role as an assistant, because the pupils themselves need this evaluation of their texts to
monitor their success. Defending the process method, Schilb (1999) posits that adding
the social component to teaching writing does not necessarily imply banning the term
56
with a view to replacing it with a new one. Moreover, McComiskey (2000; cited in Ma-
tsuda, 2003: 73) tries to present “post-process” as an extension of the process method-
ology rather than its rejection. Referring to this debate, Atkinson (2003: 10, 11 and per-
sonal communication, March 06, 2006), clarifies that by using the “post-process” term
he does not mean a paradigm shift, but he supports the tenet of keeping the process
method and expanding it with social and cultural aspects. He even admits that were he
the process method, namely pre-writing, drafting, revising and feedback tasks. Another
eminent linguist on second language writing, Matsuda (2003: 65, 78) argues that the
notion “post-process” must not be considered as a new approach but as the continuation
of the process pedagogy and the “recognition of the multiplicity of L2 writing theories
and pedagogies”. Finally, Casanave (2003) also supports the expansion of the process
pedagogy to include sociopolitical issues, since people from different nationalities learn
merce and scientific publication. In this regard, the sociocultural background of diverse
L2 writers is equally important with their linguistic performance and the cognitive proc-
esses they go through when preparing a piece of writing. Nevertheless, she is unwilling
Much as the process paradigm was presented as the ideal approach to teach stu-
dents how to write well, it also encountered a lot of criticism. Reid (1984a, b) claims
that it neglected individual differences, and variations in writing tasks and situations.
students and took no consideration of the cultural element. Horowitz (1986) added that
sion. Hyland (2002a) supported Horowitz’s tenet and complemented that the process
monolithic and formulaic, it was argued that process writing challenged the previous
“reductionist and mechanistic models” (Lockhart & Ng, 1995: 606). So, rather than a
universal formula, the process writing approach caters for different levels in language
and cognition. O’Brien (1999) recommends different application of the method to fit the
various ages and levels: beginners, intermediate and advanced. Arguing in favour of the
process model, White & Arndt (1991) concentrate on the situation and context. More-
over, the sociocultural aspect is not downgraded. Many theorists (Raimes, 1983b;
Byrne, 1988; White & Arndt, 1991) have argued that the social issue is substantial
through the awareness of audience, the attempt to follow a purpose and the collabora-
from the writing product, the social context and the content about the subject. Grabe &
Kaplan (1996) also highlight the social perspective by stressing that process writing is a
contextualised activity. Maybe the cultural component was underemphasised in the be-
ginning but more recent researches (Holliday, 1994; Pennington et al., 1996; Ham-
mouda, 2005) filled this gap trying to explain the influence of the cultural background
of the students on their acceptance of the process approach and suggested slight altera-
tions of the model to fit the cultural differences and expectations of the learners.
The last important approach to teaching writing is the genre approach. According to
Hyland (2002a: 18), genres are established ways of using language with each discourse
type exhibiting specific recurrent characteristics, genres, being thus “abstract, socially
recognised ways of using language”. Every text follows the conventions of a recognis-
58
able genre, and in this sense it is a major element of the paradigm, which also focuses
on the reader and presupposes that the content and the form of a written product should
match a social purpose. Writers undertake special roles determined by social contexts.
Each successful text must take into consideration the writer’s knowledge of its context
and the readers who are included in that context. “Writing is neither simply words on
page nor an activity of solitary individuals. Rather it is always a social practice, embed-
ded in the cultural and institutional contexts in which it is produced and the particular
Different definitions of the term genre have been coined by various theorists.
Three schools within the genre pedagogy are distinguished by Hyland (2002b: 114):
dard strategy, embodied in a typical form of discourse, that has evolved for
1998: 137).
on the significance of the social purpose of genres and the rhetorical struc-
3. The third orientation is the ESP approach which regards genre as a group of
bers have common communicative goals. The most eminent adherents of this
third ramification are Swales (1990, 1993), Johns (1997) and Master (2000).
Speaking about discourse community, Grabe & Kaplan (1996) contend that
the new element in the social issue of the genre pedagogy is that the social
All the above schools of the genre approach agree on the social component of
genre, in the perspective that written language is socially situated. To express it differ-
ently, genres are diverse ways that groups of writers use to smooth out the communica-
tion between readers and writers about different kinds of texts. The social element is
very important, and, therefore, language is seen as a means used by people in an agreed
way to get things done. The language form is also deemed very important in the genre-
based approach, because, it is through the generic organisation of a text, that the stu-
dents try to realise meaning and communicate with other people. Important as this no-
tion of the social situatedness of the writing may be, the present writer believes that the
genre theory is deficient in ignoring the cognitive struggle of the individual writers to
emphasis on the written product. The difference of the two pedagogies is that in product
there is guided imitation, whereas, in genre there is conscious discovery and application
of rules of the written product, which varies according to the social context, where it is
presented. Much as the genre adherents (Cope and Kalantzis, 1993; Coe, 1994) stressed
its efficacy, Grabe & Kaplan (1996) remark that a careful examination of the stances of
the proponents of the genre approach shows that they do not reject the process writing
pedagogy but propose that it is valid in the social context which defines the goal of writ-
ing. Taking this notion a step further, they argue that the writing process is vital in writ-
ing research and instruction, but the linguistic form, as is reflected in genre, must also
be incorporated.
The genre paradigm evoked a lot of criticism one of which was its “narrow fo-
cus on language and text” (Kamler, 1995: 9). The positive part of the genre approach is
that writing takes place in a social situation serving a particular purpose and learning is
60
achieved through conscious analysis and synthesis. Its negative point is that it down-
plays the cognitive process the learners go through in order to create a text. Rather it
regards learners as passive. Even though Hyland (2003a) argues that genres are not
fixed and monolithic, the present writer’s opinion is that they require uniformity, since
a language. Some theorists (Dixon, 1987; Raimes, 1991; cited in Hyland, 2003a) cor-
roborate that genres may become moulds which confine students’ creativity. Luke
(1996) also levels critique at the genre pedagogy by pointing out that its emphasis on
the properties of texts does not necessarily lead to critical reproduction of similar texts
but may result in uncritical, prescriptive presentation of pieces of writing. Taking this
criticism a step further, Freedman & Medway (1994: 46) caution against “a recipe the-
ory of genre”, which will provide students with ‘how-to-do’ lists, while Harbord (2005:
5) claims that the genre approach “is inherently prone to prescription” and as such runs
tions two more limitations of the genre pedagogy, which are excess emphasis on written
products and downgrading of the skills needed in text production. Finally, O’Brien
(2004) admits that the genre pedagogy does not attempt to build models of the writing
process and seems to be greatly preoccupied with the product. She gives credit, though,
Speaking about the process and genre pedagogies in L2 literature, Hyland (2003a)
claims that the process theory, having borrowed the notions of cognitive psychology
and L1 pedagogy, has been influential in teaching writing. It is alleged that the great
contribution of the process approach is that it has emphasised the individuality of the
writers and the importance of the process itself. However, cognition and writing proce-
61
dures are not enough to describe writing. A sense of purpose of situation, the social set-
ting and the appropriate linguistic resources are also needed. In this regard, the genre
approach complemented the process movement by putting greater emphasis on the role
of communication (Tribble, 1996). Much as the social context, the readership, the goal
and the exploration of the characteristics of the texts are substantial elements of writing,
they had already been encompassed in the process literature by Raimes (1983b), Byrne
(1988) and White & Arndt (1991), since the process approach gradually developed to
become not just a single method but an inclusive one which incorporates many orienta-
tions. In this vein, it seems that the elements of establishing the social context of a piece
of writing and experimenting with the organisation of different text types have been in-
formed by the genre approach. Nevertheless, these two vital elements have been fully
assimilated in the process writing philosophy and, what is more, they have been em-
• First generate ideas on a certain topic and then decide on the appropriate genre
This evolution is an answer to the opponents of the process approach who tried
1993) argued that process writing subtracted the power of teachers rendering them by-
standers. In no other pedagogy, though, is the role of teachers more crucial than in the
62
process one where the teachers are expected to help students to explore the recognised
ways of text organisation, generate ideas, plan their draft according to purpose, audience
and social setting and finally revise their writing. Furthermore, teachers promote their
It is obvious that each approach has its strengths and limitations rendering, thus
difficult the selection and application of one of them. Different linguists give various
advice on the selection of a viable approach to fit most learning contexts. Silva (1990)
gives some very good guidelines on what components instructors need to take into con-
sideration when evaluating pedagogies to the teaching of ESL writing. Teachers have to
consider what is involved in L2 writing, how students can be assisted to produce mean-
ingful texts, and, at the same time, acquire transferable writing habits. The essential re-
quirements are:
2. the process of writing (i.e. what is entailed, while learners are striving to com-
6. effective research.
conform to some essential elements in order to be complete. It must encompass the rela-
tionships among the aforementionted basic dimensions in writing: the writer, the topic,
the reader, the purpose, the text and the context. Moreover, Grabe & Kaplan (1996) ad-
vise practitioners to abandon dichotomies and seek the good points of each approach
63
with a view to formulating a comprehensive theory of teaching writing, which will en-
compass:
1. The nature of coherent discourse which is proper to the discourse type and the
2. The set of processes which are followed to generate the written text.
3. The social requirements that affect the writing and the writer.
It seems sensible to admit that a single method to teaching writing cannot be de-
signed to fit all students in all learning situations. There is no single theory on which all
linguists and teachers can agree but the process-theory appears to integrate these vital
components fulfilling the requirements for a complete pedagogy. The present researcher
believes that, while genre and product pedagogies exhibit some vital components of
writing, the process-oriented paradigm encompasses all of them. Rather than ignoring
the other approaches, process writing assimilates some of their properties in an effort to
exploit them in a more productive way, maximising therefore the students’gains. It can-
not be claimed that it is perfect or a panacea but it is the only method which attempts to
include all the necessary presuppositions of good writing. Much as the process method
seems promising to promote the learners’ ability to confront different kinds of written
this chapter in an effort to prove the necessity to focus on the teaching of writing. The
most influential cognitive models of the process of writing were discussed and a revised
one was proposed with a view to producing a comprehensive framework which exem-
plifies all the elements that influence writing. The key tenets of the Communicative Ap-
64
proach with its impact on language teaching and on shaping the principles for teaching
writing were shown in order to highlight the prevailing methodological trends and prac-
tices which promote writing. The importance of integrating writing with the other skills
in the classroom was outlined so as to replicate real-life conditions. The last part of the
chapter compared and contrasted the strengths and weaknesses of the main approaches
to teaching writing with the aim of selecting the most appropriate, which in the present
researcher’s view is the process approach. This paradigm is in accordance with the cur-
rent pedagogical and methodological tendencies and practices as far as teaching writing
is concerned. It is the ambition of this thesis that students will profit substantially from
the adoption of this pedagogy and will be empowered to experiment and familiarise
themselves with the process of producing various texts and acquire enabling skills
Chapter three will describe the philosophy and stages of process writing, explore
its appropriacy for young learners through investigating the theories about how they
think, learn and write in L1 and L2, and discuss how the knowledge of L1 influences
Chapter 3
3.1 Introduction
Chapter three will present the underlying assumptions and the phases of the process
writing approach. Since the present thesis explores the appropriateness of the process
pedagogy for primary school learners, it is necessary to refer to the conceptual devel-
opment and the language learning methods, which are suitable for students of this age.
Hence, theories of how children think, learn, and write both in L1 and L2 will be dis-
cussed and the efficacy of the process paradigm for this level will be examined. The
children’s writing development will be viewed from a socio-cultural, generative and de-
velopmental aspect.
situations about different stages of the process pedagogy will be presented with the aim
of clarifying the lack of equivalent research in the Greek primary school context, which
ing writing (section 2.6.5), an effort will be made in this part to fully describe its tenets,
The “process-focused” (White & Arndt, 1991) approach to writing has a goal to
equip writers with skills in order to shape their ideas into a coherent message. This
method emphasises the process, not the product, giving the students the opportunity to
66
improve their writing. The process-approach developed through research (Zamel, 1983;
Byrne, 1988; Hedge, 1988) into the procedures that skilled writers appear to follow so
as to produce a successful piece of written work. The research indicated that good writ-
ers start with a plan in their heads, organise what they want to write down, and bear in
mind who they are addressing. Then, they draft parts of their writing, review and finally
edit their work. In this sense, able writers exhibit a purpose, fend for their readers and
Emig (1971) identified five stages of the composing procedure in the process approach:
(a) prewriting (being motivated to write, getting ideas together, outlining and rehears-
ing, making notes), (b) drafting (writing in progress individually or collaboratively), (c)
revision (replanning, adjusting according to readers and redrafting), (d) editing (getting
ready for publishing the written text), and (e) publication (sharing the product with the
public).
Later various linguists (Hedge, 1988; White & Arndt, 1991; Pinheiro, 1996;
Tribble, 1996; Young, 1998; Hyland, 2003b; Steele, 2005) presented different models
of the stages of the writing process. Steele (2005) argued that the process pedagogy
lends itself to a great array of classroom activities and can have any number of stages,
even though teachers usually establish a typical ordering of phases. Moreover, Tribble
(1996: 39) contended that the entire process does not constitute a fixed sequence but a
“dynamic and unpredictable process” whereby the writers can move backwards and
forwards at any time while preparing their piece of writing. Finally, Hyland (2003b), in
an attempt to complement the model, added two more stages: one in the beginning and
the other in the end. The former is selection of topic by the teacher or in cooperation
with the students, and the latter is follow-up tasks, which address weaknesses.
67
Pinheiro (1996: 124) exemplified the steps of the approach. The first stage, that
is the preparation stage called prewriting or prework is crucial, because it leads up to the
writing activity. It includes prewriting tasks, which, according to Scott & Ytreberg
(1990), are very useful because they help with the production of proper language and
stimulate relevant ideas. This phase motivates students to write and provides them with
the feeling that, whenever they are supposed to write, they will have in mind the ideas
and lexes they need. This part of the lesson must include dynamic and challenging tasks
that bring in new vocabulary as well as help the pupils develop views about a specific
topic.
(Hedge, 1988) which is a face-to-face conversation between the teacher and the pupils.
This can happen in the prewriting stage to assist the students to generate ideas or while
writing when the teacher can offer support with the language and the organisation of
ideas. Conferencing has the advantage of enabling the teacher to pay attention to each
student individually and as a result give better advice. In this way, learners realise that
writing is something that can be planned and ameliorated and, at the same time, discuss
what they are writing and analyse the process. Recommending variety in prior activities,
Byrne (1988) suggested the use of visual materials, conversation, reading, or listening to
a text in order to identify the characteristics of its discourse type. Mackbeth (2010)
claims that this exploitation of various text types involves students in identifying their
organisation and use rather than controls and limits student writing as was the case with
with different text types, is that samples of a genre may present various patterns in
terms of structure, style, content and eventual audience. Each discourse mode like In-
68
struction, Description and Short stories to mention but a few, covers a range of different
kinds of texts, which may also exhibit their own features. This leads to the conclusion,
that a lot of effort needs to be made in classroom in order to analyse the typical features
of various genres. Integration of the four skills is also achieved in this way.
White & Arndt (1991: 11) suggested another stage as an introduction to a writ-
ing course, called glimpsing the process. This stage intends to give students an insight
into what they actually do when they write. This phase involves “composing aloud”,
that is, verbalising thought while students are writing. This procedure assists learners to
identify the thinking used while writing and provides important implications about the
construction of coherence of the text. Pupils are audiotaped and at the end of the session
they listen to the cassette trying to analyse their reaction. A questionnaire may be given
to them activating their awareness of the steps followed in their effort to transcribe
After the theme is brainstormed through the above mentioned preliminary work,
conducted usually in groups or pairs, the writers attempt to produce the first draft. Af-
terwards, they try to evaluate this piece of writing, through revising it with the aim of
one’s own work is not easy, since writers tend to read what they intend to be there, it is
good to give students a checklist and a list of symbols for error correction in order to
judge their text. Students usually have the impression that rectifying a text means look-
ing for errors of spelling, grammatical structure, word order, and punctuation. While
this is very important, the significance of the coherence of the writing at the drafting
stage must also be insisted on. Various authors (Beach, 1976; Sommers, 1978; Perl,
1979; Bridwell, 1980; Flower & Hayes 1981; Faigley & Witte, 1984; Anson, 1989), re-
searching how native English writers revise their drafts, found out that inexperienced
69
writers insist on the lexical level and apply rules of style and usage even if they are not
suitable. Advanced writers, on the other hand, manage to revise at multiple levels - lexi-
cal, phrasal, sentential, appropriateness, etc. - and as a result shape the argument to
match the purpose of writing. If L1 writers face these problems while revising, it is un-
avoidable that L2 writers encounter greater constraints. In this respect, students need
Learners can also benefit from peer correction by exchanging their drafts with
their fellow students. After that, the writers read their own corrections and their peers’
comments and make the necessary modifications, producing, thus, the second draft.
Here they must be reminded that, since there is not a unique best way of arranging in-
formation, they may change the organisation to add new ideas which may come up.
Then the teacher reads the students’ drafts and provides oral or written feedback. When
evaluating a piece of writing, teachers can apply the following criteria (Hedge, 1988):
1. The content in the sense of determining if the text serves its purpose.
It is needless to say that instructors do not correct all the mistaken forms in a written
Raimes (1983a) suggested that teachers should examine content and errors in
structure in the beginning and leave other linguistic features after the ideas have been
fully elaborated. A useful strategy for teachers providing feedback to student writing is
70
to underline the grammar errors without providing the correct forms, leaving thus the
initiative to pupils to rectify their deficiencies (Fathman & Walley, 1990). Hence, the
students’ creativity is developed and corrected forms are acquired by learners and ap-
plied in future writings. So, it is essential to make the norm that a lot of writing and cor-
rection is done in the classroom. In this way, the teacher can talk to individual students,
while others are doing other tasks and at the same time monitor the learners’ perform-
ance in progress.
O’ Brien (1999) alleged that this intervention by the teacher during the writing
the final text. Speaking about the same issue, Leki (1990) contended that teacher re-
sponse to student writing can take two forms: oral, in conferencing, and written. Written
treatment of student writing may be distinguished into middle and final or summative,
the former referring to students’ drafts while the latter seeking to improve the final
product. It is also pointed out that, as the target of writing teachers is to teach writing,
they are forced away from the content of a written text to the way this content is pro-
duced. Byrne (1988: 29) redefined the role of teachers when reading students’ drafts,
advising instructors to surrender the role of “judges” and always bear in mind that what
learners write are attempts, however inefficient, to communicate. There is a great ten-
dency on behalf of the teachers to focus on what is wrong, just because it is there for
them to read repeatedly. But if instructors intend to be really readers and facilitators
rather than omniscient judges, they should concentrate more not on what the pupils have
failed to do but rather on what they have accomplished. They owe it to their students to
correct their written texts with a view to ameliorating their output, but it would be de-
moralising to annihilate their motivation through excessive correction. Cohen & Caval-
71
canti (1990) proposed striking a balance between criticism and praise in feedback, espe-
cially for weaker students who are eager to see that they have done something right.
Finally, the pupils guided by the teacher’s and peers’ aid, rewrite their drafts
forming the final product, which is also evaluated by peers and the teacher. Through the
above procedure, writing teachers involve their students in the process of writing by
emphasising that drafting and redrafting, reading and rereading not only leads to a good
piece of writing but is also a proof of the students' creativity (Raimes, 1985). Besides
enhancing learner creativity, process writing influentially boosts the students’ compe-
drafting, revising, student-writers’ role and the role of instructional materials. This
multi-itemed questionnaire traced the writing strategic behaviour of students and found
out that the most competent student-writers follow process writing in that they tend to
both content and form, editing and in general all the aspects that the process paradigm
After describing the stages of the process approach, an effort will be made in the present
section to establish its theoretical foundation. The theoretical basis of the process ap-
which pointed out that children can improve their performance through the collaborative
Within the process writing framework, this support is provided by the teacher in helping
students to trace the purpose, the audience, the topical content, the layout of similar
72
texts exhibiting the required genre properties, the generation of ideas and intervention in
Furthermore, the process approach helps the students to develop their creativity.
Wingard (1981: 167, 168) uses this word in a double function. First of all, it is the crea-
tive self-expression of the students while writing, with creativity implying emphasis on
meaning without ignoring the form. The other sense of “creativity” is the one which is
also employed by the eminent theorist Chomsky (1975) as expressed in his theory of
Language Acquisition Device (LAD), in which he supported the view that all children,
while learning and using their mother tongue, can formulate sentences they had never
had the opportunity to read or hear before. Wingard (1981) claims that this notion of
creativity is also applicable to ESL/EFL settings. Seen from this perspective, “creativ-
of learning, which in the case of writing is realised through habitual imitation of certain
patterns. By generating ideas, organising their content, drafting, revising and reorganis-
ing their text, the learners exhibit a unique capacity of creating meaning and form,
which other pedagogies to teaching writing cannot account for. In this light, an appro-
priate schematic model for the process approach could take the form as shown in Figure
6 (page 73).
process writing approach. It indicates that writing is cyclical rather than linear and high-
lights the interactions between the subcomponents of writing. The writer takes into con-
sideration the task requirements encompassing the target reader, the purpose of writing,
the type of the text, the topic requirements and the social situation within which the
writing is formulated. The teacher is also related to all these elements in an attempt to
73
help the student to fully understand and apply the task requirements. Besides, the task
requirements affect the text, as they specify its form and content.
Social
Situation
+
Purpose
+
Audience
+
Gentre
+
Topic
Text
Planning involves activating the necessary information which leads to generating ap-
propriate ideas and vocabulary and presenting the first draft. Responding to this draft
results in revising and redrafting until the final product is edited. This circular process
interacts with the text, because the process leads to the formulation of the text and the
text feeds the process. Both the teacher and the writer participate in the writing process
them with all the essential elements embedded in writing and at the same time involves
them in the writing process actively. This involvement is very crucial because students
at this age are evolving both their cognition and language skills, and, therefore, are in
need to both take part in and assimilate the learning process, as well as improve their
linguistic resources. They get used to participating actively in creating a piece of writ-
ing, which is crucial, as they are not yet familiar with the requirements and steps en-
More specifically, they begin to realise that the purpose and audience of writing
are important components. They learn to read the rubrics of a written task carefully, so
as to follow the topic specifications and define the social environment whereby writing
is embedded. They begin to experiment with different genre conventions. They get in-
volved in the cyclical writing process, during which they are given practice in the for-
mulation of ideas and employment of appropriate language, and become aware of the
significance or revising, redrafting and collaboration in the whole procedure. This coop-
eration with the teacher and their partners during writing is of utmost importance, due to
75
the fact that it is a new practice for them. Finally, the entire process captures their inter-
est and ensures their concentration, whose span is limited at this age (Gude & Cliff,
2003)
The proposed model in Figure 6 is also in accordance with the proposed sche-
2.2.2). More specifically, Figure 4 indicates the linguistic, social, organisational and
cognitive variables incorporated in writing in theory, while Figure 6 displays what actu-
The teaching environment where the process approach is employed gives learn-
ers two vital scaffolds: (a) time to experiment with their ideas and (b) feedback on what
they produce. Shuying (2002) advises teachers to be ready to deal with the unexpected
in class. Even though the process-model has clearly defined steps, all students are not
the same and sometimes an unpredictable situation may arise, specifically with young
learners who are not experienced, yet. The teachers must be prepared to readjust the
necessary vocabulary, stress the purpose of writing, monitor coherence and semantic
conformity, activate student initiative and logical thinking and maintain learners’ inter-
est.
Finally, Steele (2005) contends that the process approach is similar to task-based
learning, and Raimes (1991) points out that there are parallels between the process writ-
This implies that students are given considerable freedom to experiment with ideas and
forms through purposeful activities in order to obtain transferable techniques which will
3.3 How young learners think, learn and write in L1 and L2: Appro-
priacy of the process approach
As the aim of this thesis is to establish the appropriacy of process writing for the stu-
dents in the English language classroom at the sixth grade of the Greek primary school,
an attempt will be made in this section to present the theories of child development and
learning in order to investigate the efficacy of the process approach to promote the
Unlike older learners, young children are still developing cognitively, socially,
and physically and deserve teaching methods that are proper to their needs. The general
aims of early foreign language learning should appear attractive to children, avoiding
Philips (1993) claims that the younger the children are, the more holistic learners
they will be. They react to language according to what it does or what they can achieve
with it, rather than responding to it as an abstract system. This has both advantages and
limitations: on the one hand, they respond to the meaning underlying the language,
without emphasising on individual words or sentences, and, on the other, they do not
make the analytical links that older students are able to accomplish. Younger learners
have the privilege of being great mimics, are unselfconscious, not feeling uncomfortable
about attempting to use the language even when their competence is limited, and are
usually positively predisposed to the activities the teacher has designed for them.
Thus, when planning courses and lessons, teachers should take into considera-
tion the theories of child development and learning, the ways in which children learn a
language and studies of the kinds of classroom conditions which promote language
learning and teaching writing in particular, in both L1 and L2 settings, as will be dis-
Children already possess certain capacities and attitudes when they come to class. Al-
though young learners at the age of twelve have begun to develop mental maturity and
metalinguistic awareness, they still have far to go in these areas, as well as in the do-
main of world knowledge in order to obtain the levels of adolescents. Their cognitive
level is not very sophisticated yet, since they are developmentally immature, not yet
ready to fully assimilate abstract notions (Dewey, 1916, 1956; cited in Smith, 2001).
Another eminent theorist Piaget (1971; cited in Wood, 1998: 37, 39) emphasises the
ment. He advocates that until the age of eleven children are capable of forming concrete
thoughts and only after this age can they start to think more abstractly. Therefore, they
should start with concrete experience which will act as background expertise from
which they will develop less concrete concepts. This is especially true for the students
under consideration in the present thesis, since being twelve years old, they are –
O’Brien (1999) outlines that in teaching writing to young learners we must al-
ways bear in mind that not all text types are suitable for all levels of students. Most
teachers evaluate difficulty only as far as grammar and vocabulary are concerned. But it
would be fairer for the developing pupils to think of difficulty in terms of discourse lay-
and narratives rather than present the discourse organisation of argumentative essays. It
is generally accepted that it is less difficult to describe only one thing than it is to com-
pare and contrast two or more things. Writing about well-known things, like describing
their best friend or giving information about themselves in a letter or an e-mail to a pen-
78
pal, is causing less anxiety to young learners than writing generally about topics they do
not fully know yet, such as “the advantages and disadvantages of living in a city”
(O’Brien, 1999, Vol. 1, Un.2: 16). Moreover, with regard to writing, Leki (1990) sug-
gests aiming primarily at assisting pupils to grow intellectually as they struggle to for-
mulate their ideas. Special attention must be paid to the linguistic and cognitive level of
young learners especially when applying feedback to their drafts. Thus, it is advisable to
follow the tenet supported by most researchers (Perl, 1979; Raimes, 1983a) which rec-
ommends focus on content in early drafts leaving emphasis on accuracy for later drafts,
The way young learners think and learn is closely related to the concept of human intel-
ligence. Gardner (1983) argued against the traditional view of intelligence as exhibiting
a unified character and rejected the traditional IQ intelligence test (1985) called the
Stanford-Binet, which measured only logic and language corroborating that intelligence
is an inborn ability that cannot be improved. Instead, Gardner (1983) claims that the
brain possesses other equally important types of intelligence apart from reasoning and
language. All people exhibit these intelligences in different degrees and relationships.
Rather than being unchanged, he alleges that all types can be upgraded through proper
practice. The implication of this theory on teaching is that various learners display di-
guistic Intelligence” is the ability to use language creatively focusing on meaning rather
than form. “Visual or spatial” is the capacity to form mental models of the world and
79
recreate visual experience in the mind’s eye. To fully understand and process informa-
tion students need to “see” first. “Bodily-kinaesthetic intelligence” helps learners with a
“Interpersonal” ability evolves through the interaction with other people, while the “In-
trapersonal” one assists someone to manage his/her feelings and apply his/her talents.
“Musical intelligence” is associated with both physical potential in music and mathe-
tionally and is linked with abstract reasoning. As a result, language teaching is not con-
fined to linguistics, but it also incorporates music and rhythm, activity of the body, in-
A classroom context which takes into account all “frames of mind” gives more
opportunities to students to improve their capacities and acquire new skills than those in
a traditional classroom. Such empowered pupils will finally become better second lan-
guage users as all their special traits are being exploited. So, teachers have the onus to
design multisensory activities, boosting thus their students’ L2 competence and contrib-
uting to their overall cognitive amelioration. In writing applied to young learners, par-
mind maps and produce imaginative storywriting, while rehearsed and written roleplays
by asking students to listen to music connected to a topic and then ask them to write
about it. Pair and group work boosts “interpersonal intelligence” and eventually “in-
80
trapersonal ability” is established through individual student work and personal journal
keeping.
Wood (1998) reports that both Vygotsky and Bruner are exponents of the view that
children’s language and learning improvement takes place through the process of social
interaction. Through this cooperation, children are assisted to move from their egocen-
tric self to a more sociocentric persona. According to Bruner (1975, 1978), learners
need “scaffolding”, that is help by the teacher and more capable peers in order to per-
form better. A very important factor in encouraging students to collaborate with others
rather than work individually is by stressing the importance of group work. The benefits
of pair and group work must be justified to young learners in order to engage them ac-
Thus, from the Vygotskean perspective, students need extensive practice and
some guidance in writing in order to internalise writing purposes and tasks. This theory
stresses the role of teachers and peers and the need to set purposeful activities. More-
over, writers must practise a variety of writing activities and work out different genres
and rhetorical structures with the cooperation of their peers and teachers. Another viable
technique to assist students when writing is through reading and commenting on their
drafts. O’Brien (1999) suggests advising learners to write using every other line. In this
way, there is plenty of space for the necessary intervention by them, their peers and the
teacher. Teacher and peer feedback on students’ drafts helps learners realise that both
the teacher and fellow students act as collaborators rather than judges.
Grabe & Kaplan (1996) advise teachers to offer writing scaffolding by employ-
ing the process approach developing, in this way, the students’ metalinguistic lexes and
skills to empower them to talk about their writing, and the difficulties they encounter in
81
searching for words and organising their ideas. “Scaffolding” also implies helping stu-
ideas in written form. During prewriting the pupils discuss, brainstorm or create mind-
maps where useful vocabulary may be mentioned, which can be employed for meaning-
ful writing activities. For example, the students can create sentences using these words
and keep them in a personal word bank to be called upon when deemed necessary.
It is, therefore, significant that work in the classroom is constructed so that every
child can interact with other students and the teacher when writing.
is that children have to be active and constructive in order to develop knowledge and
tion. Besides, Brewster et al. (1991) believe that teaching means facilitating discovery,
not just presenting knowledge. This discovery is a key element of the process pedagogy
and allows full rein to the enormous potential with which, to varying degrees, children
ing, they need to encounter challenges. A very useful way of challenging students is by
exposing them to different kinds of texts, to analyse their characteristics and understand
that different discourse patterns will allow them to convey information and interact with
others. This knowledge will help them to choose the linguistic medium which is suitable
to the purpose and content of the writing task. Moreover, Kamperelis (1999; cited in Lu,
2000) maintains that through exploration and experimentation, children refine their old
forms of writing by adding more sensitive awareness of the audience, pursuing their
82
purpose more diligently, presenting longer, more complex and more coherent texts at
3.3.5 Providing children with input within the Zone of Proximal Development
(ZPD)
In the context of ZPD (see 3.2.2), one of his main contributions to educational theory,
Vygotsky (1978) raises the importance of imitation not as a mechanical activity but as a
In the classroom reality this has to do with ways in which teachers can intervene
and arrange activities and materials to help push the children along. The implication of
this theory on the teaching of writing, in particular, is the use of the process-focused ap-
proach in order to enable students to become efficient writers. O’Brien (1999) advocates
the use of some guidance in the early stages of L2 writing as learners lack adequate lin-
guistic and cognitive proficiency. One effective method to achieve this is by exposing
students to correct forms that is using a lot of model texts of the same type. As students
proceed in a more advanced level, guidance can take the form of locating and assimilat-
ing the patterns of the model texts. Going a step further, O’Brien (1999) points out that
if teachers give a writing task without some kind of assistance, they are in a situation
Silva (1990) outlines that the teacher can offer valuable input in ZPD by helping
students define the purpose and audience of the writing, develop viable strategies for
starting their text in the form of generating ideas and information, building up relevant
vocabulary, and deciding on organisation and procedure. Then, the students are assisted
erasing, amending and changing the arrangement of ideas, in editing by paying attention
83
to lexes, grammar, sentence formulation and mechanics and finally in presenting their
polished product.
As children grow older they usually exhibit an interest in writing if they are offered the
opportunities to see more competent adults writing and are invited to participate in liter-
acy activities suitable to their proficiency including shopping lists and listening to short
stories (Martens, 1996 and Purcell-Gates, 1996; cited in Lu, 2000). In this perspective,
children begin to realise that both oral and written language are purposeful and mean-
ingful.
learning situations. Wood (1998) argues that instructors should present the learners with
meaningful activities that make sense to them and involve easily recognisable objectives
in that students can easily understand what is requested in each task. Johnson (1982: 24
- 29) calls the purpose of a task “outcome”, regarding it as an essential characteristic for
a motivating activity. Activities with an observable outcome increase the learners’ inter-
In writing, this has to do with offering students exercises exhibiting the “task
environment”. This means that learners are aided to spot the audience and the purpose.
In the case of readership, pupils marshal events and ideas to meet the knowledge and
expectations of the addressees. As far as the purpose is concerned, the students’ aware-
ness is raised of the goal underlying their text enabling them, thus, to connect what they
want to write with how it can be conveyed. Moreover, as the produced text is very sig-
Children need to feel secure in the environment where they learn (Williams, 1998).
Their knowledge, interests and emotions are of primary importance and must be pro-
moted and built on. Motivation is also a key issue in a supportive learning context.
Grabe & Kaplan (1996) propose certain methods to boost motivation, such as writing in
limited time, competitions for the best beginning or end in a piece of writing, defining
good and poor organisation and setting rewards for the best written product.
the learners are taught that all people make mistakes, because that is how they learn.
Translated into the classroom setting, this attitude calls for providing a positive, enjoy-
able atmosphere whereby students can work. In teaching writing, this means that teach-
ers must find ways to raise the learners’ awareness of their errors and concentrate on the
points about which the pupils are more uncertain rather than deal with all the mistaken
back to students at beginning levels who are striving to produce a written text. Frank
(1979; cited in Grabe & Kaplan, 1996) gives useful directives to teachers of young
2. In the beginning, use anonymous writings from outside the classroom for
criticism. In this way, students will feel more comfortable when their piece
will be discussed.
5. Be specific in your remarks. For example, locate unclear sentences and rec-
In addition, Grabe & Kaplan (1996), offering suggestions for the establishment
of an encouraging milieu while teaching writing, advocate using personal topics and
dealing with more academic ones latter. The tasks chosen must present easy access to
background information, while more complex activities, which further search for and
synthesise information will be left for more advanced levels. Finally, Krashen (1985),
classroom. So practice and guidance are needed in classroom especially for beginners as
the world input is too complex for them. Moreover, speaking on behalf of tuition, he
argues that attending language classes provides a better environment for beginners to
learn the foreign/second language than going to the country of the target language. Nar-
row input must be used in early stages to lower the learners’ anxiety.
Many researchers have emphasised the importance of teaching students how to learn in
order to render them independent. Williams (1991: 206), referring to young learners,
considers “learning how to learn” as a key principle. Wood (1998: 98) claims that, in
the Vygotskean point of view, through instruction, the children gain not only “local ex-
pertise” about given tasks, but they also gradually learn how to structure their learning
and reasoning. Going a step further, Bruner (1988: 265) advises the instilment of “meta-
cognition” on pupils, that is, the development of their ability to reflect on their own
Ellis & Brewster (1991) propose many activities throughout the process-oriented
writing lesson, which focus the students’ attention on how to learn and what to learn.
Such tasks are: an awareness of visual and audio clues that assist students to reach
meaning, predicting, which engages pupils in the process and develops their self-
aspects of learning that may be difficult for them and finally working independently of
the teacher, risk-taking and self-assessing, which will encourage them to take on re-
sponsibility for their own learning. Seen from this angle, it is important that the writing
materials of a syllabus for young learners are designed to support and foster growing
independence.
stages. Therefore, Grabe & Kaplan (1996: 272 - 274) propose the use of “sheltered in-
struction” in the very beginning. It is important to supply young learners with support to
shelter them, while they are struggling to establish basic proficiency in writing. Brain-
storming and discussion activities should take place before writing to assist pupils with
content. Verbal and visual prompts can be given to learners to generate and arrange
ideas so as to become better writers. In no way should this guidance, though, decrease
the students’ sense of ownership of their own writing. Only in this way, will the young
learners become independent while writing and develop the ability to think about the
All the theoretical approaches discussed so far in sections 3.3.1 to 3.3.8 refer both to
mother tongue and second/foreign language learning. There are some theories, neverthe-
less, which apply only to the learning of an L2. The most eminent second language ac-
quisition theorist is Krashen who presented the “Input Hypothesis” (Krashen 1985: 1-
87
4), which is the central part of an overall innatist theory of SL acquisition. Although
Krashen (Krashen & Terrell, 1983) views language as a means for communicating
meaning, he does not undervalue the mastery of structures in stages in order to achieve
the transmission of meaning. This is exemplified in his “Input Hypothesis” which com-
guage for communication. Learning, on the other hand, is the conscious possession and
application of language.
2) The Monitor Hypothesis. This hypothesis shows how acquisition and learning are
system, while the conscious system functions as a monitor to modify and correct the
3) The Natural Order Hypothesis states that we master language rules in a predictable
pattern, some of them being acquired earlier while others later. This hypothesis applies
4) The Input Hypothesis. In this hypothesis, Krashen (1985) asserts that one acquires
dents’ present linguistic level, there will be no opportunities for challenge and risk, both
vital elements for successful learning. If, on the other hand, the input contains forms and
structures just beyond the learner’s level of linguistic competence (what he calls “i+1”,
that is input plus one), then both acquisition and comprehension will occur. Compre-
hension of these superior data is made feasible through the context, extralinguistic in-
formation and knowledge of the world. The “Input Hypothesis” supports Chomsky’s
88
(1975) theory of Language Acquisition Device (LAD), which guarantees the mastery
and production of utterances never heard or read before and extends it to second lan-
guage acquisition. It is worthy noting that individuality in learning such as left versus
right brain abilities and differences in cognitive level or learning style must not be ig-
nored. Nevertheless, there is universal uniformity in the way learners process and pos-
sess language. This gap between the learners’ abilities and the level of input stimulates
the students to develop their language further, while the message remains accessible.
5) The Affective Filter Hypothesis. The “affective filter” is an imaginary barrier pre-
venting learners from acquiring language from the available input. “Affect” refers to
such things as motives, attitudes and emotional states. Research in second language ac-
When the learner is relaxed and motivated, then the filter is “down” and acquisition can
take place. In a research about the influence of the affective filter on various learner
ages, Krashen & Terrell (1983) found out that although older students learn faster dur-
ing the early phases, as they can process comprehensible input better, young learners
outperform them later due to their low affective filter, since they are not so self-
conscious yet, and, as a result, they do not feel embarrassed to express their ideas. An-
other aspect of learning that Krashen emphasises is the role of the materials used in
Following the above mentioned tenets, Tough (1991: 219 - 224) advises instruc-
tors to “support” young learners in the EFL classroom by providing frequent interaction
to individual children.
When applied to the teaching of writing, the above mentioned theories (sections 3.3.1-
3.3.9) call for providing students with assistance where and when it is due. Specifically,
Byrne (1988), referring to young learners, summarises some advice for teaching writing
a. Give the pupils ample chances to apply orally learnt language in writing. In brief,
they will need a great deal of writing activities to consolidate key structures and lexes.
b. Supply tasks that the students are able to do at their own speed. Some pupils may fin-
ish an activity fairly quickly. In this case, it is advisable for teachers to extend the activ-
ity or prepare an extra activity of differentiated difficulty. Slower pupils, on the other
hand, should be offered the time to complete the activity in some form, otherwise, they
c. Collaborate with students. Most of the learners will need the teacher’s help to develop
d. See that the pupils consider writing as a means of communication. This can be easily
achieved by asking the pupils to write to each other, which is a task that the students
e. Encourage them to be creative. At this stage, they have a fair amount of imagination
mind that the students are starting on a programme that will continue for years. It would
be wrong if they were put off at this early age through lack of interest or a sense of fail-
90
ure. Therefore, fun is one of the main elements they must get from a writing pro-
gramme.
learners, as it takes into account their cognitive and linguistic development, engages
them in interaction with the teacher and their fellow students without imposing undue
process with the aim of becoming autonomous learners. Especially, for young learners
at the age of twelve years who are the focus of this thesis, Raimes (1993: 239) recom-
mends process writing as a means for learning how to learn and formulating ideas rather
than simply a medium to exhibit learning or to present well-elaborated ideas. All these
are achieved in an encouraging environment, providing them with some guidance which
they need because of their age and lack of experience without inhibiting or moulding
their imagination, though. In this aspect, Wingard (1981) contends that as the learners
are still quite young, teachers must strike a balance between over explicit guidance or
excess freedom. This balance can be achieved in teaching writing following process
writing as it provides clear stages without, however, numbing the students’ self-
expression
refer to older students, as few researches concerning young learners have been con-
Trying to analyse the interaction of the first language with the second language,
Baker (2000) claims that in the thinking quarters of the brain the two languages feed
91
each other. Children have a predisposition to use language and there are common char-
acteristics between acquiring the mother tongue and learning to use a second/foreign
language. Tough (1991: 222) points out that in the past it seems to have been agreed
that what had been established in learning an L1 was likely to “interfere” negatively
with learning an L2, since languages have such different structures. More recent re-
search, nevertheless, supports the view that where one language is established before
acquiring a second, then strategies developed in learning the first language will “trans-
fer” to the process of learning subsequent languages, providing a positive aid. All the
researches that will be reviewed in the subsequent sections (3.4.1 - 3.4.2), adopted the
Two kinds of studies will be presented below: those focusing on the transference
of writing abilities from mother tongue to the target language (section 3.4.1) and re-
Referring to writing, Kroll (1990) claims that a number of studies have indicated that,
regardless of a language prescription, writers will transfer writing abilities and strategies
Edelsky (1982), exploring the writing of nine 1st, nine 2nd and eight 3rd graders
knowledge moves from the mother tongue to the target language. She concluded that
students employ their experience and strategies from their first language writing to
Examining how ESL writers generate texts in L1 and L2, Jones & Tetroe (1987), dis-
92
covered that ESL writers used in English both good and weak writing strategies ac-
Zamel’s (1983) study of six advanced L2 students also supported the tenet of
transference of abilities in writing from L1 to L2. Using the case study approach, she
observed and recorded six of her own university students, who were selected from dif-
ferent linguistic backgrounds, while they composed, interviewed them upon completion
of their writing tasks and collected their written texts for which they had been given as
much time as they deemed necessary. The skilled writers in her experiment spent more
time planning, drafting, and revising than the unskilled ones, they focused on meaning
and regarded writing as a process of discovering and exploring ideas. In striking con-
trast, the less able students concentrated on grammatical errors and considered writing
as a static series of words, sentences and paragraphs. Both skilled and less able per-
formers employed strategies in their L2 writing, which they had acquired in their L1
context.
Similar findings were reported in Arndt’s (1987) exploratory study of six Chi-
nese postgraduate students who presented academic texts in both their L1 and L2. Using
the technique of protocol analysis, which involves the writers in composing aloud into
tape recorders trying to verbalise their thoughts as they strive to write, she admitted that
the composing activities of the writers were discovered to be “consistent across lan-
guages” (ibid: 257) and where writers are efficient or inefficient in their mother tongue
they are expected to perform similarly in their L2 writing. A different finding of this
study, though, was that despite the assumed homogeneity of the group in terms of aca-
demic and linguistic competence, there was little similarity in writing performance due
to individual style. Apart from highlighting the transference of viable techniques from
L1 to L2, this research also had another implication. While the underachieving L2 writ-
93
ers would benefit from a process-oriented approach to writing, the students also need
help with “the demands of writing-as-text” (ibid: 265). In practice this means that teach-
ers should aid low performers both to develop their writing strategies and promote their
linguistic competence in the target language. This finding is in concordance with the
present writer’s view presented in the previous chapter that the process approach fo-
Having conducted a case study focusing on a different issue, namely the role of
cognitive models in general and their impact on task performance, Devine, Railey &
researches in that they claim to have proved that L1 and L2 writers possess dissimilar
cognitive models which influence their writing performance respectively. A small sub-
American colleges attending similar courses, though, and achieving equal scores in their
pleted in ninety minutes. The questionnaire was designed to trace the three variables to
be examined, that is personal, task and strategy properties. Three major areas emerged
from the questionnaire: (a) grammar and correctness, (b) communication in the sense of
considering audience and expressing opinions, and (c) personal voice in the form of
on one of the previously mentioned areas, while the vast majority, be it L1 or L2 stu-
Although the results showed that most L1 and L2 students employed a multi-
dimensional model, one component of which was grammar, the researchers claimed that
an interesting difference. L1 writers did not perceive any conflicts in their model
94
voice. Finally, the researchers concluded “tentatively” (ibid: 215) that differences in
task performance are attributed to application of different cognitive models, without be-
ing willing to generalise their findings due to the small sample size, though. It is the
current writer’s belief, however, that the similarities are more and more significant than
the differences, which are due to individual preferences of the participants, rather than
The common element of these studies is that they prove that the similarities be-
tween L1 and L2 writing outnumber their differences. However, special attention must
be paid to teaching EFL/ESL writing, since it involves a completely new context re-
gardless of the common elements of the two languages. Effective writing requires a
and syntactic structures to fit the topic and the intended reader. Hedge (1988) believes
that these demands present certain problems to foreign writers of English. Even the stu-
dents who can write adequately in their mother tongue need to master a wide range of
lexes in order to be able to express their ideas in L2. They also require help to identify
the layout of texts, as it is possible that they differ from one language to another. Be-
sides, teachers should show great concern to familiarise their pupils with the process of
composing in English.
ground, they need specific knowledge concerning writing. Grabe & Kaplan (1996) sug-
gest providing learners with knowledge of the genres in the target language, the appro-
priate writing conventions, adequate coherence strategies and finally the features and
95
expectations of the readership in the target culture to compensate for the gap of limited
vocabulary.
All the studies included in this section concern adult learners. A major limitation of all
ESL writers, especially beginners, is the lack of adequate linguistic data. As a result,
when they are in need of information, they turn to their mother tongue and then translate
into English. Far from overloading their short-term memory and subtracting from the
quality of their writing, this switch to native language improves their writing “in terms
Friedlander (1990) attested this notion indicating that translating assists ESL
writers in quality rather than limits them when producing L2 texts, especially in the first
stages when they are acquiring a new language. He advanced the hypothesis that ESL
writers can plan better and present texts with improved content when given the opportu-
nity to plan in the language in which the information of the topic was acquired. Twenty-
eight Chinese university students participated in the study responding to two letters. In
order to reply to one letter they created a plan in their native language, while for the
other they were encouraged to organise their thoughts in English. The results of the
analysis supported his original hypothesis, that is, information encoded in one language
can be retrieved more easily in the same language. Moreover, he found out some other
useful evidence: (a) L1 aids L2 in the development of content, layout, and details, and
(b) translation from L1 does not seem to constrain writing time and quality of text.
Wolfersberger (2003) also dealt with L1 to L2 translation in his study with three
female Japanese speaking subjects aged 26 -28, selected for their beginning English
esses and strategies do lower L2 proficiency writers transfer to L2 writing?” The find-
96
ings showed that while some L1 writing processes were transferred to L2, the extremely
limited linguistic proficiency in English did not facilitate the participants to employ the
strategies to deal with L2 language issues and ease transfer of L1 composing processes:
(a) Teachers should try to reduce the cognitive load of the task by urging students to
employ the most widely accepted compensating strategy of translation. Thus, learners
with very limited competency in the target language can write the draft in their mother
tongue and then try to translate it referring to a dictionary or the researcher. (b) Rather
than writing a whole draft in L1, learners can use L1 only during brainstorming, genera-
tion of ideas and the stage of organising. (c) A third technique is to show high tolerance
for errors and ambiguity in the L2 in the beginning, encouraging learners to focus on
the two languages and the issue of translation. The participants were 22 Japanese stu-
dents aged 19-23, having received tuition in English for six years in Japan and one year
in Canada, where the study was conducted. The difference in this study was that the
term translation was used with its literal meaning, that is, rewriting in one language a
text originally written in another one, rather than resorting to L1, while writing in L2 to
The results showed: (a) The participants’ attention patterns in the L1 and L2
tasks were similar, with their metacognitive level being quite high, while their linguistic
use was low. In the translation, the pattern was exactly the opposite in that the learners
exhibited low cognitive attention but improved focus on language use. (b) The partici-
pants’ scores on the use of language in L1 and L2 writing were similar but their scores
on language use in translation were far better than in the L2 writing task.
97
study considering different parameters though, namely, how L1 use in L2 writing is af-
fied into an advanced and an intermediate group were assigned two tasks: an easy one
(i.e. a letter) and a more difficult one (i.e. an essay) in a three-week period. The results
indicated that less able L2 learners turned to their L1s more often, while the task diffi-
culty contributed to the duration of switching in that more difficult tasks increased the
time of L1 use. The third variable of the study, which examined whether the L2 was
cognate with English or not, showed that for students of a cognate language, longer use
of L1 resulted in higher quality texts, while for students from a very disparate linguistic
background it related to lower quality texts. Trying to interpret the last finding, the re-
searchers assumed that individual differences must be taken into consideration. In par-
ticular, it was revealed that some learners employed their L1 as a useful tool, whereas
others only exploited it as a means to achieve cognitive stability. Concluding this study,
the researcher pinpointed that “language-switching may be driven by the mental opera-
The last research to be reviewed in this section addressed a similar issue with
Woodall’s (2002) experiment, that is, how ESL/EFL writers use their first language
and the nature of writing tasks. Wang & Wen (2002) worked with 16 Chinese EFL uni-
versity students who were labelled as average using the think-aloud method to gain
knowledge into what the learners were thinking while composing two L2 tasks, one of
which was categorised as easily manageable (i.e. narration), while the other was deemed
The results attested the employment of Chinese during L2 writing, the extent of
which, though, varied among the students and the activities. More L1 was employed in
the story than the argumentative writing but this was mostly due to the fact that the two
tasks had different prompts, evoking thus dissimilar student response. There were two
more interesting findings in this study: (a) the writers tended to rely on their native lan-
guage when they were managing the writing process, generating and organising ideas
but displayed the tendency to apply more the L2 when examining the task type and con-
structing their text, (b) the use of L1 decreased as the writers developed in L2.
writing process strategies are marshalled into L2, and writing in the two languages
shares more common characteristics than differences. Where diverse properties were
detected, they concerned quantitative rather than qualitative aspects. An indicative ex-
ample is that second language writers present shorter texts (Friedlander, 1990) than the
ones they produce when writing in their mother tongue. A qualitative difference that
Woodall (2002) highlighted is that the L2 writers have two languages to rely on which
providing them with the opportunity to resort to L1 when in difficulty. It seems that this
last belief, rather than differentiate writing in the two languages, further confirms their
correlation and the positive transference of strategies from one medium to the other.
Most L2 writers bring with them the knowledge of writing in their L1, which is a factor
not to be underestimated. Nevertheless, they also carry the constraints of their limited
proficiency of L2 and lack of rhetorical organisation of texts in the target language, re-
from L1 to L2 writing and on resorting to mother tongue when facing trouble sources in
second/foreign language writing. This section will concentrate on studies about the
various aspects of the process writing paradigm in L2 contexts with a view to highlight-
ing its efficacy and tracing any similar studies in the English language classroom in
Grabe & Kaplan (1996) point out that research on L2 writing started in the early
1970s in an effort to assist international students who pursued further studies in Ameri-
can and British universities and improve the competence of domestic students from mi-
nority languages who usually fail the writing tests. Research on L2 writing in EFL
learning circumstances received less attention than L1 settings. The central points of
these studies were the nature of writing, the social contexts and the various methods for
teaching writing. Similar recent researches were conducted in Japan and Hong Kong
(i.e. Pennington et al., 1996) because many native students go to the USA and the UK
for tertiary education, hence appropriate methods are sought to meet their writing needs.
as it may be to apply to L2 research methods effective in L1, this does not imply that L2
study derives directly from L1, since it deals with different problems of dissimilar
learners. These different L2 students must acquire writing abilities, which will fulfil di-
verse needs depending on the standards of their institution, the requirements of the cen-
tral educational system and the influence of their background and mother tongue. Con-
will be reviewed in sections (3.5.1 - 3.5.7), mostly employed the case study method and
al systems
students’ texts
Kong, Akyel & Kamisli, (1996) in Turkey, Kern & Shultz (1992) and Gallego De
Blibeche (1993) in USA, and Hammouda (2005) in France. Although these contexts
seem very disparate, important similarities were revealed in the teachers’ and learners’
Kong taking part in the introduction of the process-focused approach. The aim of the
research was to investigate the impact on teachers and their students of the introduction
of the process approach to writing for six months. After this period, the instructors
could decide to continue their adoption or not for one more year. The results indicated a
cause-effect relationship between the students’ perceptions and the teachers’ mentality.
101
The two classes who reacted positively to the experiment were taught by a teacher who
opted for the process paradigm and applied it regularly into her teaching. On the con-
trary, the group, which rated the new approach most negatively, was influenced by the
teacher who was an adherent of traditional language drills and grammatical accuracy
and who had been unwilling to integrate the new pedagogy from the beginning of the
research. Thus, they proved that the success of an approach reveals instances of teacher
bias. Additional findings of this study were that all students valued peer feedback and
teacher-student conferencing and that L1 use helped with the implementation of the ap-
proach.
dialogue. The various components of the taught course were: the audience and the
learners’ positioning to it, the communicative purpose, and the appropriate organisation
and style. The target of the programme was to lead students to understand that success-
ful writing entails negotiation of meaning with the likely reader and to equip them with
the tools to become expert writers who can manage by themselves in the professional
world.
At the end of the semester, the investigator was surprised to find that her stu-
dents reacted negatively to the change characterising her approach as too “esoteric” with
few examples and limited guidance. Trying to explain this dissatisfaction, she reached
the conclusion that useful as the approach may be for the Anglo-Saxon mentality, it may
show cases of incompatibility when applied in a different culture. The tradition of teach-
ing writing in France (which is quite similar to the Greek context) is both centralised
102
and defined by the Ministry of Education with a high exam-orientation. In this setting,
the learners attempt to master texts for only one reason: to pass the final exam of high
school to get the certificate of Baccalaureate. Drafting is unfamiliar to students and writ-
ing is regarded as the final end of the process not the initiation of a dialogue. In this
vein, her approach was contrary to the writers’ expectations who had been accustomed
to being given texts to assimilate their ideas and structures rather than discover knowl-
edge by themselves and express their individual voice. A second effort to employ the
method with more explicit instruction was once again not very successful, as French
students are used to expecting to be directed and given the answer. As a result, the re-
searcher had to fine-tune the approach to meet the writers’ long-held learning schemata
in that she carefully directed them supplying part of the answer but also had the students
find out a section of the reply on their own, applying dialogue, examples to aid them get
there and personal letters. She concluded the research by admitting that the proc-
ess/genre approach is quite flexible and can be redefined to fulfil different learning
The three following studies (i.e. Kern & Schultz, 1992; Gallego de Blibeche,
1993; Akyel & Kamisli, 1996) show consistent findings in that they presented positive
Kern & Schultz (1992) tried to trace the effects of a change of the approach in
the teaching of writing. The new teaching project concentrated both on the process and
the product. As the purpose of the study was to detect the amount of change in students’
writing performance, there was no control group in the study. Furthermore, the students
were divided into low, middle and advanced performers based on their grade at the ini-
tial writing test, since one of the research questions was whether the improvement was
related to their skill level at the beginning of the study. Seventy-three students in the
103
third and fourth semester of an American University participated in the experiment pro-
ducing four argumentative writings in French, at four points during the academic year,
which were rated holistically by expert assessors. The participating teachers had re-
the various classes. Moreover, the coordinator ensured the equal employment of the
programme through classroom visits and monitoring of grades. All the three groups im-
O’Brien, 2004) compared the impact of the process approach and the product method on
students’ output. Two groups of elementary level college learners of Spanish took part
in this case study. The experimental group received practice in the various stages of the
process methodology, that is, pre-writing, generation of ideas, pair work, drafting and
peer revision. The control group, on the other hand, followed grammar exercises and
was asked to produce compositions which were valued for grammar errors, without hav-
ing been provided with any assistance, though. The experimental group produced better
texts in terms of length and quality of organisation but both groups benefited equally in
Similarly, Akyel & Kamisli (1996) sought to confirm the possible gains of the
employed English as the main language of tuition. They conducted a small-scale study
as far as time was concerned, that is, during 1.5 semesters - 19 weeks. One of the re-
search questions of this study was whether L2 writing instruction affects learners’ L2
writing processes and if so, in what ways. The subjects produced two writing tasks in
the beginning of the semester and two at the end. They also filled in questionnaires con-
104
cerning the writing strategies they employed, as well as, their attitudes towards writing.
their previous experience of writing in English and Turkish, their perceptions towards
writing and their opinion about any changes they had undergone during the writing tui-
storming, familiarising themselves with genre conventions, coherence, list making, cub-
ing and keeping journals. They were trained to elicitation of ideas in groups, drafting
and redrafting following peer and teacher commentary and editing. The investigators
reported that the students profited in that they spent more time on pre-writing, whereby
they were engaged in brainstorming and generating ideas about the given topic. The par-
ticipants also devoted more time for planning, rehearsing, pausing and organisation. The
protocol analysis indicated that the learners had become more confident about and criti-
cal of their writing. Moreover, they decreased the occasions of surface level corrections
and they achieved better grades for their compositions at the exit point of the study. Fi-
nally, the learners adopted a positive attitude towards writing in the classroom, organis-
ing their ideas into a coherent whole, and receiving peer and teacher feedback. A limita-
tion of the study was the small number of participants, that is, eight students matricu-
A study with diverse results is the one by Gomez, R., Parker, R., Lara-Alecio, R.
& Gomez, L. (1996), trying to explore the appropriateness of process writing against the
product method with a group of low achieving English proficient (LEP) sixth grade SL
programme. Eight classrooms were employed, of which three were assigned with proc-
ess writing without a time limit and five product writing with a time limit. The students
105
were randomly stratified to classrooms in such a way that each class included equivalent
proportions of low, middle and high performers at English. Four types of indices of
writing were used: (a) countable micro-indicators of quality, (b) analytic ratings, (c) ho-
listic scores of communicative effectiveness and (d) productivity index, that is, totality
of written words. The results showed that in the five analytic ratings - topic, organisa-
tion, meaning, sentence and mechanics - the product writing students either outper-
formed or equalled (in organisation) the process writing ones. The process writing stu-
dents gained in meaning but the differences of the two groups were not statistically sig-
nificant. The process writing learners performed relatively better at productivity. The
writers did not want to generalise from a single study conducted in a period of six
weeks but urged further studies. They did emphasise, though, the short time of the re-
search as Staton (1982) suggested that process writing requires at least twenty-four
weeks to be most productive. In the present writer’s opinion, the fact that the students
who followed the process method did not yield the expected benefits may be attributed
to their limited linguistic resources, time of application of the research, and the quality
A host of studies addressed the hypothesis “What benefit is supposed to accrue from
peer response?” These researches have supplied evidential support that peer feedback
can prove to be helpful at promoting the students’ linguistic and cognitive performance.
year French course and exhibiting basic writing skills. The students were divided into
106
an experimental group (14) and a control group (16). Both groups were given two writ-
ten assignments (one in the fourth week and the other in the seventh), each one requir-
ing three separate drafts. The control group received only the instructor’s written re-
sponse, whereas in the experimental group assistance was provided in small groups con-
sisting of three learners each, with participants reading their texts aloud to the other
The final products of both the assignments were gathered, randomised and as-
sessed by four experienced raters using a 0 to 100 rating scale focusing on content, or-
ganisation, grammar, lexes and mechanics. The outcomes of this investigation were
very important: (a) the performance of the peer oral-conference group equalled that of
the control group, and (b) while the teacher-guided group improved the grammatical
layout and vocabulary. Summarising the results of their study, the researchers con-
cluded that the oral-feedback method received by fellow students can be viewed as a
medium which enables the learners to self-correct their errors and develop their writing
writers. It seems that the most striking element in this study was the finding that stu-
dents with minimum writing skills in a foreign language, that is, with limited linguistic
and cognitive skills are able to profit from peer review. This finding is useful as the par-
ticipants of the research in the present thesis are pupils with elementary writing capac-
ity.
Another representative study was that of Villamil and De Guerrero (1996) con-
ducted in a university of Puerto Rico. Two rhetorical modes were asked to be produced
the study during which the students were given practice in the two modes and in peer
107
revision. The learners were then paired for each response session, one of them acting as
a writer, while the other undertook the role of the reader whose duty was to assist the
author revise his/her writing. The interactions of the students’ dyads were recorded and
The findings demonstrated that: (a) The learners engaged in seven types of so-
problem sources, composing, writing comments, copying and talking about task proce-
dures. (b) In order to ease the feedback procedure, the writers applied five mediating
techniques that included employing symbols and external assistance, such as dictionar-
ies and prompt sheets, switching to L1, offering scaffolding, turning to interlanguage
knowledge (i.e. selecting the structure which sounded more familiar to them), vocalis-
ing private speech in the form of inner utterances directed to self-improvement and re-
lease of affective load. (c) The social behaviour of the learners during their collabora-
tion exhibited four major aspects, which are management of text ownership, affectivity
in the sense of companionship and the concern for not harming each other’s emotions,
This variety of activities adopted by students proved that peer response is an ex-
tremely complicated process offering learners mutual scaffolding to attain task targets,
this study was the eager collaboration of the learners in an atmosphere of “camaraderie
and compromise” (ibid: 68), which is typical of the Puerto Rican cultural mentality.
This finding is also corroborated by Nelson & Carson’s (1998) study that will be ana-
lysed later (cf. section 3.5.6), showing the significance of the educational and cultural
level Spanish speaking EFL learners in a Puerto Rican private university, Villamil and
De Guerrero (1998) once again attempted to verify the impact of peer response on their
partners’ writings. This experiment also focused on narration and persuasion but posed
two different questions: 1) How were the recommended revisions integrated in the final
products? 2) How were problematic areas rectified in terms of the following language
of learners were tape-recorded cooperating on drafts for each discourse type. The
method involved the writers reading their texts aloud with the readers reacting to con-
tent and layout first and focusing on language usage and mechanics later. The tape-
recordings, drafts and written texts were analysed and remedies were classified as “in-
corporated, not incorporated, further revised, and self-revised”. Most of the revisions in
both peer interactions (74%) were embedded in the polished versions, 8% received
more revision and 18% were not taken into account. A different finding revealed in this
research was that 39% of the integrated revisions were self-revisions, which indicated
As far as the second question is concerned referring to the kind of language as-
pect the effected revisions involved, it was shown that in both modes grammar ranked
first, whereas layout was the least dealt with. In other words, students insisted on focus-
ing on grammar despite the explicit instructions to attend to content and organisation
first and then to language use and mechanics. The experimenters attributed this reaction
to three plausible explanations: (a) ESL intermediate learners are not very confident
about their mastery of linguistic structures, thus they are in need of concentrating on
correct usage, (b) students may have attempted to rectify the linguistic deficiencies
which might have obscured the content of the writing, and (c) learners were influenced
109
by their previous language tuition with its strong emphasis on form. The authors con-
cluded that peer assistance can help students to achieve effective revision within their
linguistic potential, to obtain a sense of audience and to internalise the social dimension
not was carried out by Jacobs, Curtis, Brain & Huang (1998). They worded their hy-
pothesis quite differently from the other researches: “If peer feedback is not valued by
L2 learners, ESL learners who have experience with both teacher and peer feedback will
prefer not to receive peer feedback as one type of feedback on their writing” expecting
that the results would reject it. The participants were 121 first and second year under-
graduate ESL students in two universities, one in Hong Kong (44 subjects) and the other
in Taiwan (the remaining 77). The former students exhibited upper intermediate or
higher proficiency, while the latter ranged from lower to upper intermediate. All of
them were accustomed to the process approach during their university writing courses,
even though they had been exposed to more teacher-oriented methods prior to their ter-
tiary education.
whether they prefer to get peer response to their writing as one type of feedback or not
and at the same time were requested to briefly justify their choice. A significant per-
centage of the writers (93%) demonstrated that they preferred to receive student assis-
tance among the kinds of feedback they were given when writing. The two most preva-
lent explanations of peer response preference were that other students came up with
more ideas and were capable of locating problems which the writers could not spot
themselves. The findings of the present study showed that SL students who are familiar
110
with the process-oriented paradigm favour peer reinforcement as one type of commen-
tary on their writing. The researchers concluded by offering suggestions on how to inte-
grate peer review in the second language writing classroom. They urged teachers to
supply sample peer feedback forms, give models of productive comments, stress the
significance of both praise and criticism, and finally discuss instances of student review
with the whole class with a view to distinguishing between useful and ineffective peer
response.
truism that specific training and guidance is needed to attain successful application in
designing on the teacher’s part and that learners should be shown how to react to writ-
trained peer response shapes ESL writers’ revision types and quality of writing. Two
intensive English programme in a large city in U.S.A. participated in the study, which
took place over two separate 11-week terms. The former classes focused on academic
paragraph, while the latter practised academic essays. None of the 46 participants had
received any previous practice in peer review to writing. The subjects were classified
into a trained (experimental) group and an untrained (control) group as far as peer re-
sponse is concerned.
Based on Faigley and Witte (1984), Berg attempted to measure the number of
meaning changes made by students in their second drafts, in terms of addition of new
content or deletion of existing content. The students’ first and second drafts were as-
111
sessed by two independent evaluators who achieved consistent rater agreement. The re-
sults showed that the trained learners outperformed the untrained ones in the number of
meaning changes in the revised drafts. Berg ended her experiment by offering the fol-
lowing classroom implications: (a) the classroom environment is one of learning and
peer response can be beneficial in terms of learning opportunities, and (b) in order for
Lawrence & Sommers (1996; cited in Bodwell, 2004) offered detailed stages to
engage students in peer response groups. These steps include analysis of transcripts and
video-taped lessons of peer correction, and specific practice. A case study which cor-
roborates this tenet was conducted by Bodwell (2004) in a family literacy programme
ish, tried to revise one student’s draft with a view to improving its textual organisation
and content. Even though the teacher tried to engage the learners in an effort to amelio-
rate the text, the subjects used the text to discuss about the appropriacy of their maternal
practices towards their children. This proves that the teacher and the participants had
different orientations. The former focused on the semiotic aspect of the text, while the
latter paid attention only to the social implications of the ideas presented in the draft.
These findings show that students need scaffolding at peer response strategies in order
Although previous studies had managed to prove the impact of trained peer re-
sponse on revision types and text quality, Min (2006) felt that a “thorny” question still
trained ESL response groups in Berg’s study (1999) were a direct outcome of the train-
ing. Thus, Min (2006) initiated a preliminary classroom study to investigate the extent
of trained responders’ review in terms of types of revision and textual quality. The par-
112
ticipants were 18 of the author’s Chinese speaking sophomore students in an EFL writ-
ing class in a university of Taiwan, none of whom had received any peer feedback prior
to the experiment. This writing course was held twice a week over eighteen weeks every
semester aiming at refining the learners’ writing capacities in expository essays. The
training consisted of four hours of in-class demonstration and one hour of responder-
teacher conference.
Both qualitative and quantitative analyses were used. As far as the quantitative
analysis is concerned, the teacher and two independent assessors employed a multiple-
trait approach (Hamp-Lyons, 1991a, b) to evaluate revision quality before and after peer
analysis entailed a text analysis comparing the number of peer comments used in revi-
sions and the ratios of peer-initiated revisions prior to and post the coaching of students.
The results demonstrated that trained peer reinforcement had a significantly higher in-
fluence on writers’ revisions after peer review training with 90% of the total revisions
being triggered by peer assistance. Regarding quality, the revisions made before the
peer response coaching focused mainly on the word level, whereas after the specific
training the produced revisions concerned development of ideas, coherence and layout.
Stated differently, the overall quality was refined. Min used an effective tool that was
not employed in previous studies comprising written commentary through which she
could tally the reviewer’s comment with the writer’s reaction in order to specify revi-
sions presented in relation to peer feedback from those that did not. Min attributed the
success of peer review training to the inclusion of the individual teacher-responder con-
ferences that played a complementary role to the whole class demonstration. She con-
tended that only by using a “step-by-step” (Min, 2006: 135) procedure of introducing
113
students to peer feedback will the learners be empowered to explore texts from different
Another major focus of research has been the effectiveness of teacher feedback on the
development of the students’ cognitive and linguistic ability in L2 writing. This type of
research has been burgeoning in EFL writing for many years, given its strong support
study to explore ESL teachers’ responses to student writing. Specifically, she examined
the comments, reactions and grades by instructors to their students in their own univer-
sity ESL writing courses. She pinpointed that as these essays were originally intended to
be placed in the students’ writing files rather than included in a research, it is unlikely
that the instructors’ reactions were affected by the artificial conditions established in an
experiment. The replying methods of fifteen teachers were measured, each one evaluat-
ing at least two different texts of three or more learners. The total number of the studied
texts was 105. The findings denoted that the ESL instructors attended primarily to lan-
guage-specific errors and problems. Their reactions were inconsistent, their remarks
vague, and, at times, contradictory, and their treatment of texts was as a final product
rather than a draft in need of improvement. Whenever the teachers did address aspects
of content and layout, the students did not have the opportunity of ameliorating their
writing, for two reasons. The first was that the writers did not produce a second draft in
which to handle these vital elements of writing. The second was that this commentary
was also expressed vaguely leaving learners little initiative for essential revisions even
The researcher pointed out that such a response to students’ writing fails to make
learners understand that writing entails presenting a text that evolves. Therefore, she
offered the following advice to instructors to help them record their responding behav-
iour with a view to rendering it more student-friendly and productive: (1) Teachers need
to replace vague comments that could be appended to any student writing with “text-
specific guidelines” (1985: 95), their primary concern being the communicative efficacy
of the text. (2) Instructors should take into account the complexity of the task and be
from taking the risks needed for their evolution as writers. (3) Students must be given
time to integrate teachers’ responses into their texts in a second or even a third draft if it
is considered as necessary. (4) Priorities must be established in the review of drafts and
the ensuing revisions, and students should be encouraged to react respectively dealing
with certain concerns prior to others. (5) By working with the students to create mean-
ing through responses, teachers relinquish their role of authority and act as facilitators.
(6) Finally, this dynamic interaction can be better attained not only through written
Cohen & Cavalcanti (1990) tried to address the following hypotheses: (a) what
vanced L1 or FL writing course?, (b) what is the students’ response towards this feed-
back?, and (c) how do students benefit from the assistance they get? Two separate stud-
ies were conducted in Brazil in L2 contexts: one in a private EFL institute and another
in a university department of English. Two sets of subjects took part in the project: two
experienced teachers and six students - three for each group representing high, interme-
The EFL institute teacher focused on form indicating the type of error without,
however, correcting it. Her preoccupation was the problems rather than the strengths.
Her students realised her lack of attention to content and would have liked more assis-
tance in this sector. The university teacher valued form without ignoring content, which
she regarded as promoting the learners’ logical reasoning. Her comments varied accord-
ing to the writer and the composition, pointing out deficiencies rather than merits. The
university students regarded their teacher’s role both as an evaluator and an adult reader
who is truly interested in their writing. Regarding feedback, they were not always sure
how to handle it. A characteristic which is prevalent in both settings is that high and in-
termediate writers turned to the teacher for help more often, while the low achievers
opted for assistance from previous compositions or a dictionary. Concluding their re-
search, Cohen & Cavalcanti advised teachers to supply more positive comments and
grammar correction with its central part being the debate between two eminent profes-
sors and researchers: Truscott and Ferris. The disagreement, which is still continuing,
started with Truscott’s (1996) article “The Case against Grammar Correction in L2
Writing Classes”, where he took a very strong position claiming that not only is error
correction harmful and but it should also be abandoned. Using evidence from previous
research, he posited that teachers failed to detect errors, to explain them clearly and to
be consistent rendering thus grammar correction ineffective. One of his sources was
Kepner’s (1991) study, which lasted a semester in a college FL Spanish writing context.
Two diverse types of feedback were given to the 60 participating students producing
journal writing, which were error correction and message-related response. The results
showed that learners who had received the message-related comments produced better
116
writings, which did not include more mistakes than the writers who had been assigned
only the error treatment technique. She concluded that error correction does not seem to
enhance students’ accuracy or the content of their texts, while the message-related rein-
forcement has the capacity to heighten writing evolution both in “ideational quality and
Ferris (1999) who described Truscott’s admonition as “premature”. While agreeing with
Truscott that vague error correction is not only ineffective but may also misguide stu-
dents, she called upon previous studies (Ferris, 1995; Reid, 1998) to defend error cor-
rection which is “selective, prioritised and clear” (Ferris, 1999: 4). She ended by stating
that teachers should continue to provide error correction in L2 writing classes citing
evidence from surveys of student opinions about teacher feedback which have con-
firmed their preferences of receiving grammar correction from their teachers (Leki,
1991; Hedgecock & Lefkowitz, 1994). In addition, she pointed out that it is imperative
to train students on how to profit from this kind of feedback in order to improve their
editing skills.
The debate was continued with Truscott (1999) replying to Ferris (1999) in a
later article stating that much as Ferris attempted to reject his beliefs, she did not man-
age to challenge his argument that correction not only makes students “shorten and sim-
plify their writing to avoid being corrected” (Truscott, 1999: 117) but also decreases
their chances to experiment with writing and practise new forms. In this perspective,
grammar correction hinders rather than assists the development of writing. He con-
cluded by remarking that his research has offered the teachers the opportunity to opt for
a correction-free tuition in their teaching and admitted that it is up to the individual in-
117
structors to consider seriously both the case against grammar correction and the one in
favour of error treatment so as to decide which best serves their teaching situation.
bate up until then. She presented three major observations: (1) The existing research
base does not adequately compare the texts of students who have received grammar cor-
rection for a long period of time with those of writers who have no receipt of error
treatment. (2) The previous researches are not easily comparable as they exhibit mis-
match in design. (3) Previous research predicts, without conclusively proving, positive
A. The first is the correlation of the appropriacy of writings of students who received
error response with the texts of writers who did not. One of these studies was conducted
by Fathman & Whalley (1990) with 72 students enrolled in intermediate ESL college
writing classes at two different colleges. The participants were randomly divided into
four groups: Group 1 received no response whatsoever; Group 2 got only grammar
feedback; Group 3 had content reinforcement; and Group 4 was provided with both
grammar and content review. The students were asked to write a story based on a se-
quence of eight pictures. The results showed that students improved grammatical accu-
racy only when given adequate guidance and all writers improved content irrespective
of the type of review they had received. The first finding corroborated Ferris’s advice
Ferris (2004) refers to relevant studies (Lalande, 1982; Chandler, 2003) for evidence:
eign language in the State University of Pennsylvania with a view to answering the
question whether students will benefit more if teachers mark errors for them to correct
118
than when instructors rectify the mistaken forms themselves. He found that the experi-
mental group, which received specific information on the type of errors made, improved
significantly compared with the control group, whose deficiencies were simply rectified.
group. The first research gauged whether error correction improved accuracy in student
writing involving music majors in the first and second year of an American conserva-
tory attending high intermediate and advanced writing classes. The experimental group
consisted of 15 undergraduates and the control of 16 students. Both classes were taught
by the same teacher-researcher and both got feedback, the difference being that the ex-
perimental group was required to correct every assignment responding to all the errors
underlined by the instructor before tackling with the following assignment, while the
control group remedied all their located errors at the end of the semester. The results
signified that the experimental group students improved their writings in accuracy with-
out reducing fluency or quality, whereas the control group did not exhibit any linguistic
improvement.
and easily replicable studies. Therefore, she recommended the undertaking of re-
searches, which last over a long period of time addressing the “big question” (ibid: 56) -
whether or not error review aids students to improve their linguistic accuracy in writing
and exhibit a transferable design. In the meantime she provided the following advice:
(1) Error treatment must be included in L2 writing instruction and executed clearly and
consistently by teachers. (2) Different types of errors should be treated diversely. (3)
Learners should be encouraged to revise their texts after receiving feedback ideally in
Guénette (2007) followed a different perspective based on Ferris’s (2004: 50) acknowl-
ducted a meta analysis of various studies reviewed by Truscott (1996) and Ferris (2004)
focusing on corrective feedback trying to investigate whether their findings may be at-
tributed to the layout and methodology of the research, as well as, other external factors
studies under discussion make comparisons very difficult. First of all, she contended
that, even though the researchers (Lalande, 1982; Fathman & Whalley, 1990) claim that
their subjects display similar proficiency levels, the criteria used for this classification
are not very clear. This vagueness at the definition of the students’ levels makes repli-
cability and the validation of results by other researchers nearly impossible. Therefore,
the effects of feedback or lack thereof may be accounted for by proficiency levels rather
than any flaws of the feedback itself. Second, on the issue of including an experimental
and a control group, the reviewer believes that the existence of both groups is not suffi-
cient. What is needed is two groups that are as far as possible comparable in terms of
performance level and writing conditions. Only in this way can the comparison of the
dent on the employment of different ways of eliciting correct answers and feedback
techniques instead of any dissimilarities between the involved groups or the duration of
the study. Guénette refers to Chandler’s (2003) research, whereby the expected treat-
ment of the underlined errors from the two groups was different, which may explain the
120
improvement of accuracy of the experimental group. Another factor which renders vari-
ous studies difficult to compare is the use of different classroom activities and student
motivation. Concluding her review, the author admitted that teachers should provide
feedback but cautioned against any universal recipes. She acknowledged that no matter
what the cornerstone of feedback is, be it content or form, or both of them, it must be
explicit so that the students understand what kind of treatment they receive and what
Advancing the stream of opposed views about error correction, Truscott (2007)
attempted to prove the negative effects of grammar correction on student writing, with-
out rejecting the significance of provision of comments on content and clarity, though.
writing ability and if it has any genuine effects, it can be confessed at a 95% certainty
that these gains are so trivial as to be insignificant. He even claimed that there are some
factors that bias the results favouring the correction groups. These two factors are: (1)
The setting of the testing- the time when the post-test is conducted - earlier or later- is
crucial and may tamper with results. (2) Avoidance - corrected students have the ten-
dency to shorten or simplify their texts in order to escape correction. Consequently, any
rise of scores on accuracy may not really mean improvement but it might well imply
that learners have got enough practice in avoiding employing structures they usually get
wrong. All researchers would admit that avoidance is a strategy that poses barriers to
Truscott (2007) even put forth that not only do most researches present feeble
benefits of grammar correction but also fail to highlight the decline of students’ accura-
cy due to given error correction. He concluded by stating that, although he does not
doubt that correction can help students rectify the text on which treatment was provided,
he strongly questions whether and how correction influences student potential to em-
ploy language in realistic ways, such as writing and speaking in meaningful, commu-
nicative settings.
& Yi-ping Hsu, 2008) with forty-seven EFL graduate students from a university in Tai-
wan assigned to an experimental and a control group. The participants were requested to
write a narrative in class and revise it in next class. The experimental members had their
errors underlined in order to revise them, while the control subjects did not obtain any
feedback whatsoever. Matching the results of similar studies, the experimental group
was significantly more successful than the control one. One week later the two groups
produced another narrative to measure retention of learning. The findings showed that
both groups were almost identical in terms of errors and the researchers contended that
improvement during revision does not guarantee the efficacy of correction for ameli-
as evidenced in Ferris (2004) and Guénette (2007), Bitchiner (2008) conducted a care-
fully organised research so as to smoothe out design incongruities and focus on the ac-
guage schools in New Zealand participated in the experiment. The subjects produced
three pieces of writing of the same genre, which was a description of a picture so as to
122
be involved with tasks of similar layout and difficulty. The feedback was targeted to
two types of errors only. Specifically, the definite article ‘the’ and the indefinite article
‘a/an’ were selected in order to boost the effectiveness of correction. The students’ texts
were received in a pre-test, an immediate post-test, eliminating, in this way, the interfer-
ence of extraneous variables, and a delayed post-test after two months to measure the
levels of retention of the performance exhibited in the immediate post-test. The partici-
pants were allocated to four groups: (1) direct corrective feedback plus written and oral
aid, (3) direct corrective treatment only, and (4) no feedback to the control group.
Bitchiner reported that students who had received written corrective feedback
outperformed the control group members in terms of accuracy in the immediate post-
test and that this attainment was present in the delayed post-test.
The latest contribution to the debate of error correction is the one by Bruton
(2009), who explored the aforementioned study by Truscott et al., (2008) with the aim
of interpreting the conclusions of this experiment. Thus, Bruton indicated that Truscott
et al.’s claim that gains in error correction are not transferred to subsequent new texts,
are based on wrong assumptions due to inefficient design of the research. He observed
that the errors of the second writing task bear no resemblance to the errors of the first
data. Moreover, the most frequently recurring error in the first text (i.e. verb to be) was
Therefore, he offered alternative patterns in research design. One variation is, in-
features over a period of time and define which of them will be rectified and which will
not be amended. In this way, the comparisons will be made between the error rates of
123
specific set of traits and trace their progress longitudinally. Although this second sug-
gestion reminds us of a PPP exercise, rather than meaningful writing under the process
The present author believes that in this debate the case for error correction is
stronger than the one against it. Since certain studies have proved that error correction
do help students improve their writing and others have highlighted the students’ prefer-
ence for teacher guidance, teachers must go on supplying students with specific and se-
lective error treatment. Truscott (1999) posited that correction must be avoided until an
extremely cogent case will be made favouring its use. This notion will be contradicted
and worded the other way round, claiming that correction should be given to students
unless some studies explicitly prove that all learners, under all circumstances are
A significant body of research investigated the relative value of teacher and peer feed-
back and the students’ preferences towards these two types of response. Jacobs et al.,
1998) attempted to trace the students’ choice between peer and teacher feedback, in
their study as was presented earlier in this thesis (cf. section 3.5.2). The 121 Chinese
ing both peer and teacher comments either orally or in written form during a semester.
When questioned what kind of support they preferred, they replied that they wanted
both teacher and peer review. Another interesting finding was the subjects’ acknowl-
124
edgement of profiting from giving feedback. The researchers concluded that rather than
exclude each other the two types of feedback exhibited complementary roles.
Another case study that confirmed the results of the previous research was con-
ducted by Tsui & Ng (2000) in the Hong Kong upper secondary setting with 27 sub-
jects. They attempted to explore the role of teacher and peer feedback in the revision of
two tasks in a six-week cycle. The response involved: (a) teacher comments on the first
draft in whole-class discussion, (b) students’ written response on a partner’s first draft,
(c) students talking about peer commentary in groups, (d) teacher comments on second
draft, and (e) final revision. Quantitative and qualitative methods for data analysis were
and teacher response, a questionnaire and semi-structured interviews with six students.
The analysis of the questionnaires revealed that the writers preferred teacher comments
compared to students’ feedback and embodied them more often in their writing. The
employed interviews, however, showed that the subjects who had employed both forms
of reinforcement admitted having gained a “sense of audience” when working with their
fellow students. They also gained responsibility of their own writing, due to the fact that
they had to select whether to use a comment or not. In addition, peer comments contrib-
uted to raising students’ awareness of their good and bad points and enhanced coopera-
tive learning. Finally, writers who had applied more teacher feedback, rather than un-
dervalue peer response, acknowledged its contribution to familiarising them with the
writing process.
The above mentioned studies on peer feedback, teacher response and a combina-
tion of both forms of review indicate that the types of feedback are so varied that, as
Lynch (1996) suggests, the teachers should provide students with a range of response
125
technique.
Other studies on students’ conceptions of teacher and peer feedback centred on the
learners’ disparate expectations and interpretations, and the role of cultural origin.
misconceptions that can appear when learners attempt to interpret teacher assistance. In
her two case studies in an English proficiency course lasting fourteen weeks in a univer-
sity context in New Zealand, she used a variety of data sources, including observation
ing feedback and written texts. The participants were two experienced teachers and six
students from two classes, one preparing learners for undergraduate studies and another
training students for postgraduate studies. After the analysis of the data, the individual
style of teacher response surfaced and the personal nature of writing was outlined.
comments even when they are positive leading, thus, writers to demotivation. One par-
ticipant confessed having received positive assistance which, however, did not pertain
to the parts of the texts whereby she was uncertain. Another learner was even annoyed
ther elaboration. Hyland ended the study by remarking that future researches could in-
vestigate the interaction between the teacher’s attitude to a student and the extent and
In another study, Hyland & Hyland (2001) also examined the writers’ interpreta-
tions of the teachers’ positive and negative commentary, and suggestions to their writ-
ing. The context, duration and participants in this study were similar to the previously
126
mentioned experiment. Various source data were examined such as interviews, ques-
tionnaires, analysis of texts, observation of classes and verbal reports. The feedback of
two ESL instructors to 6 students from two classes (one undergraduate, the other post-
graduate) was explored showing that out of 495 feedback points 44% were praising,
31% concerned criticism and 25% of the comments involved suggestions for improve-
ment. Most of the times praise was direct but occasionally the practitioners attempted to
alleviate the negative points. This confused the students who misinterpreted the teach-
ers’ mitigated response. It seems that much as the writers need positive reinforcement in
order to feel they are progressing, they also require special attention to their weak ele-
ments so as to be given the opportunity to improve them and, therefore, develop linguis-
One important requirement to take into consideration when exploring the stu-
dents’ reaction to peer and teacher feedback is the different cultural and educational
background of the EFL students which instils diverse values on them. Nelson & Carson
(1998: 128,129) posited that the cultural concept of “power distance” influences the ef-
ficacy of L2 peer response. By “power distance”, they mean the interpersonal relation-
ship or affect which, translated in an educational context, refers to the distance between
the teacher and students. In countries where this distance is large, the teachers are re-
garded to be omniscient, and, as a result, their feedback is viewed as superior to the one
of the peers.
In order to verify these notions, Nelson & Carson (1998) conducted a study on
the perceptions of EFL learners towards the effectiveness of peer response employing a
phenomenon (ibid: 116). The participants were eleven Chinese and Spanish-speaking
students in an advanced ESL writing class at a large metropolitan university in the USA
127
following the process approach in their writing classroom. The results showed that both
Chinese and Spanish writers valued effectiveness in the form of change. Therefore,
since positive remarks did not require any change, they avoided mentioning them, pre-
Another finding was the students’ preference of teacher feedback over that of
their peers reflecting their belief that, since the teacher is the expert, it is sensible to
provide more productive comments. Furthermore, they showed interest in global feed-
back feeling that sentence-level and grammar comments were not very helpful in revis-
ing their drafts. Finally, this study showed the impact of cultural differences on the per-
treasuring collectivism, they focused on the need for consensus in order to establish a
positive group climate even at the expense of improving their text. As a result, they
sometimes avoided criticising their partners and disagreeing with the other students of
the group. On the other hand, the Spanish students who come from a Western European
culture which values the individual voice, concentrated on the improvement of the es-
says, considering the task dimension as more important than the social element. In other
words, the members of the Spanish group collaborated with the aim of ameliorating
Few studies centred on a noticeable aspect of the process pedagogy, namely the learn-
ers’ revision strategies. The most important of them was conducted by Sengupta (2000)
who explored the results of teaching revision techniques in three classes in a Hong
Kong secondary school. The subjects were 15-16 year old students learning English in
an educational system not favouring process writing. As a result, the participants were
All three groups were asked to produce a prewrite sample and to fill in a ques-
tionnaire. Then, the subjects were asked to produce multiple drafts of six compositions.
specific guidance in revision after the first draft, whereas the control group (40 learners)
was not provided with any assistance whatsoever. The purpose of revision instruction
was to render the subsequent draft more accessible to the audience concerning appropri-
acy, adequacy and layout of information. In this way, the responsibility of the commen-
tary transferred from the teacher to a fellow student and eventually to the writers them-
selves. The results showed that, after three terms at the end of the academic year, the
two groups who had received tuition in revision exhibited more progress than the group
following the traditional method. Questionnaires and interviews carried out after the ex-
periment showed that students valued the knowledge they had obtained on both theo-
retical and practical grounds, as they gained insight into how teachers think and self-
Studies on revision have highlighted the differences between skilled and less
skilled writers, proving that expert writers take into account parameters such as reader-
ship, topic, organisation and revisions on a global level with low performers amending
Porte’s (1997) research, which lasted nine months, is indicative of these differ-
ences in approaching revision between proficient and less proficient L2 writers. Sev-
enty-one second year students (28 male, 43 female) in a university of Granada, Spain
were selected. Two methods of measuring the writers’ competence were used, that is
semi-structured interviews and audio tapes of the students while revising. The design of
the interviews was formulated with a view to activating students’ thinking about their
Most participants confessed not having received any explicit instruction in revi-
sion. This accounts for their narrow outlook of revision, which they perceived as a
proofreading exercise, with the majority of the subjects concentrating on the word and
its cosmetic changes such as spelling, word endings and search for synonyms. The pre-
sent writer believes that maybe this behaviour is due to their limited linguistic ability
leading them to overfocusing on the word level, leaving the more complex issues of
content and organisation for later stages when they feel more secure about their lan-
guage use. The pragmatic aim of achieving a higher grade for their writing was one of
the main reasons which made students consider revision as worthy. Furthermore, this
case study confirmed the implicature of the teachers’ perceptions of feedback and
evaluation of the students’ conceptions of revision by showing that the writers’ revision
techniques mirror teaching strategies. Porte concluded that even though a direct cause-
effect relationship between teachers’ preferences and students’ revising behaviour can-
not be claimed, there is enough evidence of such an influence, which must make in-
structors sceptical when trying to substantiate the etiology of inadequate writing and
plan methods to remedy these inefficiencies. He implied that the best way to help low
ment of advanced methodologies which are far beyond the students’ level.
Hillocks (1986; cited in Gomez et al., 1996) stated that most researches about
the efficacy of the process approach were conducted with adults especially in academic
environments with the theorists testing their tenets with their own students. These par-
ticipants are named as “subjects of convenience” Krapels (1990: 48) who are the re-
searcher’s own students and therefore not chosen randomly. As Krashen (1977) justifia-
bly argues that research results with adult learners are not necessarily applicable to
young learners, studies focusing on young students must be initiated since they exhibit
130
quite different properties from older subjects. Only a few studies have been conducted
in Greece lately concerning early primary students (Giannakopoulou, 2002), Greek high
computer assisted process writing (Nikolaki, 2004; Simou, 2006; Takou, 2007).
Given the apparent scarcity of studies on FL writing at the upper state primary
school both in Greece and internationally, the present researcher has decided to venture
this experiment in the Greek state primary school situation to investigate the applicabil-
ity and efficacy of the process paradigm to ameliorate the students’ performance and
this chapter analysed its theory, stages and implications. The theories of child develop-
ment and learning were presented in an effort to discuss and locate the properties of
good educational practice in the teaching of writing concerning the process pedagogy,
which fits the cognitive and developmental level of young learners. The procedures
used in the acquisition of writing in the mother tongue which are also present in the tar-
get language were mentioned and corroborated by relevant research showing the mu-
tual influence of the two languages. An overview of research, although far from com-
prehensive was supplied as regards the wholesale application of the process approach or
In the following chapter the philosophy of the Greek national curriculum and a
detailed evaluation of the equivalent syllabus for the teaching of English in the sixth
grade of the Greek state primary schools will be demonstrated. The inconsistencies
between the aims of the official curriculum and syllabus and the classroom reality will
131
Chapter 4
4.1 Introduction
This part of the thesis will present the aims of education nowadays and the educational
context in Greece both state and private in relation to the teaching of English and spe-
cifically writing. In particular, since the main preoccupation of the present thesis is the
state sector, there will be a discussion of the philosophy of the new general national cur-
riculum, the curriculum of teaching English and a detailed evaluation of the equivalent
syllabus for the teaching of English in the sixth grade of the Greek state primary
schools. The employed coursebook will be introduced with a focus on writing. A com-
parison of the current national curriculum to the previous one will be made. Throughout
the discussion, the focal consideration will be on the inconsistencies between the aims
of the curriculum and syllabus and classroom reality. Problematic areas of this frame-
work, which need further elaboration will be highlighted, concentrating on the teaching
proposed, which is in alignment with process writing, the directives of the new curricu-
lum, the principles of teaching writing and theories about the proper learning environ-
For our discussion, it is imperative to adopt a clear definition of the terms “cur-
riculum” and “syllabus”, as various theorists (Brumfit, 1984; White, 1988; Nunan,
1989; Pantaleoni, 1991) have presented different definitions. Brumfit (1984: 75) re-
stricts the term “syllabus” to what the responsibility of the language teacher is, with
“curriculum” implying the total provision within a school. Both White (1988: 4) and
Nunan (1989: 14) agree that syllabus refers to the content of an individual subject, whe-
133
reas “curriculum” deals with the totality of content to be taught and aims to be realised
in an educational programme. Pantaleoni (1991: 302) specifies more clearly this distinc-
tion between curriculum and syllabus, supporting the view that the former entails broad
institutional and classroom goals, while the latter is a more day-to-day, localised guide
for the teacher, which concentrates on “what” should be taught and learnt, providing at
the same time a rationale for “how” this content must be selected and ordered. This
portunities. English is indispensable in scientific and other academic research and for
business people who seek to cooperate with other companies all over the world. Young
people, who want to have access to English-language movies and music, need an ade-
quate command of the language. English is also used for correspondence with pen pals,
conferences and for travelling abroad. Moreover, English is the predominant language
for accessing information in and communicating with other people through the Internet.
Seen from this perspective, it is evident that English has become an international lan-
guage used by people from different cultural and national origin as a means to commu-
nicate. To this end, Sifakis & Sougari (2004) suggest offering both native and non-
native speakers ample practice in order to “render their discourse internationally com-
prehensible”.
134
Due to this significance of English, the state primary schools began to offer
English-language tuition from the fourth grade in 1992 and from the third grade in
2003, whereas English had been taught in secondary education since 1945. As far as
time allocation to teaching English is concerned, the number of teaching hours is three
45-minute periods a week in primary school, and the first grade of both junior high
school and senior high school, whereas two teaching sessions per week are allotted for
the second and third grades of lower secondary school and upper secondary school. In
the fourth, fifth and sixth grade of elementary school there is a set book issued by the
Pedagogical Institute, which is an institution responsible for advising the Greek Minis-
try of Education on pedagogical and methodological issues. These set books, at the time
of the conduct of the present research, were Fun Way English 1, Fun Way English 2 and
Fun Way English 3 respectively. New assigned books were introduced in the fourth,
fifth and sixth grade of primary school, and the junior high school in the academic year
2009-2010, while for the third grade of primary education and the senior high school,
the teachers of each school can select a book from various independent publishers,
There are also private FL schools “frontistiria” where parents send their children
to further their English instruction. According to Nikolaou (2004: 61), the proliferation
schools. There are four reasons, which render FL schools more prestigious than state
schools: (1) they train their students for all the accredited external examinations (Cam-
bridge, Michigan, State Certificate - KPG, Edexcel, City and Guilds, Toeic, Bulats, Edi)
that are available in Greece, providing them with the opportunity to obtain a much de-
sired recognised English proficiency certificate, (2) classes are much less crowded and
tend to be more homogeneous compared to the ones in state schools, (3) more time is
135
allocated to the teaching of English than the time set by the Ministry of Education for
state schools, and (4) finally, the directors of these schools are free to select more ap-
pealing and effective teaching materials according to the needs of their students. Fur-
thermore, many learners opt for private lessons at home, which give them the opportu-
nity to save time and proceed with English at their own pace.
writing skills that students will sit for and succeed in the aforementioned proficiency
exams, complete their curriculum vitae when applying for a job either abroad or in
Greece in international companies and communicate with their Internet friends. Moreo-
ver, academics and researchers need to write in English in order to publish their articles
in established journals and cooperate with colleagues all over the world.
Referring to the educational reality in Poland, Reichelt (2005: 215) contends that
different examining bodies and lack of L1 and EFL writing instruction. The educational
Even though the importance of teaching writing in English is more than evident,
up until now, it has not been emphasised per se in state and private language schools.
Rather, it has been perceived as an extension of the other three skills and L1 abilities.
Little attention is paid to writing in the state sector due to time limitations. Although
more time is spent on writing in private language schools, it mainly involves the trans-
mission of certain techniques, in that the learners receive tuition in writing which pre-
pares them for the exams they will sit for later. These exams have an obvious washback
effect on the parents and students’ mentality and expectations, which is reflected in
classroom practice. This means that teachers in reality are expected to provide students
136
with clear-cut formulas to help them cope with writing in the university entrance exams
for the department of English Language and Literature and the other aforementioned
As the present thesis concentrates on the state sector, the next section will con-
sider the current educational changes which affect the state curriculum design.
framework of educational and social needs arises concerning the possession, manage-
ment, while lack thereof leads to social inequity. Moreover, the continuous inventions
and innovations in different scientific fields renew knowledge and propel both individu-
als and societies to adopt life-long learning in order to avoid lagging behind. Further-
more, globalisation creates a social milieu with a variety of cultural, linguistic, racial
and socio-economic properties, which calls for ruling out the predominance of one cul-
on the respect of mental and humanistic values. In this vein, the traditional role of
the Greek school is required to contribute to the shaping of individuals with integrity
and self-awareness and simultaneously satisfy the totality of emotional and cognitive
needs as well as the interests of students. To this end, it is deemed as imperative for the
1. to ensure the conditions that will allow the learners to develop a strong cha-
with social and humanistic values without religious and racial prejudices.
2. to create the opportunity for every single citizen to renew his/her knowledge
5. to instill the spirit of the European citizen without degrading the national
ty.
This orientation is consistent with the directives of the European Union about education
Having presented the educational orientations, which are determined by the so-
cial, political, financial and cultural changes on a global scale, an attempt will be made
in the following sections to analyse the Greek framework of education and curriculum
philosophy.
tualisation of the role of the school, the Ministry of Education has defined the following
(a) Providing general education that entails the familiarisation with the basic compo-
nents of different scientific domains and the development of cognitive and metacog-
nitive abilities, which will enable students to interpret concepts, phenomena and
(b) The cultivation of the students’ skills and interests. According to the tenets of the
Communicative Approach (see chapter 2 – section 2.4.1), the learners must “learn-
how-to learn” in order to approach knowledge actively and creatively, and they
should also “learn how to react” so as to use the knowledge acquired at school to
meet the pressing requirement for specialisation in the job market. In this sense, the
(c) Provision of equal opportunities for learning to all students, especially to those be-
count of globalisation and participation in the European Community, the Greek so-
citizens and a minority of citizens from other countries. Education must aim at
Greek origin, who will respect the cultural and linguistic diversity of other people.
(e) Sensitisation about the necessity of protection of the natural environment. As there
is a two-way relationship between society and education, social needs inform the
content of school knowledge and at the same time the educational system contri-
butes to the development of society. In this perspective, one of the major preoccupa-
tions of school is to sensitise students about the right use of natural resources and
(f) Rendering the learners ready to exploit the new technologies of information and
(g) Promotion of the physical, mental, emotional and social development of the stu-
dents, which will lead them to self-awareness and make them responsible for the
quality of their own life and the society where they belong.
(h) Sensitisation of learners on issues of human rights, global peace, human dignity,
the international radical changes (section 4.3), the Greek Ministry of Education com-
missioned the Pedagogical Institute with the design of the new Crosscurricular Unified
of Study for the primary school and junior high school, which comprise the compulsory
the Greek Constitution and the directives of the European Union. The former deter-
mines the emotional, mental, professional and physical education of Greek citizens,
aiming at the development of their national and religious identity, and their nurturing
into free and responsible individuals (article 16, paragraph 2, 2001). The latter favours
the development of European citizens who will preserve their national heritage and at
the same time be willing to cooperate with people from other countries towards a uni-
fied Europe. Particularly, following the global tendency, the European Union, according
synthesis of school knowledge by abolishing the boundaries of the school subjects fos-
tering, in this way, a multidimensional analysis of concepts that entails diverse subject
areas. At the same time, its target is the promotion of the learners’ critical reasoning,
The prevalent model of the Greek educational system so far has been the dis-
crete teaching of the various scientific subjects, leading thereby to the compartmentali-
sation of the national curriculum. The new component in the revised curriculum, which
is, at the same time, its organising principle, is the crosscurricular approach (henceforth
ledge that allows students to formulate a personal opinion about different scientific is-
sues that are interrelated and connected to every day life. In this light, students will form
their own “cosmo-idol”, their own cosmo-theory about the world they live in. The new
element aims at applying a new pedagogical trend to teaching that emphasises the inte-
gration rather than the individualisation of knowledge, with a target to easing the syn-
thesis of information, the weaving of school subjects and the collaboration of teachers.
It is claimed (ibid: 62) that the CCA is both content-oriented, as it focuses on the con-
learning. The CCA is based on the principles of active involvement in the acquisition of
knowledge, which should be infused in the new books to be used in primary and sec-
ondary schools. Matsaggouras (2003: 107 - 111) puts forward the most important of
them:
1
Matsaggouras (2003: 48 - 50) opts for the term “inter-disciplinary” approach rather than crosscurricular
since the discrete subjects are kept as the key elements of organising school knowledge.
141
engage in and finally receive practice at self-evaluating both the product and
dents select and process knowledge, and reach conclusions through expe-
process. Students develop intellectually and cognitively when they are ac-
tively involved in tasks, the central point of experiential learning being the
processes.
6. The holistic approach. It consists of two components, the first being that the
children should be engaged in learning with their whole entity, that is, cogni-
142
through continuous reference to the overall system they belong to. Trans-
lated into classroom milieu, this means, that the students must synthesise the
various parts of the puzzle of knowledge bearing in mind the final represen-
These key principles of the CCA are best achieved through project work, which,
that has been agreed upon and well-organised in advance by both teachers and students,
and which aims at the solution of a particular problem. It is pointed out by Matsag-
gouras (2004) that even though the eminent pedagogist J. Dewey (1916) first employed
the principles of project work, it was W. Kilpatrick in 1918 who first used the term and
In school reality, projects entail carrying out certain themes chosen by the child-
ren. The most frequent activities in the context of a project are experiential and commu-
relate the programme to everyday life and as a result connect school with local commu-
nity. The emphasis is on formulation of small groups, which is the most effective strate-
Based on the directives of the Common European Framework (2001), the new curricu-
lum has been organised in two different axes, which, nevertheless, are parallel and com-
ras (2002: 31) puts forward, intends to ensure cohesion within a specific field of know-
ledge from one unit to another, from one grade to the following, from primary to sec-
ondary education.
The second means of organisation of the curriculum is the horizontal axis inter-
relating the various fields of knowledge through a parallel or successive teaching of dif-
ferent issues by means of many disparate subjects and the realisation of crosscurricular
Three parameters must be taken into consideration for the effective application
1. The aims of education of every cycle, namely primary and secondary school.
The first contradiction in the design of the curriculum arises here in the second
dimension mentioned above. Although the new curriculum favours the crosscurricular
connection of the various school subjects, at the same time it very clearly defines the
The current curriculum, as all the previous ones, is “fully centralised” (Nunan,
1988: 21), devised by a government department and then disseminated to the learning
institutions which are under the auspices of the Ministry of Education. It was published
144
by the Pedagogical Institute on behalf of the Ministry of Education and contains guide-
lines for both primary and lower secondary schools. The curriculum is organised in two
cycles, one for the elementary education and the other for junior high schools.
In primary school, in particular, the revised curriculum has as a target the estab-
lishment of basic concepts and values and the development of a positive attitude to-
wards learning throughout one’s life, collaboration and responsibility. These goals have
to be consistent with the students’ individual needs and their perceptive and emotional
level.
new national Greek curriculum along with specific suggestions for its best realisation
was discussed in sections 4.4 - 4.5.1. The subsequent section will focus on the individu-
al subject curricula.
be regarded as the basic frame of reference for the design of the framework of the vari-
ous school subjects and the relevant Individual Subject Curricula (Government Gazette:
303/13-03-2003: 3740). Regarding its structure each Individual Subject Curriculum in-
cludes:
1) Goals. These are in line with the general aims of the educational system and take
2) Objectives. They represent the guidelines for the organisation of the content of
the subjects and are divided into cognitive ones referring to the acquisition of
and adoption of positive attitudes, and finally psycho-kinetic ones involving the
145
fostering of pupils’ practical skills, which are essential for their school career
3) Thematic units. The content of each subject derives from the corresponding dis-
4) Indicative activities. They are divided into two major categories: Subject-
individuals and social beings. The following teaching strategies are recommend-
ii. School trips to the environment. This contact with the natural and human-
ing easier and more natural. Special care should be taken to enable stu-
v. Direct method of teaching - Narration. The teachers can use this tradi-
ciples of the Individual subject curriculums. The next section (4.7) will refer to the
lum for English was designed (304/13-03-2003: 4085 - 4113) for the three years of pri-
mary school - fourth, fifth and sixth grade and lower secondary school. Later, the curri-
culum for the third grade of primary school was also defined (1325/ 06-09-2003: 1- 21).
The main aim of teaching English is to contribute to the cultivation of the pupils’ ability
contexts, which will help them in their personal, school and social life in the short-term
and at the same time empower them to cope with the requirements of their later social
and professional life, in the long-run. The communicative orientation follows Widdow-
son’s (1978: 3) attitude about “usage” and “use”, whereby “usage” is the manifestation
of correct knowledge of the language system and “use” is the appropriate exploitation of
learner-centred (Nunan, 1988), since it intends to assist learners to gain the necessary
communicative and linguistic tasks rather than just acquire the totality of the language.
mastery of the structure of language through acquiring listening, speaking, reading and
writing skills. In this sense, language can be seen as an end in itself. Multilingualism
embraces English with a new dimension rendering it a social and cultural medium apart
from a communication code. Multiculturalism results from the communication with na-
the single domain of the English subject but rather the participation in the process of
• Enabling learners to use a foreign language to search for, access and process
riential learning.
• Mastery of the basic elements about the structure and function of the foreign
language.
• Development of:
more people
messages from one medium to the other. This parallel use of the two lan-
The curriculum is divided into two parts: one for primary education and the oth-
er for lower secondary education. The objectives of the curriculum for primary school
children include: (a) the acquisition of the phonemic and graphemic system of the lan-
guage; (b) comprehension and production of written and oral discourse; (c) interpreta-
tion of unknown words through context; (d) development of cognitive and linguistic no-
tions e.g. existence, space, time, quantity, relativity of actions and events, and logical
processing; (e) practice of language functions such as asking for information, thanking,
for and giving directions, narrating an experience and expressing emotions; (f) parallel
use of L1 and L2 or transference from one medium to the other; and (g) development of
tion, to predict and hypothesise to mention only a few (ibid: 4088- 4098). Various in-
dicative themes and activities are provided to assist the realisation of the aforemen-
tioned objectives. The curriculum for high school involves more complex notions, func-
As far as writing is concerned, the curriculum clearly defines the required skills
of the students of primary schools (ibid: 4089 - 4090, 4094 - 4097). The learners are re-
quired to produce short descriptions of their family, other people, animals, objects, daily
life, free time activities, their future plans, and finally past, present and future events.
They should be able to utilise information from various sources in order to develop a
written text regarding healthy diet such as a recipe, visits to museums and monuments,
mails thanking, apologising, accepting apologies, and expressing likes and dislikes.
They are expected to produce short stories or imaginary fairy tales and to narrate ex-
periences. Finally, especially in the sixth grade, where they are considered as more ad-
vanced, they must possess the ability to produce coherent written texts including linking
words, relative clauses and expressions which show that they can discern the differences
It seems that the CCA will have a beneficial influence in the teaching of English,
as it will not be taught in isolation but in connection with the other subjects emphasising
information and communication rather than a boring collection of grammar rules and
accumulation of vocabulary. Finally, the new curriculum for the teaching of English,
which is learner-centred and task-based through projects and other activities, is in line
with the underpinning principles of the process approach to teaching writing. Special
150
care should be taken, though, to avoid overemphasis of the crosscurricular aspect at the
Having outlined the key elements and aims of the general curriculum and the individual
curriculum for English, an attempt will be made in this section to examine the appropri-
on the overall educational, social and cultural philosophy of a nation. Heath (1991), a
diverse way. In America, individuality is stressed and students are encouraged to ex-
press their opinion. Group work is also valued and learners are often engaged in colla-
borative work. Other cultures, nevertheless, credit learning in groups more and down-
grade individual initiatives. Having conducted a research in the orientation of the Chi-
nese educational system, Cortazzi & Jin (1996) pointed out that there is lack of the no-
rather than discovery. Therefore, “process writing” may be more suitable to students
is socially embedded and follows the values of local cultures, rather than students from
backgrounds where the personal element is downplayed to the benefit of the collective
effort.
This tenet was verified by Scollon (1991) through his research with his Taiwa-
nese university ESL students who had difficulty in accepting the process approach, due
to the lack of credit for the autonomous mind in the Eastern cultures. Moreover, Nelson
& Carson (1998: 126, 127) (see section 3.5.6), investigating peer revision with Chinese
151
and Spanish tertiary students, concluded that their Chinese students focused on agree-
ment, fearing that if they threatened the “face” of their fellow students, they would jeo-
pardise the group harmony. Thus, their performance of consensus rather than disagree-
ment was due to their culturally inherent values of empathy and conformity, preventing
them from giving productive feedback. The Spanish students, on the other hand, exhi-
improvement of the essay more than the maintenance of the social relations of the
group.
In some countries, like America and the United Kingdom, peer revision is orga-
nised as a cooperative group activity in which students comment on each other’s writing
the advantages of peer or group feedback, contends that writers little by little develop
their judgement, become able to distinguish what is bad or good and eventually use their
fellow students’ comments to improve individually. Taking this notion a step further,
Atkinson (1997) states that the social aspect of critical thinking is linked with indivi-
dualism, in the sense that cultures which prize uniqueness as a person favour the expres-
sion of personal voice as long as the “rules and the roles” (Heath, 1991: 12, 13) of the
process approach is the notion of textual ownership in the educational and academic set-
ting of a country. Ramanathan & Atkinson (1999) highlight that in the USA text owner-
the appropriate references equals stealing called plagiarism. In other cultures, though,
like in India learning by heart, even whole essays is a highly praised practice, hence
In light of the above discussion, it is obvious that process writing is more appli-
cable in student-centred educational systems, which promote critical thinking and self-
discovery of knowledge along with group work. The new national curriculum with its
ing.
language teaching and task-based language instruction play the central role. Kohonen
(1992; cited in Nunan, 2004) presented the most articulate notions of experiential and
task-based learning:
• Adoption of a holistic stance towards content promoting, in this way, the crea-
This very basis of the curriculum for English with its focus on learner-
directedness, experiential and task-based learning is ideal for the application of the
process pedagogy, which includes in its core synthesis of knowledge by the students,
153
teaching. In this perspective, the process writing approach is seen as ideal for promoting
writing abilities in the primary school, as students are given motivation to experiment
In the high school context, the expectations are quite different, though. Al-
though, the curriculum philosophy also refers to junior high school, the highly exam-
orientation of the Greek educational system counterbalances this philosophy. Since stu-
dents are expected to enrol to university, when they finish the upper secondary school,
through a heavily competitive system after sitting exams in six different subjects ac-
cording to the field they want to study, all the participants in the procedure (students,
teachers, parents) insist on the rote reproduction of these six subjects and the sterile
cally mastered rather than consciously acquired. In this environment, there is no room
for discovering information, developing learning strategies and promoting both individ-
ual and group growth. It is evident that the process pedagogy will be valued very little
stressed.
and fits perfectly with the crosscurricular philosophy, which relies heavily on tasks. Be-
sides, Brewster et al., (1991) believe that teaching means facilitating discovery, not just
presenting knowledge. This discovery is a salient element of the process paradigm and
allows full rein to the huge potential with which, to varying degrees, children are gifted
by nature. This discovery of knowledge is in accordance with the principles of the new
The new general curriculum and individual curriculum for the English language have
been discussed so far in this chapter. However, there is a need to refer to the previous
curriculum as well, since the syllabus for primary schools under discussion, that is, the
coursebooks Fun Way English 1, Fun Way English 2 and Fun Way English 3, was de-
signed according to the previous curriculum, although it could be readjusted to fit the
demands of the new one. This syllabus was in effect until the academic year 2009–2010
4.8.1 Similarities
There are similarities and differences between the current curriculum and the previous
one. The first similarity is their communicative orientation. The present curriculum aims
at rendering the students able to communicate information. Similarly, the old curricu-
lum aimed at the development of the students’ skills and abilities through their commu-
of knowledge, which will assist pupils to learn how-to-learn are common elements in
both frameworks.
which is the result of a complicated spiral process, whereby new information is con-
Much in the same vein, in the current curriculum, assimilation refers to the modification
155
of the child’s existing schemes to incorporate new knowledge. One more shared ele-
ment is the fact that both programmes have identical objectives for primary and lower
secondary school children. In the primary school cycle, in particular, students are di-
rected towards the mastery of the phonemic and graphemic system of the language,
comprehension and production of oral and written discourse, practice of similar notions
and functions, parallel employment of the mother tongue and the foreign language and
Education undertook the task of designing the aims and objectives of the curriculum and
syllabus for both programmes. Curriculum planning, which is the first stage in curricu-
lum development, was assigned by the Ministry of Education to the Pedagogical Insti-
tute. The same team also carried out the second stage, that is, the specification of the
“ends and means”. The objectives of the syllabus and the methods to achieve them were
specified, although there is no indication whether and how a needs analysis, which is
considered by West (1994) as imperative for the definition of the goals, took place. The
teachers’ opinion and students’ needs were not investigated in the first place implying
that both the previous and current curricula and the syllabus were imposed on them.
4.8.2 Differences
The most significant difference between the two frameworks is the crosscuricular orien-
tation of the new one. The new curriculum for foreign languages defines a double goal
of teaching modern foreign languages: (a) the development of language skills that will
enable pupils to communicate in different linguistic and cultural milieux, and (b) the use
of language not only for communication purposes, but also as a tool for acquiring and
processing knowledge and information from different subject areas (Government Ga-
156
zette, 304/13-03-2003: 4085). Such an approach was not dominant in the previous cur-
riculum. There was an attempt in the old Analytical Programme of English to benefit
from knowledge from other subjects - i.e. students analyse and draw conclusions from
transmitted in writing or orally in the classroom (Dendrinos et al., 1997: 76), but it was
at the same time, it maintained that the English language constitutes a goal in itself, for
example it is demanded from the pupil, to understand and produce simple written and
oral texts (Dendrinos et al., 1997: 77). This dimension of language as a target is not ap-
parent in the new framework. Specifically, even though the new curriculum aims at fos-
tering language skills, that is, reading, listening, speaking, writing, little in its assump-
A new element prevailing in the new programme, which was not highlighted in
the old one, is multiculturalism and respect of cultural diversity as more and more na-
tions are becoming multicultural and the fabric of society changes by being enriched
A last difference is that the present curriculum followed the logical sequence of
curriculum design, which entails first the definition of the aims and objectives of the
curriculum and later the presentation of the syllabus. Thus, it was first presented in 2001
and finally articulated in 2003. In 2002 the writing of the new coursebooks for English,
which constitute the new syllabus, started. The new coursebooks were introduced to
schools after seven years, that is, in 2009-2010 with many problems (the CDs and
teacher’s books were not available in the beginning of the school year), while, in the
157
mean time, the old coursebooks Fun Way English 1, Fun Way English 2, Fun Way Eng-
lish 3 were used. In the old framework, a major discrepancy appeared in that the sylla-
bus was defined, and the teaching materials were distributed before the curriculum was
officially published. Therefore, the syllabus was a “syllabus without a curriculum” (Du-
bin & Olshtain, 1986: 44) for two years. In other words, the syllabus was an “a priori”
room implementation - and each level gives feedback to the previous and the next one
(O’Brien, 1999). Seen in this light, it seems that there is no coherence in the Greek pri-
mary school situation. Not only is there lack of cooperation between the four stages of
curriculum development but also some parts are missing: needs analysis and teacher
training in the second and third phase respectively. The teachers’ opinion and students’
needs were not investigated in the first place, and when they were asked through ques-
tionnaires (concerning the previous curriculum and syllabus), they were not taken into
consideration, as there was no change in the coursebooks. The teachers, even after the
introduction of the new coursebooks in 2009 - 2010, prefer to select books from inde-
pendent British or local publishers rather than the set book, because they believe that
they are more reader-friendly and more appropriate for their students. Moreover, the
students’ opinion about the content and the realisation of the curriculum, which is con-
not asked. Therefore, both the new and the old curriculums are “student-centred” in the-
This part compared and contrasted the new curriculum with the previous one
and demonstrated inconsistencies in their design. The following section will present the
4.9 Presentation of the syllabus of English for the sixth grade of pri-
mary school
The curriculum for the primary education is implemented through the use of a syllabus
for each grade, which, at the time of conducting the present research, were, as already
mentioned, Fun Way English 1 (Sepyrgioti, Karidi & Kosovitsa, 1999) for the fourth,
Fun Way English 2 (Sepyrgioti, Papapetrou, Karidi, Kosovitsa & Kortesi, 2000) for the
fifth and Fun Way English 3 (Sepyrgioti, Papapetrou, Karidi, & Kosovitsa, 1999) for the
sixth grade. Even though the syllabus claims to have a similar orientation with the pre-
vious curriculum, this cannot be true, because the materials writers did not have the re-
quirements of the curriculum in mind when designing them, due to the fact that the syl-
labus was created before the specifications of the curriculum were defined (see section
4.8.2). It is obvious that if the syllabus did not relate to the previous curriculum, in no
way can it be in compliance with the new one, which follows the latest assumptions of
education.
For thirteen years after the introduction of the syllabus to schools, although the
teachers strongly reacted to the quality of the materials and questioned their efficacy,
and even though a new curriculum was introduced in 2003, the same syllabus, which
was outdated, remained and was taught to students until the school year 2009 - 2010.
The description of the syllabus for the sixth form is found in the table of contents of the
coursebook and some instructions about its exploitation are found in the teacher’s book.
tive approach, although the “eclectic” approach has also been exploited in many ways”
The materials under consideration used for the sixth grade of primary school con-
sist of a student’s book - Fun Way English 3, a workbook, a teacher’s book and a cas-
sette. The book contains 10 units organised under Byrne’s (1986) PPP cycle. According
• Presentation. In this stage students are introduced to new language and func-
• Practice. Controlled practice normally follows the presentation stage. This phase
aims to develop mastery of the language structures with its focus being on accu-
racy.
• Production. During this last phase, the learners try to use language freely in or-
Each unit in the book begins with a picture story giving the new language and
functions in context. The stories are presented in dialogues, which are escorted by rec-
orded material whereby the characters are native speakers. There is a continuity of
theme talking about the life of the children of two families - the Browns and the Greens.
The topics are appropriate to the students’ level - ‘me’, ‘my family’, ‘my town’, ‘shop-
ping’, ‘the environment’. Although the subject matter refers to the students’ interests
Graded tasks (recognition, guided/free practice) follow so that pupils are ade-
quately exposed to the language. In recognition activities, the students are demanded to
identify the language structures and functions provided in each unit, in guided practice
tasks they are offered the opportunity to master these structures focusing on correct
forms, while in free practice exercises the learners use the language in real-life situa-
160
tions. A reading text, which is relevant to the theme of the unit, is included. These texts
are “specially written” materials constructed for the second language learner, which “at-
tempt to maintain the authenticity of genre” (Wallace 1992: 79). Every unit requires a
piece of writing through project work related to the thematic subject of the unit. Accord-
ing to Piaget (1951; cited in Andrews et al., 2000, Vol.1, Unit 3), project work can help
children learn and develop, since it engages them in investigative work, encourages
autonomous learning and allows for crosscurricular work. This link with the other sub-
jects taught at school is regarded by various linguists (Gibbons, 1991; Bearne, 1998;
Andrews, Hunter, Joyce, Superfine, O’Brien & Thorp, 2000) as an approach, which sat-
isfies the needs of all pupils. In this sense, this syllabus exhibits some scarce elements
of the new crosscurricular programmes of study. At the end of each unit, there is a sec-
tion called extension” which entails revision, recycling of the new language and further
elaboration of the topic with a text and “pre-reading” exercises, “while-reading” activi-
ties and “post-reading” ones to help the students negotiate with the passage.
The recorded material includes the tapescripts of the picture stories and the lis-
tening tasks. The materials producers contend that the students benefit by using the cas-
settes as they listen not only to native speakers, but also to the voices of native children
of their age (Sepyrgioti et al., 1999). The passages on the cassette, however, are read
aloud without displaying the features of spontaneous speech like repetitions, pauses,
hesitations, incomplete sentences, fillers (i.e. er, mm) and overlapping of speakers, as
suggested by Brown and Yule (1983), so as to enable students to receive practice and
The workbook provides practice through more graded exercises, which exem-
plify the topic and the structures presented in the main coursebook. The teacher’s book
161
provides detailed lesson plans and suggests ways of using the various sections of the
course.
Following the aforementioned description, one can conclude that the teaching
materials for the sixth grade under discussion exhibit a “coursebook-based frame-
work”.2 There are certain advantages in the present framework due to the fact that it is
to employ other materials due to time constraints. The materials designers encourage the
teachers to adapt the various parts according to the needs of their specific students, sup-
plementing it with materials of their own and providing additional or remedial work.
Moreover, the new curriculum had rendered it imperative to use new materials under its
underlying philosophy, since these coursebooks were out-dated and needed renewal.
Nevertheless, the instructors do not have enough time or the appropriate expertise to
Having presented the sixth grade syllabus, the following section will display its
classroom realisation.
labus designers, on the one hand, and the way in which they are realised in the syllabus
gauge the nature of teaching and learning in the classroom milieu. An effort will be
made to examine whether there is alignment between the stated goals of the syllabus
2
A “framework” (Andrews et al. 2000, Vol.1, Unit 3: 3) is a diagrammatic representation of a course
outline clearly stating the targets of this course and showing how diverse elements interconnect to reach
totality.
162
Dubin and Olshtain (1986) support the view that a curriculum entails a broad
description of general aims, whereas a syllabus translates the philosophy of the curricu-
lum into a series of sequenced steps leading towards more specifically defined objec-
tives. The main target of the current curriculum is the development of the students’
A first reading of the teacher’s book gives the impression that the aim of the syl-
labus is in accordance with that of the previous and the present curriculum. The syllabus
designers claim that they followed the principles of the “communicative” approach and
that the “eclectic” approach has also been exploited in many ways (Sepyrgioti et al.,
1999: 8) in order to fulfil one of the main purposes of the syllabus, which is to encour-
age learners to use the foreign language to talk and write about themselves, as well as
the world around them and to process the information they receive in English. The stu-
dents’ receptive and productive skills, which have already been mastered in their mother
tongue, are developed and practised in the target language. The learners’ prior know-
interact in a natural and purposeful way. New grammatical items, language functions
and forms are presented to pupils through activities calling for communication (ibid: 9).
The objectives of the syllabus are presented to be in alignment with those of the
curriculum as they were articulated in section 4.7 and 4.8 of the present thesis. The stu-
dents of this level have mastered the phonemic and graphemic system of the English
language. Cognitive and linguistic notions are specified: existence (e.g. some, any, no),
time (e.g. going to, past continuous), quantity (i.e. comparative, superlative), quality
(i.e. physical condition: well, bad, healthy), and relativity of actions and events (e.g. ad-
tween the proclaimed aims of the materials writers and the actual contents of the book.
Although, the central point of the syllabus is to aid learners to communicate in real-life
situations, there are few communicative activities to facilitate the pupils to interact by
receiving and transmitting information. On the contrary, most tasks fail to activate per-
sonal involvement of the learners, due to the fact that most of the times they involve
The materials display some other problematic areas, as well, such as overde-
manding vocabulary, which is at times inappropriate to the students’ level, e.g. water-
vendors and maiden voyage. There are no authentic texts as all the input materials for
listening and reading are specially written for the second language learner. Thus, the
students are deprived of the opportunity to interact with passages produced by real writ-
ers/speakers for real readers/listeners outside the classroom, which will help them de-
velop their predictive and inference skills and eventually prepare them to interact ade-
quately with real-world input. Most of the activities for the receptive skills aim at test-
ing comprehension rather than actually mobilising the skills and helping them develop
transferable abilities. Speaking tasks are mainly used to practise language not the skill
itself, since they do not have an “information gap”, so there is no obvious reason for
students to speak in order to communicate a message. They are highly controlled focus-
ing on correct forms with the learners repeating the model language. Almost all writing
activities in the coursebook assign writing as a project without helping the pupils to
generate proper ideas and relevant language and produce well-organised texts. In gen-
eral, there are no tasks that engage students in meaningful writing activities (i.e. the
purpose, audience and context of the requested writing are inadequately presented).
Moreover, the four skills are taken for granted and are, consequently, tested rather than
164
taught and practised in order to help students become efficient readers, writers, listeners
and speakers. Finally, the four skills are treated separately instead of in an integrated
way, which is contrary to the use of language skills in every day communication as was
The teaching framework of the sixth grade of the Greek state school at the time
of the current research was described and evaluated in this section in an attempt to trace
its inadequacies. From the above mentioned shortcomings of the syllabus, the present
traditionally viewed as difficult to acquire” (Bereiter & Scardamalia, 1987: 4). Advanc-
ing this notion, Nunan (1989) refers to writing as the most difficult of the four skills for
both first and second/foreign language users. He states that all children, except those
with disabilities, learn to comprehend and speak their native language. Not all of them
learn to read, while fewer manage to write fluently and legibly. An effort will be made
in the following two sections to show how the teaching of writing can be improved, fol-
lowing the latest methodological principles for developing writing discussed in the lit-
erature about writing and in research findings about young learners, as they were ana-
work, which can be carried out either in groups e.g. (1) preparing a school exhibition
with pictures and captions about the environmental problems (Unit 2), (2) organising
(Unit 3), and (3) writing a funny version of a well-known fairy tale or both in groups
165
and individually e.g. (1) presenting a funny accident through a comic strip (Unit 4), (2)
describing a monster of the Greek mythology using pictures and captions (Unit 5), (3)
making a questionnaire to find out about their fellow students’ lifestyle (Unit 6) (4) de-
scribing their ideal holidays accompanied with a map and pictures (Unit 7), (5) looking
living tribe (unit 8), and (6) designing a questionnaire about their fellow students’ ex-
There are also writing assignments in the workbook: a description of their holi-
days, their best friend and their pet (Unit 1), a letter to their penfriend about their birth-
day party (Unit 2), a letter to a penfriend describing their ideal school (Unit 3), a de-
from now (Unit 7), and a short story guided by a picture and questions (Unit 10).
Since the written assignments of both the coursebook and the workbook are
mostly assigned as homework, there is no time in the classroom to develop the students’
writing skills. As a result, it was deemed appropriate to attempt to create a parallel syl-
labus for teaching writing, for the purpose of the current research, following Harley’s
(1998) tenet who points out that, when a characteristic in second language proves defi-
cient, it is worth planning a part of the syllabus to ameliorate it. Consequently, a parallel
syllabus was prepared following the process writing approach and the crosscurricular
of seven writing lessons aimed to be taught to the experimental groups of the research.
The content of these lessons is based on the written assignments of the coursebook and
workbook Fun Way English 3, so as to provide the opportunity to require similar pieces
of writing of both the experimental and control groups with a view to obtaining compa-
rable results.
166
The proposed framework is based on Figure 6 (p. 167) showing the stages of
process writing. This framework was fully analysed in section 3.2.2. but it is presented
again for convenience. The writing lessons will be organised around this framework as
follows:
A. Awareness: it involves the social situation, purpose, audience, genre and topic and it
ing, redrafting and finally editing in compliance with the social situation, purpose, audi-
As can be easily seen from Figure 6 all parts interact and give feedback to each
other. During the awareness stage, the social situation, the aim, the intended reader, the
discourse type and the topic of a specific written assignment will be identified. Useful
of other subjects and employment of information from various sources, such as bro-
chures and magazines. Relevant vocabulary will be elicited through tasks requiring tran-
sition of information from a passage to another medium such as notes, charts and grids.
Different discourse types will be explored by asking students to identify the characteris-
tics of diverse passages, while the coherence and organisation of a written text will be
practised through the use of cohesive devices, ordering jumbled paragraphs to create a
In the second stage - that is, creation- the students will try to produce their first
draft using prompts such as notes, visuals, tables, etc. The teacher or the peers will re-
spond to this first draft enabling the learner to revise and redraft it. Successive drafts
will be produced and revised in a similar way until the final product will be edited fol-
lowing the task requirements which were analysed during awareness by the students
167
including the topic, the social situation, the target audience, the purpose and the organi-
sation of the required text. This piece of writing will be corrected by the teacher in order
Social
Situation
+
Purpose
+
Audience
+
Gentre
+
Topic
Text
Having proposed a framework for improving the teaching of writing in the sixth
grade of the Greek state primary school, the parallel writing syllabus will be presented
along with the justification for its selection in the subsequent section.
This section will introduce the supplementary syllabus and discuss its alignment with
the process writing approach, the CCA of the new curriculum, the principles of teaching
writing (see chapter 2) and theories about how young learners learn a foreign language.
Lesson One (appendix IX) aims to familiarise students with different discourse
types and realise the influence of the target reader and the purpose of writing on the
produced text. The passages are relevant to the students’ interests, and their level is ac-
cording to Krashen’s “i+1”, a little beyond the students’ linguistic level, so as to engage
them in a challenging but not threatening learning situation. With the exploration of the
characteristics of each text, the young learners are “scaffolded” to decide on the layout
The other six writing lessons follow themes, texts or written assignments found
expect learners in the English lesson to produce a written text which is linked either to a
topic or a story they have received practice on. This constitutes a thematic building of
the parallel syllabus, which has a twofold aim: to present familiar themes and create the
preparation of a first draft, response by the teacher or a partner, revising by the students,
presentation of a second draft, response by the teacher, revising by the student and edit-
ing of the final product, which receives feedback from the teacher. Throughout the
process there is constant interaction among the students, the teacher and the text. Each
ideas, spelling errors, punctuation errors, deficiencies in the use of verbs, good points,
weak points, etc. (see symbols for error correction appendix VII).
Lesson Two involves the familiarisation with and presentation of a thanking let-
ter, which is included in the new curriculum requirements. It starts with a brainstorming
activity, eliciting students’ prior knowledge about the themes we write in a thanking let-
ter and assisting, in this way, the flowing of ideas in the stage of “generating ideas”, as
The students experiment with the organisation of a thanking letter through prob-
which, at the same time, boosts their “linguistic” and “logical-mathematical or abstract
intelligence”. Students produce two drafts and receive feedback from the teacher fol-
lowing a specific checklist. In this way, they are provided with assistance within their
Lesson Three was designed in line with the affirmation of the importance of in-
tegrating the English lessons with the other subjects in the new Crosscurricular Pro-
grammes of Study. Its content reflects History and Literature, two of the major subject
areas taught in the Greek state school. Students talk about tragedy and comedy and the
masks worn in these two kinds of plays. Moreover, through a quiz they realize that dif-
ferent people may regard different events as either funny or tragic. A “top-down” proc-
170
ess under the “schema theory” (Anderson & Pearson, 1988: 37) is utilised so as to acti-
vate the students’ accumulated knowledge that will lead them to be active participants
The students are offered questions with a view to being assisted to produce their
text, which lowers their “affective filter”. They are “scaffolded” by their peers, after
having received special practice in the correction code (appendix VII), in their first
draft, whereas they receive feedback in their second draft and their polished product
In Lesson Four, the students are required to write a story using a series of pic-
tures taken from Heaton (1967), which are given in a jumbled order so as to make the
task more challenging, improve the students’ inference skills and train the students to
become more independent and autonomous. Their “visual or spatial intelligence” is de-
veloped through the exploitation of visuals along with their “logical-mathematical intel-
Useful vocabulary is provided taking into consideration the fact that the learners
are still developing linguistically and cognitively, and as a result they need help within
their ZPD. The learners produce two drafts, the first being corrected by their partner,
while the latter is rectified by the teacher and finally they present the final text.
The aim of Lesson Five is to improve the students’ writing skills in a lesson
whereby all four skills are integrated replicating, thus, real life (see section 2.5). Rele-
(1993) offering, in this way, valuable assistance to “visual” learners. During listening,
the students are cognitively engaged in an effort to create the discourse type of a recipe
and then they attempt to trace its characteristics in order to assimilate its format. In
terms of error correction, both the good and weak points of the drafts are sought. All the
171
tasks foster autonomous learning and lead students to participate in the process of learn-
ing how-to-learn.
Lesson Six incorporates crosscurricular elements, since the students are given
information about the local History, Geography and Environmental Education in order
to create a travel brochure about their area through the process writing approach. This is
in accordance with one of the requirements of the new curriculum for the English lan-
guage, which demands from students to employ information taken from various sources
in order to develop a written text (see section 4.7). Special leaflets were taken from the
local Prefecture concerning the resorts, the possible activities, archaeological sites, en-
tertainment and shopping, and accommodation of the area the students live in.
formation along with their “interpersonal intelligence”, while working in pairs. Learners
are asked to identify the proper layout of a tourist guide and, in this way, they are en-
couraged to be active participants in the learning process, having, therefore, the oppor-
two vital elements of the philosophy of the new curriculum. Furthermore, they interact
in an appropriate, meaningful and enjoyable environment for young learners. The new
element of this lesson is that both the drafts and the final text are written by pairs in-
stead of individual writers, which is a focal point under the collaboration orientation of
process writing. Moreover, the first draft is corrected by another pair, while the second
In Lesson Seven, the students are required to describe their real or imaginary
pet. They brainstorm ideas to be included in a pet description and negotiate the organi-
sation of the required genre with the aim of improving their inference skills and getting
by a student of their age, is given to them after their first draft, so as to compare and
contrast it with their own text and become able to discriminate between bad and good
other people “after the students have written something of their own, so that the text is
now a resource for further ideas rather than a model for mimicry” (White & Arndt,
1991: 5, 6).
their ideas coherently. The first draft is corrected and modified by the students them-
selves, while they compare it with another text. Their second draft is commented on by
the teacher and the students produce the final product. Only in this way can the students
participate in error treatment and the amelioration of their piece of writing and simulta-
neously develop their “metacognition” (Shorrocks, 1991: 269), which is the ability to
realise and ponder about their thinking and learning process. In this perspective, the stu-
It follows, therefore, that the most substantial contribution of the proposed writ-
ing framework is that it enables the teacher to use supplementary data in order to help
students unravel the process of writing and acquire transferable writing skills.
The educational context in Greece concerning the teaching of English and specifically
the teaching of writing was presented in this chapter of the thesis. The characteristics
and objectives of education globally nowadays were demonstrated with a view to focus-
ing on new trends of curriculum design. The new national curriculum with its crosscur-
ricular orientation was outlined. The individual curriculum for English was presented
with an emphasis on its requirements about the production of the written mode. An ef-
173
fort was made to investigate the appropriateness of the process pedagogy to the underly-
ing philosophy of the curriculum. The previous curriculum was also described, since the
syllabus under discussion in the present thesis was constructed in accordance to its di-
rectives.
The corresponding syllabus was presented and an attempt was made to locate re-
levance and coherence between the curriculum requirements, the aspirations of the ma-
terials designers and syllabus application in classroom. The shortcomings of the sylla-
bus construction and realisation were highlighted concentrating on the teaching of writ-
ing. An alternative framework for the presented syllabus, with the aim of incorporating
the process writing approach so as to improve the learners’ writing abilities, was sug-
gested.
The next chapter will present the methodology of the research, the hypothesis, the
research questions, the participants, the instrumentation and the implementation of the
Chapter 5
Methodology of the research
5.1 Introduction
Chapter 5 of the thesis will describe the context and methodology of the research. The
hypothesis and the research questions to be addressed will be presented and their selec-
tion will be justified. The number and profile of participants will be given and the tools
of the study (i.e. questionnaires, interviews, placement test, entry and exit writing test
oped or tested in a different situation. In this way, the hypothesis is both based on rele-
vant literature and theoretically informed. The main hypothesis of the current thesis
about the ability of the process approach to improve the learners’ writing performance
derives from a vast amount of literature, as was explicitly presented in chapter two and
on a theory of teaching writing and it is informed by the cognitivist, social and expe-
tive, the overall aim of this research is defined as follows: to determine the degree to
which the process approach in writing can help the students of the sixth grade of the
Therefore, the main preoccupation of the present thesis is to approach the fol-
lowing hypothesis:
175
► The process approach to writing helps sixth grade students of the Greek state primary
was deemed significant to formulate specific research questions, so as to plan and con-
Consequently, this study will attempt to verify the application of the above men-
tioned hypothesis and trace its implications. Furthermore, a number of research ques-
tions will be tackled with, which are listed below in order of relevance:
• Will the students of the experimental group of the sixth grade of state primary
schools, who receive process writing tuition, outperform the students of the con-
• Will there be any gender differences, as previous research has suggested? More
specifically, will the girls of the experimental group respond more positively to
• Will the application of process writing positively influence the attitudes and per-
The results of the research will be used to inform teaching practice as the two processes
questions have been articulated, this part of chapter five will indicate how the research
will be operationalised.
176
Having conducted a review of the relevant literature about educational research, the
conclusion has been reached that the present research contains elements of three major
research methods: the experiment, the action research and the case study (Nunan,
In the present context a true experiment is conducted in that a pre- and post-
writing test is employed and careful sampling is applied dividing the subjects into con-
trol and experimental groups, which are compared under controlled conditions. There
are certain independent and dependent variables (i.e. the method of teaching writing, the
students’ performance and attitudes, and gender). More specifically, the writing tuition
is the independent variable and the writing performance as well as the learners’ attitudes
towards writing the dependent ones. Therefore, it can be assumed that if the writing in-
struction is improved, then the students’ writing performance along with their percep-
tions towards writing will be ameliorated too. The variable of gender is also taken into
account in the present thesis, that is, it is explored whether gender affects the students’
reaction to the intervention and their writing competence. The quantitative approach is
followed along with the qualitative one and the results are intended to be conclusive.
There is random assignment of classes as experimental and control rather than assign-
ment of individual subjects. In fact, the students were randomly assigned in these
classes in the first place when they were in the first grade of primary school and re-
There are certain elements of action research in the present research, as there is
a real problem in the classroom concerning the teaching of writing, which must be con-
fronted, and the research is collaborative in the sense that the present researcher is the
teacher of writing and at the same time cooperates with the teachers of the classes. Fur-
177
thermore, it is context-specific, develops reflective practice and links research and class-
room reality.
The characteristics of the case study in our research lie in the fact that detailed
data from various sources are gathered: students’ level, writing lessons, students’ per-
formance and attitudes, students’ gender and teachers’ practices. The aim of relying on
ing on a similar case will be able to correlate his/her decisions to what is described in
the current research. Consequently, there will be an attempt for disseminating the results
yield numerical results and qualitative ones investigating the participants’ perceptions
towards writing has been selected in order to “ensure greater reliability through triangu-
lation” (Hyland, 2002a: 158). The objective was to use more than one method of col-
lecting data in order to ensure a more extensive and balanced research. Furthermore,
exclusive reliance on a single method was avoided, which could affect, bias or even dis-
tort the investigated event. Besides, if the methods contrast, the researcher is more con-
fident about the procedure and results. “If findings are artefacts of method, then the use
of contrasting methods considerably reduces the chances that any consistent findings are
Specifically, the instruments used in the present research are the following:
(1) The Oxford Quick Placement test (2001) administered to identify the level of the 90
(2) An entry writing test to specify the students’ writing performance in the beginning
of the study.
(3) An exit writing test to detect the students’ writing capacity at the end of the research
with a view to tracing any differentiation between the entry and exit point.
(4) Pilot questionnaires to 90 students the year prior to the study in order to check the
(5) Preliminary and final questionnaires provided to the 90 subjects of the present study
to specify their attitudes towards writing and highlight any dissimilarities in the begin-
(6) Seven writing lessons based on the written assignments of the coursebook and the
workbook. During these lessons the control group followed the materials of the course-
The aim was to explore whether the teaching intervention in the experimental group
would differentiate their writing performance and attitudes towards writing in compari-
(7) Interviews with five teachers of English to determine their teaching practices in writ-
These tools will be fully described and justified in sections 5. 6 – 5.10 of the thesis.
The main preoccupations of a research, is its reliability referring to the extent to which
the scores of an instrument are free from errors of measurement and its validity gauging
how far an instrument measures what it has been constructed to measure (Dörnyei,
2003). In other words, the validity of the study investigates if its outcome is generalisa-
ble and applicable to further studies and similar contexts and, on the other hand, the re-
liability explores the consistency of the produced data. Generalisability in research may
179
present writer’s opinion refers to the present study, since its findings can be applied to
the general population exhibiting similar traits. More particularly, the reliability and va-
lidity of each part of instrumentation of the current research will be fully explicated in
5.5 Participants
The focus of this research was placed on the sixth grade learners of the Greek state pri-
mary school, as they already possess enough linguistic background, having received tui-
tion in L2 in the previous three years, to follow a methodology, which will promote
their writing capacity. Furthermore, they have already mastered composing strategies in
Rather than just follow ready-made methods and instructions, while conducting
original. That is, while sampling as well as during other phases of the study, the re-
Seen from this perspective, a selection procedure for the sample was considered
as necessary regarding the spatial boundaries of this research. In order to achieve more
possible. Such an ambitious plan, nevertheless, would be beyond the available resources
for practical reasons such as the amount of time needed, the requirement of the re-
searcher’s presence in every single teaching institution in order to obtain more reliable
data, as well as, difficulty in collecting and analysing the outcomes. An adequate range
of sampling was, consequently, needed which could provide enough data to draw evi-
dential conclusions. A sample of 44 control students and 46 experimental ones was se-
lected, aiming at having enough data to reach viable and transferable conclusions, be-
180
al., 2000) in order to obtain statistical analysis of the data, while 50 participants are
Therefore, the research was conducted in the sixth grade of two state primary
the location and the student population are concerned. Both schools are 1km and a half
away from the town centre. The majority of the students are Greek and a percentage
(8% - 10%) of them belongs to families who have emigrated from the countries of the
former Soviet Union, Albania and Romania. These two schools represent the reality of
the schools in our area, as well as, the vast majority of all Greek state schools, which
have had students of Greek origin and students from immigrant families during the last
seventeen years.
Four mixed proficiency (see 5.5.1) classes participated in the project: two expe-
rimental (44 students) and two control (46 students). One class from each school was
randomly selected as the experimental group, while the other two classes served as con-
trol group. In Greek state schools, the students are allocated in classes alphabetically
identity marking to follow someone’s development and link questionnaires with other
data e.g. codes are given to the participants in order to ensure anonymity and be able to
match various data, at the same time. In this vein, the subjects in the current research
were given a number and a letter according to the group they belonged to - that is E for
experimental or C for control. Thus, the students were given precoded identification
numbers to ensure anonymity and at the same time safeguard matching of response and
respondent and “data linkability” (Dörnyei, 2003: 94). Nevertheless, most of them con-
181
tinued to write their full name on all the documents they produced (i.e. questionnaires,
tests and writing pieces). This is not against the correct practice since Gliksman, Gard-
ner & Smythe (1982; cited in Dörnyei, 2003), advise researchers that if participants in-
sist on writing their name, to explain to them that their identity is needed because we
want to match the original questionnaires with further questionnaires and other data and
Two teachers participated in the research one teaching the experimental and con-
trol classes in one school and the other teaching the two other experimental and control
classes in the second school. Only one of the two colleagues was familiar with the
process writing pedagogy, although she admitted that she did not have time to practise
it, so the researcher had to explain its philosophy to the other teacher. As it would have
taken a lot of time to train the two teachers and the presence of the researcher was re-
quired during the writing lessons so as to monitor the procedure, the researcher decided
to conduct the research by herself to save time and achieve more reliable results. The
two colleagues were present during the writing sessions in their own classes, but it was
the researcher who did the teaching and the research to both the experimental and con-
trol group.
sixth grade of primary schools at A2- level of the Common European Framework of
Reference for Languages (to be referred to as CEFR from now on), which is a useful
tool issued by the Council of Europe in order to provide a common basis for the objec-
tives, content and methods for the teaching of foreign languages. A2- level corresponds
basic user of the foreign language and globally “Can understand sentences and frequent-
182
ly used expressions related to areas of most immediate relevance (e.g. very basic per-
sonal and family information, shopping, local geography, employment). Can communi-
cate in simple and routine tasks requiring a simple and direct exchange of information
on familiar and routine matters. Can describe in simple terms aspects of his/her back-
ground, immediate environment and matters in areas of immediate need” (CEFR, 2001:
24). As far as the overall written production is concerned the following requirements
apply to this level: “A2: I can write short, simple notes and messages relating to matters
in areas of immediate need. I can write a very simple personal letter, for example thank-
In an early effort to define the purposes of using an L2, the Council of Europe
commissioned Van Ek & Trim (1998) to create the specifications of Waystage 1990
level, which were later complemented in CEFR (2001). Waystage 1990 offers indicative
appropriate for learners at this level. It was designed primarily around functions and no-
tions, divided into general and specific. Lexical and grammatical forms were not consi-
dered as a starting point, but they were given the secondary role of tools for conveying
meaning.
sage, claiming that languages are based on an organisation of form and an organisation
of meaning. In this sense, it is evident that a language user should assimilate both forms
plore if it matches the classification of the Pedagogical Institute, as stated in the pre-
vious section (i.e. A2-). Specifically, the students took the reading, vocabulary and
183
grammar sections of the Oxford Quick Placement test (2001), which is a standardised
test, trialled with more than 5.000 students in 20 countries. Two versions were used to
minimise the risk of cheating. The placement test showed that half of the students of
each class belonged to level A1 and the other half to A2 (control group in school num-
ber one: Α1:13 and Α2: 14, experimental group: Α1: 14 and Α2: 13, control group in
school number two: Α1: 12 and Α2: 6 (5 children were borderline) Β1:1, experimental
group Α1: 08 and Α2: 09) confirming the classification of the Pedagogical Institute of
sists mainly of texts with topics which are unfamiliar to children without activating any
to, as prior knowledge in the form of schemata of the world in general or a specific cul-
ture is not mobilised in order to aid comprehenders to process the information. Moreo-
ver, Greek young learners are not familiar with this kind of test, which demands cogni-
tive and inference skills rather than purely linguistic ones (e.g., in version 2, page 2 the
students were asked to decide where they can see the following notice: KEEP IN A
the word ‘cold’ and selected the first option instead of the correct one which was C as
and make an attempt to trace any differentiation and improvement at the exit point of
the study. The content of the writing test was chosen following two criteria: (1) the re-
quirements of the students at this level - A2 Basic user as explicitly expressed in the
Common European Framework - CEFR (2001: 24) “Can communicate in simple and
184
routine tasks requiring a simple and direct exchange of information on familiar and rou-
tine matters” and (2001: 26) “I can write a very simple personal letter”, and (2) the writ-
ing tasks they were asked to perform in their previous coursebook Fun Way English 2
which were constricted to sending a card and writing a letter. As a result, the control and
experimental subjects of the research were required to write a simple letter expressing
their feelings about the beginning of the school year, describing their holidays and ask-
ing about their reader’s holidays (appendix IV). This letter fulfils the expected perform-
ance of a basic user at level A2 and at the same time covers the functions and the lin-
guistic structures (grammar, vocabulary range, spelling and punctuation) the partici-
For the assessment of the writing test, an “assessor-oriented scale” CEFR (2001:
38) was employed to inform the evaluation process. Such scales pinpoint how well the
learners perform and are sometimes negatively worded. Some of them are holistic scales
involving only one descriptor for every level, while others are analytic concentrating on
based on the assessor’s intuition, whereas analytic assessment examines different as-
pects separately having established specific rating criteria for each one of them. In this
sense, an analytic marking scheme was designed, as it provides more detailed informa-
In an attempt to form an appropriate rating scale for the participants of this level,
CEFR was thoroughly investigated. Several parameters and categories were found
which, nevertheless, “are indicative classificatory tools without being obligatory” (ibid
CEFR: 109). Waystage 1990 of Council of Europe (CEFR, 2001: 116) prioritises the
communicative functions and notions and regards forms, both lexical and grammatical
of secondary importance. In the CEFR (2001: 116), though, meaning and form are
185
complementary ways of dealing with language and in this perspective they should both
• Linguistic competence
• Sociolinguistic competence
• Pragmatic competence
2006) was consulted as it grades the written performance of students of the same level,
that is A2. Useful elements were also taken by the criteria used by the KPG (the state
certificate of language proficiency) (Dedrinos, 2007) for assessing B1 level - as the re-
levant requirements for the A1 and A2 level had not been formulated at the time of the
application of the entry writing test - and an effort was made to readjust them for level
A2-.
meaning and form, were selected to be included in the analytic rating scale:
munication of message, (b) fulfillment of required function, and (c) audience awareness.
Criterion 2: Linguistic Appropriateness. The written text was assessed for (a) spelling,
Criterion 3: Pragmatic Competence. The written text was assessed for (a) organisation
An analytic marking scheme was formulated (appendix VI) including all the
grade 10 (representing an excellent written product for this level). The underpinning
philosophy of the current analytic scale is to trace what the learners have achieved ra-
186
ther than what they have done wrong. At this level, the expectations of students’ written
production are not very demanding. The specifications of CEFR (2001) allow for
seriously impede intelligibility are permitted following the CEFR directives, i.e. “uses
some simple grammatical structures correctly, but still systematically makes basic mis-
takes” (2001: 114) and “can write with reasonable phonetic accuracy (but not necessari-
ly fully standard spelling) short words that are in his/her oral vocabulary” (2001: 118).
As a result, misspelling, as well as, minor morphological and grammatical errors are not
students at the end of the study with a view to tracing their performance and investigat-
ing any amelioration of the proficiency of the experimental group as opposed to the con-
trol one.
Both entry and exit writing tests were graded by two properly trained raters, one
being the researcher and the other an experienced fellow teacher, holder of a Master’s
Degree specialising in the teaching and testing of the four skills in English. Both raters
familiarised themselves with the marking scheme (appendix VI), designed by the re-
searcher, in order to apply the predetermined criteria. A high inter-rater reliability was
achieved as it will be explicitly shown in chapter 7 - section 7.3.3. The entry - exit test
reliability is shown in that they are free of errors of measurement as the great inter-rater
reliability clearly indicates. The validity of both entry and exit tests is great, due to the
fact that they measure the students’ writing performance according to the terms desig-
ing, self, peer and teacher correction, purpose, and audience of a written text,
2. their attitude towards specific techniques which can help students improve their
writing, and
More specifically, the target was to explore whether the aforementioned attitudes were
the same at the entry and exit point of the study or if they changed due to the interven-
tion.
The questionnaire was selected as a useful research instrument for many rea-
analysis, it exhibits several advantages. First, it saves time to administer and yields data
in a short period of time with a minimum amount of resources. Second, the results are
controlled by questions providing thus, a lot of precision and clarity. Thirdly, the col-
lected data are amenable to quantification. Moreover, it has the advantage of addressing
A pilot questionnaire (appendix I) was given to 90 students of this age in the two
schools participating in the study and two more schools in May 2007, which is the year
previous to the research. The collected feedback from the administration of this pilot
questionnaire was used to formulate the actual pre-study (appendix II) and post-study
(appendix III) questionnaire, which aspired to spot the students’ original preferences,
needs and expectations from writing in general and a writing session in particular and
trace at the end of the observation period whether their perceptions have been modified
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or remained the same. There were minor alterations to the pilot questionnaire concern-
ing the layout and the wording with the aim of rendering it more reader-friendly.
omissions covering as many aspects as possible (Dörnyei, 2003), (i.e. the process writ-
ing philosophy and the principles employed in the teaching of writing) without being
too long, though. In determining the items scientific knowledge, creativity, common
ended items were chosen involving ready-made response options to choose from by cir-
cling or ticking in the selected box. Their most salient advantage is that coding and ta-
bulation is easy and prevents rater subjectivity. They are suitable for quantitative, statis-
tical analysis because the replies are easily coded and entered into a computer database.
At the same time, these items measure qualitative aspects, that is the respondents’ opi-
nions and beliefs towards writing. Particularly, Yes/No questions and multiple choice
questions, which are easy to answer, were employed. Factual questions were applied,
which “tap divisions in the population being polled” (McDonough & McDonough,
1997: 174). This item was about the sex: male or female. Moreover, ranked items,
which require the informants to rank the alternatives, were used. Finally, scaled ques-
Only two open-ended items were employed, since they are regarded as uneco-
nomical, even though, they give freedom to participants to elaborate on their opinions:
the last item in part two C – giving reason for learning English and part two E – provid-
Some parts of the questionnaire were worded by the researcher: (a) General atti-
tudes towards writing, (b) Attitudes towards specific techniques which can help students
improve their writing, and (c) Part two: D and E – Information about attendance of les-
sons in private language schools. The section referring to attitudes towards teacher cor-
rection and attitudes towards peer correction was based on an idea expressed by Hedge-
cock and Lefkowitz (1994), and the second part - Background information about self-
evaluation and purpose for studying English was based on an idea by Oxford (1990:
282). The same questionnaire was given to students at the end of the study to trace any
changes of stance towards writing. The second part of the entry questionnaire was miss-
ing in the exit questionnaire, as it entailed background information, which did not alter.
The questionnaire was constructed in the students’ mother tongue, since the respondents
are young learners. Then an experienced colleague translated it “back into the original
McDonough’s, 1997: 178). The validity of the questionnaire was checked with the help
of the supervising professors and then it was piloted. After receiving the feedback from
the piloting and validating the items as far as the statistical items are concerned, the ne-
cessary changes were made and the final version was produced.
Reliability:
The internal consistency of the questionnaire was confirmed through the homogeneity
of the various multi-item scales employed (Dörnyei, 2003). In other words, the homo-
geneous items in the different parts verified the internal consistency of the questionnaire
5.9 Interviews
Interviewing is considered as a useful qualitative method in researching writing. In the
present research, the researcher employed structured interviews whose agenda was to-
These structured interviews were used with the two participating teachers and
three other colleagues working in the Greek state primary school to determine their
teaching practice in writing. The teachers were experienced colleagues having worked
for 15–25 years in state primary schools. Three of them have a bachelor, whereas the
These interviews were regarded as effective techniques due to the fact that both
the interviewer and interviewees had the opportunity to clear up all the included points
in a face-to-face discussion. Confidentiality was agreed in the sense that the intervie-
wees’ identity cannot be revealed. The flow of the discussion was gauged by the inter-
These questions involved: (1) teacher training on teaching writing, (2) efficacy
of the school materials to promote writing skills, (3) applied methodology for writing,
(4) the nature of assigned written tasks, (5) preference for preparing the written assign-
ments at school or at home, (6) employed methods of feedback, (7) familiarity with var-
ious marking scales and (8) expectations of student reaction to given feedback.
The interviews (CD) showed that most teachers, unless properly trained during a
Master’s degree course, which specialises in teaching and testing the four skills, test ra-
ther than teach writing. Teachers are not familiar with the “process-approach” and
usually assign the writing tasks of the book as homework depriving, therefore, the stu-
191
dents of the opportunity to collaborate with their teacher and peers. Most teachers be-
lieve that there is not enough time to devote the appropriate attention to writing tasks.
school year, were conducted following the writing assignments of the coursebook and
workbook assigned by the Ministry of Education for this grade at the time of the con-
duct of the research, that is, Fun Way English 3. Two control and two experimental
groups took part in this research following Wallace’s (1998: 160) suggestion that in a
research, whereby a control and an experimental group are involved “some treatment
(e.g. a lesson, a syllabus, new materials, etc.) that is given to the experimental group is
not given to the control group”. Therefore, the experimental group was given specially
written materials created by the researcher under the philosophy of the “process-
approach”, while the control group followed the materials of the coursebook. The idea
is “to seek to discover if one variable influences another by holding other factors con-
stant and varying the treatment given to two groups” (Hyland 2002a: 170). In other
words, the two groups will be assessed at the end of the study to identify which one will
develop better writing ability and adopt positive attitudes towards the process of writ-
ing: the one using the materials assigned by the State or the other employing the spe-
cially developed syllabus (see section 4.11–4.12), which has the “process writing” ap-
proach as its focal point. Both groups were given the same writing task to complete at
the end of each lesson, being allowed the same amount of time. The writing lessons
were presented as the parallel syllabus in 4.12, whereas in this section their implementa-
The first lesson aimed at familiarising students with various text types, their cha-
racteristics, as well as the purpose and audience of writing. The students in the experi-
192
mental group worked in teams. In the beginning there was noise in the classroom, as
they were not used to working in groups in any of their classes, either in English or in
Greek. Then they started to collaborate and managed to find the traits of the different
genres. Some of them wrote them down in English, whereas others wrote them in
Greek. The researcher did not intervene to correct the students’ mistakes. Finally, two
learners, a boy and a girl in the experimental group, volunteered to write down the rules
for the characteristics of various discourse types. In the control group the students just
The second writing lesson followed page 24 of the book Fun Way English 3
(appendix X - writing a letter). The students of the control group were allowed to look
at the model text on page 24 and were given 20 minutes to write a piece of writing like
the first draft of the students in the experimental group. The members of the experimen-
tal group produced two drafts and a final product. Each successive writing was better
than the previous one regarding content, ideas and organisation. Most students showed
progress from the first draft to the final product. Feedback was given to the final prod-
uct by the researcher to both groups. To be more specific, the feedback provided to the
experimental group is analysed in section 4.12. The commentary given to the control
group mostly aimed to highlight good points and focus on recurring errors in order to
A special lesson was prepared for the experimental group, providing them prac-
tice with correction codes. The researcher prepared a correction code based on Pinheiro-
Franco (1996) and Chrysochoos, Chrysochoos & Thompson (2002), (appendix VII),
where there are symbols, their meaning and examples. After explaining the code to the
students, the teacher provided two texts with correction symbols for the students to find
out the mistakes and correct them. In the third text, the students were requested to spot
193
the errors and mark them with the equivalent symbols, so as to be ready to apply this
procedure when trying to correct their partners’ writings. Most of the students did not
find any serious difficulty in identifying the errors, which was a surprise to the re-
searcher, as it was believed that it would be quite hard for the learners, since it was the
first time they dealt with a correction code. As was expected, the weak students certain-
The third writing lesson followed page 43 of the book (appendix X - a funny ac-
cident). The students of the control group were allowed 20 minutes to write their text,
like the students in the experimental group. The students were allowed to look at the
model text at page 39 and 42 as well as the instructions and questions on page 43 of the
book. The students of the experimental group produced two drafts and a final product.
Each successive writing was better than the previous one concerning verb tense, gram-
mar and development of ideas (correction code). Most students showed progress from
the first draft to the final product. The lesson was crosscurricular complying with the
main orientation of the new curriculum. A student brought information about comedy
The fourth writing lesson followed page 50 of the book (appendix X - a story
with pictures). Both groups wrote a story based on a series of pictures. The students of
the experimental group produced two drafts before their final product exhibiting im-
provement as far as verb tense, grammar and development of ideas are concerned. This
was the first writing lesson where peer correction was implemented in the first draft,
whereas the second draft was corrected by the teacher. The majority of the students ma-
naged to spot the mistakes and write the equivalent symbols above. The weak students
could not trace the errors, so their partner had to cooperate with another student during
194
this phase. The students benefited from peer correction but they benefited more from
The fifth writing lesson followed page 63 of the book (appendix X - a recipe),
involving both groups in producing a recipe. The experimental group presented two
drafts and a final piece of writing whereby the first draft was corrected by peers and the
The sixth writing lesson followed page 70 of the book (a travel brochure). The
teacher gave extra information to the control group about the local area in order to pro-
vide them with equal opportunities with the members of the experimental group. The
learners in the experimental group were provided with brochures about this area, issued
by the local Prefecture, in order to draw useful elements for their own travel brochure.
They worked in pairs, which is considered as an important element in the “process writ-
ing” approach. Each pair produced two drafts and a final product. The pairs corrected
each other’s first draft, while the teacher commented on the second draft. Each piece of
writing was better than the previous, regarding organisation, style, vocabulary choice,
and development of ideas following the administered correction code. Most pairs
The seventh writing lesson followed page 81 of the book about animals and page
12 (appendix X) of the workbook about their real or imaginary pet. It demanded from
both groups the description of their favourite animal/pet. The students of the experimen-
tal group produced two drafts and a final writing. The first draft was corrected by the
students themselves, whereas the second one was examined by the teacher. The correc-
tion procedure in each writing lesson focused on different kinds of mistakes like spell-
sis and research questions were presented along with a justification for their selection.
The participating students were presented and their level was described. The cooperat-
ing teachers were introduced and their teaching experience, as well as, the way they
teach writing was shown. The teaching practices of writing of three other colleagues
were explored. The instrumentation of the study (i.e. placement test, exit and entry writ-
ing test, questionnaires, interviews, and writing lessons) was fully described and its re-
liability and validity was discussed. The implementation of the suggested syllabus was
presented.
Chapter 6 will focus on the presentation and analysis of the research data. A sta-
tistical analysis, both qualitative and quantitative, will be given along with a discussion
of whether the hypothesis and research questions of the study have been verified or not.
196
Chapter 6
Results of the research: Presentation and explanation
6.1 Introduction
The results of the research will be discussed in this chapter. An attempt will be made to
present a qualitative evaluation of the students’ writings and the teachers’ practices and
attitudes towards teaching writing. The quantitative analysis of the grades to students’
pre-study and post-study writings and of their answers to the questionnaires will also be
analysed. The purpose of the analysis is not only to provide a detailed presentation of
the data gathered, but more importantly to investigate the relationship between variables
that will aid the formation of meaningful conclusions about the efficacy of the process
writing approach to ameliorate the students’ writing performance and influence their
More specifically, the findings will show whether the original hypothesis and
the secondary research questions (see chapter 5, section 5.2) have been verified, that is,
if the process approach to writing can help the students to improve their writing skills in
English, whether the experimental group will outscore the control one, if the girls will
present more positive results than the boys and finally whether the students’ attitudes
towards writing will remain the same or change due to the impact of the application of
Five teachers, working at various state primary schools, participated in the interviews
(appendix XII- CD), two of whom were the teachers whose classes took part in the re-
search and the other three were colleagues who volunteered to offer their viewpoints, so
197
as to have a greater pool of teaching practices in writing. None of them had received
any special training on teaching writing during their undergraduate studies. This va-
cuum was compensated either at postgraduate studies or seminars by the school advi-
sors and private publishers. All participants agreed that the existing teaching materials
Only two of them (teachers number 3 and 5) were familiar with the process writ-
ing approach due to the fact that they had attended a Master’s course focusing on the
teaching and testing of the four skills. Of these two teachers only one admitted devoting
time occasionally to do writing assignments at school and as a result, having the oppor-
tunity to teach the students the process of writing. She said that during writing she gave
feedback both on meaning and form to students through employing both teacher and
peer feedback. The other Master’s degree holder said that, although she was familiar
with the process writing pedagogy, she could not find enough time to practise writing at
school, so she usually requested that her students prepare the writing tasks at home.
Both of them provided students with useful guidance in writing assignments even
though the written texts were required to be prepared at home. Specifically, they tried to
brainstorm relevant ideas, highlight the intended audience and trace the characteristics
The other three colleagues (teachers number 1, 2 and 4), who were not familiar
with the process writing paradigm, informed the researcher that they assigned writing as
homework without offering the students the opportunity to participate actively in the
The pre-writing aid administered to students was as follows: (1) they encouraged the
students to follow the organisation of the model text in the book by reproducing its
layout rather than trying to explore and assimilate its charactertics, (2) they explained
198
the instructions, and (3) they offered useful vocabulary. It is obvious that in this stage
the students were guided into writing instead of being facilitated to discover knowledge
structural organisation of the written texts and corrected the errors themselves without
employing other kinds of feedback, such as self- or peer-correction. This attitude re-
flects the predominantly existing reality in Greek state schools concerning writing.
Writing is either neglected or assigned as homework with the teachers providing feed-
back, which is usually ignored by the students, since it is not a starting point for confe-
rencing between the teacher and the learners. Consequently, writing is tested rather than
taught without enabling the students to collaborate with their classmates and teacher, to
experiment with ideas, revise and redraft their text so as to ameliorate it and finally to
While the results of the entry and exit writings will be presented after their numerical
grades are statistically analysed, some observations about the qualitative aspect of the
aforementioned writings as well as some of the interim pieces of writing can be pre-
sented here. This discussion will show that the experimental group outperformed the
control one in the textual, ideational and organisational level of the writings.
For the sake of the presentation of the results, it should be mentioned that all the stu-
dents were assigned a code number and a letter - either ‘E’ if they belonged to the expe-
rimental group or ‘C’ if they were members of the control group. It must also be hig-
hlighted that the learners’ writings, which are included in the present discussion, are in-
An entry and an exit writing test (appendix IV, V) concerning an informal letter
to a cousin both exhibiting a similar topic and difficulty level were administered to the
students.
You are Dimitris. You live in Katerini. This is the beginning of the school year. Send a
letter to your cousin George who lives in Boston with his family.
Say: How you are and how you feel about the beginning of the school year.
Where you went for holidays and what you did there.
Start and finish your letter appropriately and at the end of your letter add something you
have forgotten.
As can be easily seen from the aforementioned rubrics of the entry test, there are four
1. How Dimitris is and how he feels about the beginnning of the school year.
4. The letter begins with the address and Dear George, and finishes with Love,
All the above parts were underlined in the instructions of the test in order to guide the
students.
You are Dimitris. You live in Katerini. Your cousin George, who does not speak Greek
well, lives in Boston with his family. This is the end of the school year. Send a letter to
Write: How you are and how you feel about the end of the school year.
Where you will go for holidays and what you will do there.
Start and finish your letter appropriately and at the end of your letter add something you
have forgotten.
Some of these pieces of writing, corresponding to the entry test and the exit test
respectively for each group, will be discussed here, in relation to the marking scheme,
which was designed by the researcher (appendix VI), in order to trace any differences
and test the efficacy of the intervention. More specifically, the writings of one experi-
mental and one control group student from level A1 and level A2 will be presented ex-
Level A1
Experimental group
Entry text
15-10-07
16 Aggeli Gatsiou
T.K. 60100
You live in Katerini. This is the beginning of the school year. Sand a letter to your
cousin George who lives in Boston with his family.
201
I am a well and I thane well about the beginning of the school year. Go to went
Θάσος. We eat fishs and we play volleyball, the boys play football.
How are his summer holidays? I went to with his family?
Love
Katerina
P.S. I went for your letter.
Exit text
Greece
16 Ageli Gatsiou
Katerini 60100
21/5/08
Dear George
Hi, how are you and how you feel about the end the school? I am very good and I am
happy because end the school.
We will go summer holidays to Paros. We will eat ice-cream and we will go every day
to the beach.
Where will you go for summer holidays?
Love Dimitris
P.S. You will go here will play with my friends and stend your photos.
In the first text, the student communicated successfully only one part of the mes-
sage, while she partly attempted the others (i.e. she signs off using her name instead of
Dimitris). In most of the parts, the student copies the instructions, whereas the spelling,
grammar and vocabulary errors render parts of the text difficult to understand (i.e. the
postscript).
In the final text, on the other hand, all the aspects, that is Communicative Com-
addressed. There is a fairly good organisation of ideas with only a few problematic
grammatical and lexical structures, which partly affect intelligibility (i.e. postscript). On
the whole, the second text is far better than the first one.
202
Control group
►Case two Student 64 C - Level A1
Entry text
15-10-07
Dear George
Thank for you letter
How are you I’m fine
Have got new friends. You’re good stiuden. Go football. Play computer. Watch TV. I
watch the Satarday has got the tv at four o’clock Mega Sumusu. You watch I watch
wvatch basketball in Boston.
How is Boston is beautiful
Im wainting for you letter
Love
Dimitris
P C I go in Igoumenitsa. and I have a new bike
Final text
16-5-08
Dear George I am a cousin the Katerine in Greece I will a go Santorine will, go and
you will go? How you are in Boston . In Katerine is a very good has got a very good
days has got hot and very people go a beach and do sunbuth and drink kafe, orange
juice, lemon, juice, melon juice, evry juice, carrot juice and eat shrips, fish. The center
have got very people very people go a Net café a cafe a fast food a shop a supermarket
The man go a stadium a cafe and drink kafe, freddo and orange juice, jerry juice, lemon
juice melon juice and eat hampurger, potaetos, tomatoes.
In this case the first writing is very weak. The topic is unsuccessfully attempted,
the ordering of ideas is poor, the text is mostly incoherent and the cohesion is seriously
grammar and vocabulary errors are so frequent that a few parts of the text are unintellig-
ible.
203
Even though the second text is longer, it is weaker than the first one presenting
all the above mentioned shortcomings, as well as being besides the point, since the au-
thor describes his hometown rather than present his holidays. Furthermore, the layout of
an informal letter is not followed (i.e. Love Dimitris and P.S.) although it is included in
Level A2
Experimental group
►Case three Student 53 E - Level A2
Entry text
15-10-07
Dear George
How are you in boston? Are you OK? Here in Katerini weare all OK but the school
year is beginning. How are you feeling?. Did you go for holidays? I go for holidays
in Mykonos . It was really nice. I was swimming in the morning then I go for fishing
with my father. How about your summer holidays? I hope see you soon. Whith love Alex
(his surname- not to be provided for anonymity reasons).
Katerini 60100
P.D
I’m writing for your letter. And your dog isn’t in life
Final text
60100
Greece
Katerini
19 Pythagora
Dear George
204
I’m really fine and very very happy because the scools will end at two weeks. but I’ll
loose my friends and that’s something bad maybe very bad. If we go for holidays we’ll
go to germany with my family. There I have my cousins. I’ll play ther with them. What
will you do on your summer holidays? Please write me soon.
Love
Dimitris
P.S. If you want come in Greece
In the first piece of writing the three parts are communicated, whereas the fourth
is partly attempted (i.e. there is no address) and partly incorrect (that is, he signs off
with his own name and surname instead of using the name given in the rubrics. More-
over the postscript is incoherent). There is a fairly good organisation of ideas and the
text is generally coherent. There are a few problematic grammatical structures - wrong
use of tenses.
The second text far exceeds the first one in structural organisation, communica-
More specifically, all four parts of the message are adequately introduced, the ideas are
well-organised creating a coherent text with correct cohesive devices. There are some
structural errors (i.e. loose, come in Greece), which do not affect the meaning, though.
Control group
Entry text
35 Xandou St.
Dear George,
I’m sick. I feel happy because I see my friends. in school I went from holidays in
Xalkidiki. There I went to swim, ate many ice-creams and bote souvenirs. There I lived
two weeks.
205
Were were you went in summer? Haved fun? What you did there? What do their
parents?
Love
Dimitris
P.S. In my holidays I went in Patra, Sparty and in Athens.
Final text
Xanthou 35
T.K. 60100
20/5/08
Dear George,
How are you? I’m fine and happy, because is the last week. I play all day and go out
with my friend.
I’ll go with my syster and my parents to Corfu. I’ll take with me lots of money I’ll go
swimming, I’ll play beach volleyball, football and basketball. I’ll travel by fery. I’ll go
shopping all day. I’ll eat out with my parents and my sister. That’s all for me.
Where you will go for holidays? Will you go to island? I wish you to be happy and
excited.
Love
Christos
In the first piece of writing, two parts of the message are adequately communi-
cated, whereas the others are unsuccessfully attempted (i.e. the postscript is correct but
irrelevant, since in the main text the student mentioned having gone to Chalkidiki on
holidays and then in the postscript three other holiday destinations are mentioned). The
ideas are disorganised, although the text is generally coherent. Furthermore, there are
The final text is greatly improved. Three parts of the message are explicitly
communicated and one is partly unattempted (i.e. there is no postscript) and partly in-
correct in that he signs off with his own name rather than the one given in the instruc-
tions. There are some spelling errors with no impact on meaning, and in grammar
The brief analysis of the texts in this section shows that in both levels A1 and
A2, although some control students displayed remarkable improvement (case four),
most of them (e.g. case two) exhibited similar performance both at the entry and exit
text, as no special guidance was given to them on how to improve their writing skills by
focusing on the process of writing. On the other hand, the experimental group members
have been trained to read the rubrics carefully, follow the task specifications, try to or-
ganise and reorganise their ideas, be careful while correcting their errors, and, as a re-
sult, they are able to present better texts than the control group participants.
research, this section will concentrate on the students’ writings in two lessons with a
view to comparing and contrasting the texts produced by the members of the two
groups.
Level A2
Experimental group
►Case one Student 33 E - Level A2
First draft
My pet’s name is “Mermedia”. She is a fish girl and I have bought her when I was fife
years old. Mermedia is bluck and a little fat. She eat food for fish and she leaves in a
beautiful bowl with clean water and wonderful water-plant. But every Saturday I put
her bowl in a cupboard, ’cause my cousin is visit us with her cat. This kitty is brown
with white and he has green eyes. Her name is Fisarionas and he always, when he is
coming, he is break a doll of my collections with my dolls. I love Fisarion and we have
fun together as and with Mermedia.
207
It is more than obvious that the student had the chance to draft and redraft the
text improving it in all aspects, that is, ideational, organisational and structural and fur-
thermore the opportunity arose to change the content of the first draft. In the first at-
tempt, a fish was described as a pet, whereas in the second draft the focus shifted and a
horse was described. This is in compliance with White & Arndt’s (1991) tenet that, al-
though students may start with a general organisational plan, they have to readjust their
original arrangement as new ideas arise during the course of composing. Stated differ-
ideas and content, rather than a procedure whereby the ideational and structural layout is
“a preliminary and finite stage” (ibid: 78). This shows that far from numbing the stu-
dents’ initiative and modelling their thought, as some critics of the process writing ap-
proach claimed (section 2.6.3 of the present thesis), it boosts their resourcefulness.
208
Since the control group students wrote only the final product, without being able
to write and rewrite their text, this student presented the above piece of writing and was
not given the opportunity to reformulate and ameliorate its shortcomings through peer
Level A1
Experimental group
The monkeys were wore the hats and the man stood up and started shouting and they
started shouting too. After he scratched head and monkeys scahed head too. Next the
man threw his hat and finaly the monkeys started the hats.
Control group
Both student 46 E and 10 C presented a weak text concerning the use of tenses,
sequencing devices and presentation of ideas. Only student 46 E, though, had the oppor-
tunity to improve the piece of writing through multiple drafting, whereas student 6 C
produced only one final product and could not benefit from peer and teacher correction
which is far from being comprehensive. The approach followed in this analysis focused
210
on the strengths and weaknesses of the written texts and delved into their improvement
either between the entry and exit point of the study or at separate writing lessons with a
view to examining whether this amelioration or lack thereof was connected to the appli-
The statistical analysis was conducted employing the SPSS 15.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago,
IL) and a p-value < 0.05 was considered as significant. Various descriptive and inferen-
tial tests were used (Dörnyei 2003: 114, 115). Specifically, extensive use was made of
the following tools: paired t-test, independent samples t-test, repeated measures
More specifically, the independent samples t-test was employed to measure the
grades and attitudes of both the control and experimental group at the entry and exit
point of the study. The paired t-test was used to determine if there is a significant differ-
ence between the average values of the attitudes towards certain aspects of writing of
either the control or the experimental group (within group comparison) both at the be-
ginning and the end of the intervention. ANOVA tests gauged the mean scores of the
experimental and control group regarding gender and group prior to and after the re-
pre- and post- writing test. Finally, the chi-square tests defined the statistical signific-
ance or lack thereof of the answers of both groups to certain attitudes towards writing
Table 1 indicates that no statistical significance was detected between the experimental
and control group in the beginning of the study, therefore, it can be easily concluded
that the two sample groups are homogenous presenting equal writing performance
A t-test was computed to test for differences in grades between male and female
participants at the entry point of the research. The mean score of the girls is 5.45 and for
the boys 3.85 irrespective of the group they belong to (Table 2). Since significance is
0.007, and therefore p< 0.01, it can be deduced that the difference in performance be-
Table 3 presents both gender and group regarding the mean score of the grades
showing that both parameters are statistically important influencing the performance. In
the control group the boys provided a mean score of 3.54 in the beginning of the study
and 3.85 at the end. The girls attained 5.26 in the entry test, while they reached the
mean of 5.50 at the exit. This leads us to the conclusion that female students of the con-
trol group were better in the beginning and retained this proportion of superiority until
the end of the study as compared to male students but neither sex of the control group
Table 3 Two-way ANOVA results for the mean scores of the grades regarding gender and
212
group
95% Confidence
Interval
GROUP GENDER RATERS N Mean SD
Lower Upper
Bound Bound
On the other hand, it is more than clear, judging from the results, that the expe-
rimental group enhanced their writing performance. The results show that there is a sig-
nificant improvement in that the boys from a mean score of 4.39 reached 5.87, while the
girls started with a mean score of 5.60 to result in 6.92. Consequently, both the girls and
the boys yielded a substantial improvement, which verifies the first research question as
If the girls’ and boys’ attainment is compared, it can be deduced that in both the
control and the experimental group the female students were better at the starting point
and remained better at the final point of the study. What is worth noticing is that there is
an inconsistency here. In concordance with the second research question that the girls of
the experimental group would present better results than the boys of the same group
(section 5.2), the girls indeed attained higher mean grades. On the other hand, though,
they had a similar percentage increase with the boys showing that the improvement be-
tween the two sexes had a parallel rise, therefore, the two sexes of the experimental
213
group seem to have benefited equally from the intervention. This finding runs counter to
the second research question that girls would respond more positively and in general it
is contrary to most bank of research between the two genders. The following two fig-
Gender
------ Male
Female
Figure 7 Comparison of pre- and post- scores of the two genders of the control group
Gender
------ Male
Female
Figure 8 Comparison of pre- and post- scores of the two genders of the experimental
group
214
Table 4 clearly shows that, whereas the control group increased their perfor-
mance very little, the experimental one had a substantial rise from a mean score. The
final mean score of the control group reflects lack of important rise of achievement,
while the mean score of the experimental group indicates a significant amelioration.
Moreover, it is remarkable to state that fifteen students from the forty-four participants
their performance at the entry test and the exit test, whereas only three out of the forty-
six members of the control group reached the same improvement. These data show that
the intervention in the experimental group was successful and supports the first research
question of this thesis that having received process writing tuition, the students of the
experimental group of the sixth form of state primary schools will outperform the stu-
dents of the control group as far as the overall writing ability in English is concerned.
Table 4 Two-way ANOVA results for pre- and post-test mean scores of the experimental and
control group regardless of gender
GROUP SCORES MEAN SD N
PRE 4.34 2.60 45
CONTROL
POST 4.62 2.67 45
PRE 5.08 2.99 44
EXPERIMENTAL
POST 6.47 3.04 44
Table 5 illustrates that both the gender and the group affect the students’ output.
For the two parameters the difference was significant at 0.017 level (gender) and 0.049
level (group). No statistical significance was found for the interaction between gender
and group, which means that gender and group have affected the final score as distinct
variables.
Table 5 Two-way ANOVA results for the post- scores by gender and group (Tests of Between-
Subjects Effects)
F p
GENDER (main effect) 5.88 0.017 < 0.05
GROUP (main effect) 3.98 0.049 < 0.05
215
can be seen in Table 6, a very high coefficient magnitude was established for the expe-
rimental group both at the pre-study (0.982 at p<0.01) and post-study test (0.979 at
p<0.01). The correlation was also highly significant for the control group (0.983, p<0.01
Table 6 Raters’ agreement for pre-study and post-study test of the experimental and control
group
Experimental Control
0.982(**) 0.983(**)
PRE RATER
P (2-tailed) N P (2-tailed) N
Pearson Correlation
0.000 44 0.000 46
0.979(**) 0.978(**)
POST RATER
P (2-tailed) N P (2-tailed) N
Pearson Correlation
0.000 44 0.000 45
p<0.01 level (2-tailed)
agreement. Since their correlation is at around 0.98 in all four cases, which is very close
to 1, this proves that they reached an extremely high agreement, yielding thus a high
inter-rater reliability and validating the employed marking scheme (appendix VI).
In this section, the results collected from the analysis of the answers to the various items
of the questionnaire will be discussed. This questionnaire (appendix II) is divided into
five parts:
(2) Attitudes towards specific techniques which can help students improve their writing.
(5) Background information about self-evaluation, purpose for studying English and
For the sake of our discussion, it should be clarified that the Likert scale was used and
the items of the questionnaire were coded as follows: always- 1, usually- 2, sometimes-
3, rarely- 4, never- 5, which means that the lower the mean score, the more the students
tionnaire (appendix II) in the beginning of the study. An independent samples t-test was
employed to trace any differences of opinion between the two groups before the study
started. It is more than evident that both teams provided similar answers and stances to-
wards writing, their only statistically significant differentiation being in statements three
and statement eleven. The outcome of this part corroborates that the two groups were
homogeneous in the beginning of the research as far as their attitudes towards writing
are concerned. To be more specific they admitted being able to generate ideas about
various topics and being in need of help so as to spot their mistakes in their text. On the
other hand, they were against cooperation for the improvement of their writing.
Table 7 General attitudes towards writing of the experimental and control group prior to the
study
GROUP CODE: E for ΕXPERIMENTAL AND C for CONTROL
) the phrase which shows what you
Tick (
Group N Mean SD p
think about each sentence
E 44 2.57 .974
1. I like writing in my English class .299
C 46 2.37 .826
3
This codification was applied in all the parts of the questionnaire which employ the Lickert scale.
217
Table 8 presents the participants’ responses towards the same topics at the final
point of the study. An independent samples t-test was computed to find out any diffe-
rentiation of attitudes between the two groups at the end of the research. A statistical
difference arose in twelve (2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15) out of the fifteen items.
A close examination of the results implies that, while the control group remained almost
in the same levels (items 3, 4, 7, 14), the experimental group changed their stances dras-
tically in almost all items except 1, 2 and 4. This finding proves that the experimental
participants’ opinion towards writing was affected by the application of the process
writing component and it substantiates the third research question as presented in sec-
218
tion 5.2, which is: the application of process writing will influence the attitudes and per-
ceptions towards writing of the students of the experimental group. Specifically, the ex-
perimental group participants feel more confident about their ability to write good texts
in English, elicit relevant ideas about a topic and present better texts in future written
help provided by (a) the teacher in pre-, while-, and post-writing, and (b) the partner’s
feedback.
Table 8: General attitudes towards writing of the experimental and control group after the
study
) the phrase which shows what you
Tick (
Group N Mean SD p
think about each sentence
E 44 2.32 1.095
1. I like writing in my English class .493
C 46 2.48 1.110
E 43 2.05 .872
2. I can write good texts in English .051
C 46 2.39 .774
E 44 2.05 .914
3. I can think of ideas about a topic easily .021
C 44 2.50 .902
E 44 1.32 .601
4. I can write better if the topic is familiar to me .130
C 46 1.52 .658
5. I know how to organise my texts (paragraph E 44 1.95 .888
.015
sequencing, logical development etc.) C 46 2.39 .774
E 44 2.34 1.098
6. I can write alone (without help) .179
C 45 2.02 1.118
E 44 1.34 .713
7. I want my teacher to help me when I write .000
C 46 3.78 .841
8. I need help in order to come up with relevant E 44 1.50 .762
.000
ideas C 45 3.98 .866
9. I need help before writing (with the topic, or- E 43 1.26 .621
.000
ganisation) C 46 4.07 1.041
10. I need help when writing to organise my ideas E 44 1.41 .583
.000
and my text C 46 4.07 1.041
11. I need help after I finish writing to spot my E 44 1.48 .902
.000
mistakes C 46 2.46 .912
12. I can spot my mistakes if the teacher gives us a E 44 1.66 .861
.000
code for error correction C 46 4.65 .900
13. I feel embarrassed when my classmates know E 44 4.50 .849
.000
my mistakes C 46 1.74 1.255
14. I would like my partner to help me to correct E 44 1.61 .689
.000
my mistakes and organise my text C 46 4.48 .863
15. If I get help in one lesson, I know how to do a E 44 1.14 .462
.000
better piece of writing next time C 46 2.43 .655
219
B. 1 Responses of the experimental group in the beginning and the end of the research
While the previous section compared and contrasted the answers of the two groups in
both the entry and exit point of the study with a view to delving into the homogeneity of
the samples in the beginning of the study and finding any change in attitude at the end
of the research, this part will examine both groups separately in order to measure possi-
Table 9 shows that the impact of the application of process writing resulted in an
overwhelming alteration of the experimental subjects’ opinion towards writing and the
main principles of the process paradigm, such as task environment (item 4), teacher and
peer collaboration (items 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14) and teacher feedback (items 7, 12).
Moreover, they became more confident about their ability to write good texts in English
and come up with relevant ideas more easily (items 2, 3). The paired t-test yielded sta-
tistically significant results in 13 out of 15 items. A striking finding was item 6 whereby
they exhibited a similar attitude both in the beginning and the end of the study. This cla-
rifies that when asked if they can write alone, they felt confident but when the questions
about the given aid became more specific, they realised the importance of the assistance
Table 9 General attitudes towards writing of the experimental group prior to and after the study
) the phrase which shows what you think about
Tick (
N Mean SD p
each sentence
Pre- I like writing in my English class 44 2.57 .974
1 .140
Post- I like writing in my English class 44 2.32 1.095
B.2 Responses of the control group in the beginning and the end of the research
On the other hand, Table 10 shows that the attitudes of the control group presented sta-
tistically significant changes for about half the items of the questionnaire, namely nine
of the fifteen all of which were also significant for the experimental group. What is
worth noticing, nevertheless, is that in most items, which exhibited statistical signifi-
cance, instead of improving their attitude towards writing the control group members
became less confident towards the principles of writing, that is, task environment (item
3), and teacher and partner collaboration (items 8, 9, 10, 12, 13 and 15). Specifically,
they do not value teacher and peer cooperation and feel embarrassed if exposed to part-
ner commentary.
Table 10 General attitudes towards writing of the control group prior to and after the study
) the phrase which shows what you think about
Tick (
each sentence N Mean SD p
6.3.4.2 Attitudes towards specific techniques which can help students improve their
writing
A. Comparison between the experimental and control group before the study - question-
naire (appendix II)4
In this section, all the tables will be commented on. The tables which exhibit statistical-
ly significant differences will be presented, while all the other ones with non-
Table 11.5 shows the first differentiation between the two groups at 0.008 level
with the control group favouring the importance of using linking words in order to pre-
sent a well-organised text while the experimental group, even though they yielded a
very high percentage (72,7%), lagged behind the one of the control group by 20%.
4
This part of the questionnaire was administered to the students at the beginning and the end of the study.
The answers to the first part are presented in tables 11.1 - 11.12 while the results of the final part are ex-
hibited in tables 12.1 - 12.12.
223
A variation at 0.028 level arose in statement number 8 (Table 11.8), whereby the
vast majority of the experimental group (80.5%) prioritised their participation in the
correction of their piece of writing, while only half of the control subjects regarded this
No statistical significance arose between the two groups in the other tables (ap-
pendix VIII):
93,2% of the experimental group and 84,8% of the control group reporting favourable
disposition towards the opinion that familiarisation with a text genre can aid students
tance of task environment, that is, the audience and purpose of writing in Tables 11.2
and 11.3.
The low proportion of both teams points to the fact that neither group prioritises
the importance of writing down relevant ideas either alone or as a whole class before
224
starting their text (Table 11.4). This may indicate that they believe that there is not
A meagre proportion of both groups (Table 11.6) favoured the idea of drafting
and redrafting, which is a totally new concept for them, producing thus similar distribu-
tion of responses.
High endorsement ratings were given by both groups to the belief that it is a
good procedure to try and correct their piece of writing as soon as they finish (Table
11.7) and that they can learn through their errors (Table 11.9).
ing minimal approval to the importance of peer correction, a fact reflecting the pre-
dominant teaching practice in the Greek school where children are not used to being ex-
The respondents of both teams rated very high the role of the teacher as an om-
niscient judge who must correct all the mistakes (Table 11.11), an attitude long-
Finally, both groups in a high proportion agree on the necessity to use a dictio-
It is apparent from the analysis in this section that the attitudes of the two groups
are similar in all items apart from two (item 5 and 8), leading us to the conclusion that
the perceptions of the two groups about certain techniques, which can aid them to im-
prove their skills, were similar in the beginning of the study. We will now proceed to
examine whether these attitudes remained the same at the end of the study.
B. Comparison between the experimental and control group after the study
At the end of the study the groups yielded the following findings:
225
In table 12.4 a great difference at 0.000 level arose between the two groups. Al-
though the control group yielded 19.6% in favour of brainstorming - a percentage al-
most identical to their original 21.7%, the percentage of the experimental group soared
from 34.1% (Table 11.4) to 97.7% reaching thus almost unanimous endorsement. This
result reflects the importance of the impact of brainstorming and experimentation with
ideas, which was part of the writing lessons under the process writing philosophy that
Table 12.4 Brainstorm some ideas alone or with the whole class before writing
χ2
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL
2
Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea χ (1)=
N % N % N % N % N % N % 56.319,
p=0.000
43 97.7 1 2.3 9 19.6 37 80.4 52 57.8 38 42.2 p<0.001
As was expected in the third research question, the experimental group changed
opinion in the end of the research, prioritising drafting, redrafting and revising, because
these techniques were practised during the writing lessons. On the other hand, the con-
trol group percentage fell from 21.7% (Table 11.6) to 8.7% (Table 12.6), since they are
totally unaware of the terms of drafting and redrafting. The computed chi-square test
Table 12.6 Draft and redraft the text and try to improve it before presenting the final product
χ2
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL
Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea χ2(1)=
N % N % N % N % N % N % 71.446,
p=0.000
43 97.7 1 2.3 4 8.7 42 91.3 47 52.2 43 47.8 p<0.001
Table 12.8 displays an interesting finding. Even though there was a statistical
difference of 0.028 in the beginning, this diversity rose to 0.000 as the percentage span
between the two groups became wider. This result was more than expected by the re-
226
searcher due to the fact that the experimental group subjects were actively involved in
The next item corroborates the influence of process writing on the experimental
their partners, whereas the control group retained (4.3% - Table 12.10) the concept of
text ownership in a very limited scope admitting that they prefer not to share their piece
of writing with their partner. Therefore, the statistical significance reached 0.000.
Table 12.10 The contribution of one’s partner to the correction of one’s errors
χ2
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL
2
Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea χ (1)=
N % N % N % N % N % N % 82.344,
p=0.000
44 100 0 0.0 2 4.3 44 95.7 46 51.1 44 48.9 p<0.001
In the next item, the experimental group changed their stance drastically con-
cerning teacher correction. Having realised during the intervention that the teacher
correction of all errors as a bad practice. The control group, on the other hand, raised
their percentage from 89.1% (Table 11.11) to 97.8% (Table 12.11), creating thus a sta-
Finally, even though there was no differentiation in the last item in the begin-
ning of the research, the variation again reached the highest level of 0.000 (Table 12.
12) with all the experimental group students admitting the importance of looking up an
unknown word in a dictionary, while the control group ones downgraded the use of dic-
tionaries in classroom. The obvious explanation for this finding is the fact that the ex-
perimental group students could have access to reference sources while writing, whereas
these materials were not available for the control group members as is the norm in the
Greek state school reality. It is worth mentioning, however, that the researcher provided
help with unknown words to the control group so as to offer equal treatment to both
groups.
agreeing that the genre, the audience and the purpose are important elements to be taken
The low differentiation (experimental 72.7% and control 93.5% - Table 11.5)
that appeared in item 5 in the original questionnaire was smoothed out in the final ques-
tionnaire with the overwhelming majority of both groups (Table 12.5) underpinning the
importance of a well-organised text. This raises again the importance of the process
writing tuition, which led the experimental group to realise the significance of practising
228
The results in item 7 were similar to those of the original questionnaire (Table
11.7 and Table 12.7) with the overwhelming majority of the two groups admitting the
importance of the attempt to correct their own writing. Similarly, no differentiation (Ta-
ble 12.9) occurred in statement 9 from the original answers (table 11.9).
It is more than apparent that the students’ answers in questionnaire 2 at the end
of the study showed the alteration of the attitudes of the experimental group towards
ous sources while writing, and selective error correction. This finding substantiates the
beginning of the study. An independent samples t-test was computed to examine any
diversity of perceptions between the two groups at the starting point of the study. It be-
came evident that both groups presented similar responses and stances towards teacher
feedback, their only statistically important differentiation arising in item 8. The outcome
of this part clearly highlights that the two groups were homogeneous in the entry point
of the study regarding their attitudes towards teacher treatment of their texts.
Table 13 Attitudes towards teacher correction of the experimental and control group in the be-
ginning of the study
Generally I improve in writing when my
Group N Mean SD p
teacher
1. comments on the content of my writing (i.e. E 44 1.84 .914
.155
ideas, evidence, examples, etc.) C 46 2.17 1.253
2. comments on the organisation of my writ- E 43 2.00 .845
ings(i.e. paragraph sequencing, logical devel- .187
C 46 2.33 1.383
opment, etc.)
3. comments on my writing style (i.e. expres- E 44 2.16 1.055 .780
229
Table 14 shows the subjects’ answers to the same topics at the end of the study.
An independent t-test revealed that, whereas the control group remained almost in the
same levels (items 1, 3, 8, 9) or became more negative towards teacher feedback (items
5, 6, 7, 10), the experimental group altered their attitudes considerably in all statements
tudes prior to the study. Once again, the results of this part of the questionnaire demon-
strates the impact of the employment of the process writing pedagogy on the experimen-
Table 14 Attitudes towards teacher correction of the experimental and control group at the end
of the study
Generally I improve in writing when my
Group N Mean SD p
teacher
1. comments on the content of my writing (i.e. E 44 1.18 .390
.000
ideas, evidence, examples, etc) C 46 2.15 .698
E 44 1.14 .347
2. comments on the organisation of my writ-
ings (i.e. paragraph sequencing, logical devel- .000
C 46 1.96 .729
opment, etc.)
3. comments on my writing style (i.e. expres- E 44 1.20 .594
.000
sion, tone, etc.) C 46 2.09 .865
4. checks my vocabulary (i.e. accurate word E 44 1.20 .462
.000
usage) C 46 1.61 .537
230
B. 1 Responses of the experimental group in the beginning and the end of the research
Sub-section A of this section 6.3.4.3 investigated the responses of the two groups in the
starting and exit point of the study in order to decide if there was homogeneity of atti-
tudes towards teacher correction in the beginning of the research on the one hand, and to
examine any alteration of attitude in the end of the research, on the other hand. Subsec-
tion B will focus on each group separately to measure any alterations of their percep-
tions.
teacher error treatment can be easily seen. This change is statistically important in all
statements indicating that due to the application of the process writing approach the ex-
perimental team expressed their expectations to receive both positive and negative criti-
cism from the teacher regarding the ideational, organisational and structural level of
their writings, and to be given a special code by their instructor in order to attempt to
Table 15 General attitudes towards writing of the experimental group in the beginning and at
the end of the study
B. 2 Responses of the control group in the beginning and the end of the research
Table 16 shows that the control group presented statistically significant variations in
half the items, particularly five out of ten (items 5, 6, 7, 9, 10). What is interesting, nev-
ertheless, is the fact that the mean scores of the answers indicate that only in one item
(9) did they change favourably to teacher feedback focusing on the good points of their
writing. In the other four statements they became more negative to instructor correction
232
concerning feedback based on underlining of the errors without providing the correct
Table 16 General attitudes towards writing of the control group in the beginning and at the end
of the study
Generally I improve in writing when my teacher N Mean SD p
Pre- comments on the content of my writing (i.e. ideas,
46 2.17 1.253
evidence, examples, etc)
1 .901
Post- comments on the content of my writing (i.e.
46 2.15 .698
ideas, evidence, examples, etc)
Pre- comments on the organisation of my essays (i.e.
46 2.33 1.383
paragraph sequencing, logical development, etc.)
2 .091
Post- comments on the organisation of my essays (i.e.
46 1.96 .729
paragraph sequencing, logical development, etc.)
Pre- comments on my writing style (i.e. expression,
45 2.09 1.294
tone, etc.)
3 1.000
Post- comments on my writing style (i.e. expression,
45 2.09 .874
tone, etc.)
Pre- checks my vocabulary (i.e. accurate word usage) 46 1.83 .877
4 .077
Post- checks my vocabulary (i.e. accurate word usage) 46 1.61 .537
Pre- highlights grammatical mistakes 45 3.93 1.116
5 .006
Post- highlights grammatical mistakes 45 4.51 .727
Pre- highlights mechanical mistakes (i.e. punctuation,
46 3.93 1.041
spelling, capitalisation, etc.)
6 .022
Post- highlights mechanical mistakes (i.e. punctuation,
46 4.37 .711
spelling, capitalisation, etc.)
Pre- identifies errors with correction symbols 46 3.93 1.041
7 .001
Post- identifies errors with correction symbols 46 4.52 .691
Pre- highlights errors with a red-coloured pen 46 4.33 1.034
8 .290
Post- highlights errors with a red-coloured pen 46 4.52 .836
Pre- comments on the good points of my writing 46 1.52 .983
9 .033
Post- comments on the good points of my writing 46 1.22 .467
Pre- comments on the weak points of my writing 46 4.33 .845
10 .004
Post- comments on the weak points of my writing 46 4.74 .713
the research showing that only one statistically significant response (at 0.038<0.050)
occurred, which concerns the provision of negative comments from a partner (item 10).
233
This difference demonstrates that the control group members were more negatively dis-
posed to a peer offering negative commentary on their writings than their experimental
counterparts. It is worthwhile noticing that both groups were homogenous in the fact
that they were heavily unfavourably disposed to correction originating from a classmate.
In fact, peer correction is a totally new notion in the Greek educational context.
Table 17 Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental and control group at the entry
point of the study
Generally I improve in writing when my
Group N Mean SD p
partner
1. comments on the content of my writing (i.e. E 44 4.05 .834
.533
ideas, evidence, examples, etc.) C 45 4.16 .824
2. comments on the organisation of my writings E 44 4.09 .858
(i.e. paragraph sequencing, logical development, .342
C 46 4.26 .828
etc.)
3. comments on my writing style (i.e. expres- E 44 4.11 .868
.422
sion, tone, etc.) C 45 3.96 .976
4. checks my vocabulary (i.e. accurate word E 44 4.00 .940
1.000
usage) C 46 4.00 1.011
E 43 4.33 .808
5. highlights grammatical mistakes .412
C 46 4.46 .690
6. highlights mechanical mistakes (i.e. punctua- E 43 4.21 .940
.473
tion, spelling, capitalisation, etc.) C 46 4.35 .875
E 43 4.30 .989
7. identifies errors with correction symbols .529
C 45 4.42 .783
E 44 4.30 .930
8. highlights errors with a red-coloured pen .949
C 46 4.28 .958
E 44 2.50 1.067
9. comments on the good points of my writing .537
C 46 2.35 1.251
E 44 4.18 .922
10. comments on the weak points of my writing .038
C 46 4.57 .807
Table 18 shows the respondents’ opinions towards peer feedback at the end of
the research. The employed independent samples t-test presented a considerable diffe-
rentiation at 0.000< 0.050 between the two groups in all items except the ninth where
they responded similarly regarding encouraging commentary by a peer. The results in-
dicated a clear favourable diversion of the experimental group to peer feedback, while
the original aversion of the control group either remained similar (items 1, 2, 6) or was
Table 18: Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental and control group at the exit
point of the study
Generally I improve in writing when my part-
Group N Mean SD p
ner
1. comments on the content of my writing (i.e. E 44 1.48 .731
.000
ideas, evidence, examples, etc.) C 46 4.52 .623
2. comments on the organisation of my writings E 44 1.50 .731
(i.e. paragraph sequencing, logical development, .000
C 46 4.61 .649
etc.)
3. comments on my writing style (i.e. expression, E 44 1.57 .695
.000
tone, etc.) C 46 4.35 .566
4. Α checks my vocabulary (i.e. accurate word E 44 1.59 .757
.000
usage) C 46 4.46 .546
E 43 2.74 .759
5. highlights grammatical mistakes .000
C 46 4.70 .553
6. highlights mechanical mistakes (i.e. punctua- E 44 2.75 .651
.000
tion, spelling, capitalisation, etc.) C 45 4.71 .626
E 44 1.43 .789
7. identifies errors with correction symbols .000
C 46 4.78 .417
E 44 3.23 .711
8. highlights errors with a red-coloured pen .000
C 46 4.85 .363
E 44 1.34 .745
9. comments on the good points of my writing .335
C 46 1.50 .810
E 44 2.00 .863
10. comments on the weak points of my writing .000
C 46 4.89 .315
B. 1 Responses of the experimental group in the beginning and the end of the research
Table 19 compares the original beliefs of the members of the experimental group to
their final perceptions as far as peer correction is concerned. The computed paired t-test
that, although the students were against peer feedback before the study, they were influ-
enced by the process writing component that was incorporated in their syllabus and be-
process philosophy.
Table 19 Attitudes towards peer correction of the experimental group at the entry and the exit
point of the study
B. 2 Responses of the control group in the beginning and the end of the research
Similarly, the answers of the control group presented statistically significant variation at
the entry and exit point of the study in all items as evidenced in table 20. However, it is
easily recognisable that this change in attitude was contrary to the change of the expe-
rimental group. Whereas the experimental group resulted in being in favour of peer cor-
rection, the control group became more opposed to all aspects of peer feedback apart
Table 20 Attitudes towards peer correction of the control group at the entry and exit point of
the study
6.3.4.5 Background information about self-evaluation, purpose for studying English and
attending lessons in private language schools or private lessons at home
This part of the questionnaire (appendix II) was administered only in the beginning of
the research to trace background information about the students’ level, purpose of learn-
ing English, attendance of lessons in private language schools and selection of the place
where they prefer to produce their writings in English. More specifically, they compared
their mastery of English to that of their classmates, they expressed how important they
237
rank the need to learn English, their target of studying English, whether they attend pri-
vate lessons and if so the duration and the class they attend, if they prefer to write by
hand and finally if they want to do their written assignments at home or at school.5
of their knowledge of English as compared to the one of their classmates. The table
clearly shows that the control students rate their knowledge as higher than the experi-
mental group, but the computed chi-square test did not yield any significant difference.
Table 22 questioned the participants about how important they consider the ne-
cessity to learn English. The overwhelming majority of the respondents both experi-
mental and control stated that they believe it is very important to learn English well. No
The students were asked to choose the four most important reasons from a list of
10 reasons why they want to learn English or state any other personal motivation (sec-
5
The tables which present interesting findings will be discussed in this section, whereas the rest of the
tables will be introduced in appendix VIII.
238
ond part- section C (appendix II). The four options which ranked higher were the fol-
lowing: (1) I need it for my future studies, (2) I want to get a certificate (i.e. Lower, Pro-
ficiency), (3) I need it for my future career, and (4) I need it for travelling abroad. From
these preferences number 1, 2 and 4 presented no significant difference between the two
groups, whereas number 3 yielded a significant variation at 0.002 with the control
group outscoring the experimental one by 91.3% versus 63.6%, χ2(1)= 9.960, p.002 -
Table 24 shows that the vast majority of both groups like English without pre-
Table 25 presents that the substantial majority of both groups have been receiv-
ing private tuition in English apart from the lessons in the state school. What is striking
here is the fact that the percentage distribution is similar - 81.8% for the experimental
and 82.6% for the control group and thus, no significant diversity can be found between
the two groups. This substantiates the fact that the difference in performance at the exit
point of the study is due to the intervention applied by the researcher rather than any
from the two groups according to the years of private tuition they have attended, that is
ten experimental students and thirteen control members attended one to three years, and
lasted four to five years. As there is no important statistical difference between the two
groups, this finding shows that both groups start from an equal basis concerning tuition
kind of private tuition the students have received, it contains important data for the
present study. Private tuition is differentiated into private language schools - frontistiria
and private lessons. A sizeable percentage of the control group - 25% have attended pri-
vate lessons, whereby students can receive individualised instruction and therefore ben-
efit more than lessons in a frontistirio where there are groups of students. Only a meagre
minority of the experimental group - 8.3% attended private lessons at home and 2.8%
answered that they have received both kinds of private instruction. The results of this
item are important, since they show that the control group members have received better
private tuition than the experimental ones, thus, one would expect the former to perform
better in writing than the latter. Consequently, any differentiation in performance would
corroborate the importance of the employment of the process writing component with
Table 28 shows that the vast majority of both groups prefer to prepare their writ-
ing assignments at home. This statement provides no statistical difference and yet it is
outstanding, since it mirrors the prevalent practice in writing in the Greek state primary
ration with the teacher and the rest of the class, and the opportunity of being exposed to
The last item of this part requested the students to state which grade they have
attended in private tuition. A Pearson chi-square test was computed to rate the
crosstabulation among the five grades but yielded no significant difference between the
two groups (Table 29). Half of the students of both groups have finished grade A senior
and a large percentage of them - 30.6% experimental and 28.2% control - have attended
institute.gr), grade As corresponds to level A2- and grade Bs to level A2+, that is stu-
dents attending the As grade exhibit the same level with the students of the sixth class
of the state primary school, whereas students attending the Bs grade are half a level
241
higher. Once more, the statistical results show that the students of both groups started
from an equal basis in the beginning of the study and no factors other than the applica-
analysis of the students’ writings and the teachers’ interviews was made. A detailed
quantitative analysis of the grades in the entry and exit writing test was provided along
with an analysis of the raters’ agreement. The results of the questionnaires were dis-
cussed and a comparison of the performance of the boys and girls was provided. A lim-
ited discussion was given during the presentation of the findings, where it was deemed
as appropriate. The obtained data showed that the reaction of the students to the teacher-
designed intervention under the process writing philosophy was positive both in per-
formance and attitudes. An attempt will be made in chapter 7 to further comment on and
interpret the findings, on the one hand, and draw relevant pedagogical implications, on
the other.
242
Chapter 7
Discussion of results
7.1 Introduction
Having presented the results gathered from the qualitative and quantitative analysis of
the research in the previous chapter, this chapter has the following targets: first of all, to
examine whether the hypothesis and research questions of this thesis have been verified
or not and trace plausible explanations for this verification or lack thereof. Second, an
attempt will be made, on the one hand, to interpret the extracted data of the study in de-
tail with reference to the hypothesis and research questions and on the other, to compare
and contrast them to the results of similar studies. Moreover, the pedagogical implica-
tions of the findings will be discussed and relevant recommendations will be made.
a required written assignment and trying to stitch together various sentences and ideas is
not enough to produce a decent piece of writing and at, the same time, enable students
employ the process approach in order to teach learners the procedure which leads to
successful writing. Therefore, the main preoccupation of the present thesis was:
► The process approach to writing helps sixth grade students of the Greek state primary
and 2) to tackle with the research questions that were set from the beginning:
243
• Will the students of the experimental group of the sixth grade of state primary
schools, who receive process writing tuition, outperform the students of the con-
• Will there be any gender differences, as previous research has suggested? More
specifically, will the girls of the experimental group respond more positively to
• Will the application of process writing positively influence the attitudes and per-
The aim of the following sections (7.2.1, 7.2.2, 7.2.3) is to negotiate the applicability
• Will the students of the experimental group of the sixth grade of state primary
schools, who receive process writing tuition, outperform the students of the con-
In the present study, two measures of English language proficiency were employed: the
grade the students obtained in the entry and exit writing test, and the level of the stu-
dents according to a standardised test - Oxford Quick Placement Test. The Oxford
Quick Placement Test confirmed the classification of the students at the level deter-
mined for this grade by the Pedagogical Institute (see section 5.4). The students’ profi-
ciency and improvement was measured through the entry and exit writing test, which is
a concrete criterion in writing examining the exact performance of the same students
throughout the school year. Therefore, the efficacy of the present intervention is deter-
mined through the written attainment of the learners who were the recipients of this spe-
244
cial treatment, resulting, thus, in safe conclusions about the success of this special
treatment.
Similar to Akyel & Kamisli’s (1996) study, the present research used a pre- and
post- test, and student self-evaluation in the beginning and the end through a question-
naire about their strategies and perceptions towards writing. Moreover, both studies em-
ployed a standardised test to detect the subjects’ level, which in both cases corres-
ponded to the expected proficiency of learners at their age. The students following the
process approach spent more time in pre-writing, planning and drafting. The learners
achieved better grades for their final compositions and developed positive attitudes to-
wards writing. Writing in the classroom improved their writing skills in English. They
valued organising ideas into a coherent whole and admitted benefiting from teacher and
peer feedback rather than writing in isolation. The only discrepancy between the two
studies is the fact that in Akyel & Kamisli’s one there was only a limited number of ex-
perimental students.
The findings under discussion are diverse from the ones provided by Gomez et
al., (1996), whereby the experimental groups achieved little gains compared to the con-
trol ones, namely in meaning and productivity. A striking datum in this study was that
the product writing students either outperformed in topic, organisation, meaning, sen-
tence and mechanics or equalled in organisation the process writing ones. A possible
explanation for this discrepancy is the fact that the participants in the Gomez et al.’s ex-
periment were of low proficiency lacking, thus, the necessary linguistic background,
which would enable them to fully capitalise on the process writing approach. Moreover,
this incongruity may be due to the different length of time, due to the fact that the pre-
sent study lasted 30 weeks as opposed to the six weeks of the other study. It should be
mentioned, of course, that during the current experiment the researcher visited the
245
classes 13 times, because it would not be feasible to interfere with the regular lessons of
state schools every single week. Nevertheless, this shows that the present study lasted
much longer and the actual time of intervention in this case was more than double from
The statistical analysis of the students’ grades at pre-test showed that the writing
performance of the two groups (experimental and control) was similar (Table 1),
whereas the exit grades of the current research showed that the experimental group out-
performed the control one at a marginal significance 0.049<0.05 (Table 5). The qualita-
tive interpretation of the writings in section 6.2 also indicated that the students of the
experimental group produced better texts at the organisational and ideational level ex-
The results of the numerical grades and the qualitative analysis of the students’
writings both sustain the first research question which refers to the improvement of the
the exit test has illustrated that giving students a topic to write about does not automati-
cally result in a good piece of writing. If that was the case, we would assume that even
the learners of the control group without any guidance would have achieved similarly
good performance as the ones in the experimental group, who received specific instruc-
tion on the process of writing through specially designed materials. It must be admitted
that some students who belonged to the control group produced very good pieces of
writing both during the study and at its exit point (e.g. student 9 C). Such cases may in-
fluence the statistics, through tampering with group mean scores and obscuring the dif-
ferences between the experimental and control group. On the other hand, it is easily no-
ticeable that although these students presented carefully organised writings, they lacked
246
the resourcefulness and quality which the students who belonged to the experimental
group developed through the various stages of process writing (e.g. student 33 E). Con-
sequently, it can be deduced that instruction may not play a pivotal role for students
Nevertheless, the vast majority of students who are in need of improvement in both lan-
guage and cognition will profit from writing instruction based around the concepts of
process writing.
This section will investigate whether the second research question was verified.
• Will there be any gender differences, as previous research has suggested? More
specifically, will the girls of the experimental group respond more positively to
In a comprehensive review, Sunderland (2000) argues that SLA research has shown that
there are differences between the two sexes and that girls usually outperform boys. In a
second language, Muchnick and Wolfe (1982) reported that females had significantly
higher scores on all factors included in the research. In another study, Sung and Padilla
(1998), explored motivation among 591 elementary- and secondary- level students in
California public schools learning Chinese, Japanese and Korean as a foreign language.
One of their conclusions was that female students, regardless of the grade level or the
language programme type, had higher instrumental and integrative motivation to learn
Asian languages than their male counterparts. A similar study is found in Nikolaou’s
(2004) doctoral thesis where he acknowledges that the girls devote more time to study-
ing English, and are more motivated and willing to do their homework than boys. The
correlation proved a low but important relationship between school marks, motivational
urge and motivational intensity. These findings show that students who try more and
have a greater desire to learn English, also achieve higher grades. Consequently, female
contending that this precedence of the girls was due to neuro-physiological differences.
Later, however, there was a change of the researchers’ focus (Ekstrand, 1980; Sung &
Padilla 1998) and the explanation of gender-based diversities shifted from biology to
socio-cultural factors, which attribute to female students roles that lead to positive per-
ceptions to SL learning.
The results of the present study indicate that unlike the previously mentioned
studies and contrary to the second research question, better performance does not seem
because part of the research question was proved but part of it was rejected. On the one
hand, the statistical analysis shows that the difference in performance between the two
sexes is statistically significant for both the experimental and control group at the outset
of the study and at the end of the research, indicating that the girls performed better in
the pre- and post- test. This numerical superiority of the girls proves that females indeed
presented better results. On the other hand, the percentage rise of the mean scores of the
experimental group at the entry and exit point (Table 3 and Figure 7) show a parallel
increase between the two genders. Consequently, the hypothesis is substantiated on sta-
This runs counter to the original assumption that the girls would respond more
positively, as both sexes seem to exhibit similar reaction to the intervention. One plaus-
248
ible interpretation of this outcome might be that since the applied treatment was new
and challenging, it made the boys work harder, and, as a result, it proved quite effective
and affected both genders positively. This is an issue which is important and needs fur-
ther research to examine whether appealing methods and well-designed materials could
trigger similar results to both sexes and result in equal improvement. This kind of re-
search might substantiate that boys do not lag behind due to biological, motivational or
social reasons but demand interesting instruction techniques in order to fully display
their potential. This point of view is also corroborated by Sunderland (2000) who cau-
tioned us about the fact that “any apparent superior proficiency as regards scores” (ibid:
The third research question will be tackled with in this part of the thesis:
• Will the application of process writing positively influence the attitudes and per-
The students’ attitudes towards writing in general, specific techniques that can help
them become better writers, attitudes towards peer and teacher correction, background
information about themselves and opinions about certain problems they face during
writing were traced through the questionnaires. These attitudes can be divided into two
sets. The first set can be viewed as ingrained attitudes referring to the ones students
have formed so far about writing, which they bring to the learning procedure. The
second set of attitudes are designated as developed attitudes, because they appear as the
result of the work done with the learners at school during the research. The former were
sought in the original questionnaire of the present research, whereas the latter were the
focal point of the final questionnaire with a view to investigating any change from the
As was shown in chapter 6, the statistical analysis of the answers to the ques-
tionnaires revealed a homogeneity between the two groups regarding the ingrained atti-
tudes towards writing. Both experimental and control groups undervalued the impor-
tance of pre-writing activities, planning, drafting and redrafting, collaboration, peer and
teacher correction (Table 7). Their greatest reaction was against peer feedback and re-
ceiving negative comments either from the teacher or from their partner (Tables 13 and
17). Moreover, they demanded correction of all their errors by their teacher, whom they
considered as an expert, rather than being given help to spot their flaws and try to cor-
rect them themselves acquiring, in this way, transferable writing and correcting tech-
niques. These perceptions hardly need an explanation, since the Greek educational sys-
tem and the teaching of writing in specific promotes collaboration only in theory and
seldom in practice. Furthermore, drafting and redrafting is a totally new notion to Greek
students and peer correction, especially the negative one, is a source of embarrassment.
In the final questionnaires, the developed attitudes were different with a statis-
tical significance between the two groups. The control group retained their original
aversion towards collaboration, drafting and redrafting, and peer correction or even be-
came more hostile to these practices, due to the fact that they are unfamiliar with these
procedures. On the contrary, the experimental group adopted a very positive mentality
towards these techniques, as they had become familiar with their usefulness during the
intervention. This proves that the alteration of the perceptions of the experimental group
is due to the specially-designed instruction during the research, whereby they realised
the value of learning the process of writing, the role of the teacher as a facilitator rather
than a guide who leads them to a piece of writing, and finally the importance of receiv-
ing and providing both positive and negative commentary. Consequently, the third re-
7.2.3.1 General attitudes towards writing and specific techniques which can help stu-
dents improve their writing
peer collaboration at the end of the study and simultaneously it will compare these aspi-
In the present study, the participants of the experimental group exhibited over-
whelming approval of teacher help at the end of the study. Moreover, even the control
subjects appreciated the positive commentary by the teacher. This finding is diverse
from the ones in Fiona Hyland’s (1998) study of students’ reaction to teacher feedback,
surfaced. She concluded that teacher comments, even when they are positive, may affect
Furthermore, in the present study, the experimental students were given special
aid to their good and weak elements both by the teacher and their partners throughout
the intervention. The weak points were highlighted neutrally without any special effort
either to mitigate them or to embarrass the students. Maybe this practice provided the
students with the opportunity to develop linguistically and cognitively without demoti-
vating them. As a result, the experimental students responded positively to negative crit-
icism, whether it originated from the teacher (Table 15 - item 10) or from their partner
(Table 19 - item 10). On the contrary, the control group members were opposed to nega-
tive commentary provided both by the teacher and by their peers (Table 16 - item 10
and Table 20 - item 10). In contrast, Hyland & Hyland (2001), investigating the writers’
reaction to both positive and adverse commentary provided by the teacher, reported that,
as the instructors tried to alleviate the negative points to avoid student demotivation,
Finally, the present writer hopes that this research is a furtherance of the one
conducted by Nelson & Carson (1998) exploring the learners’ reaction to teacher and
peer commentary with students of Chinese and Spanish origin in an American universi-
ty following the process approach in their writing classroom. While trying to investigate
the influence of different cultural and educational backgrounds of the EFL students on
their perceptions of teacher and partner assistance, they found out that this background
plays a vital role in the formulation of the learners’ conceptions. More specifically, they
reported that the Chinese students, who come from a culture which treasures collectiv-
ism rather than individualism, preferred consensus so as to maintain positive group rela-
tionships at the expense of improving their writing abilities. Consequently, they were
cautious to avoid negative comments, which would create embarrassment. On the con-
trary, the Spanish students who represent Western mentality, which prioritises the indi-
vidual voice, employed both positive and adverse treatment concentrating on the ameli-
oration of their writing instead of worrying about the implications of their comments on
though. Greeks feel inconvenient and get strongly discouraged when receiving negative
criticism, whichever the source of the commentary. In the first writing lesson, the re-
searcher felt disheartened and became dubious of the possibility of collaboration be-
tween the students and the teacher but mainly among the students, due to the intense
aversion of the learners to cooperation. Little by little, during the following lessons they
realised the importance of giving and receiving feedback, which led them to harmonious
collaboration and to the point of asking themselves to work with their partners. As a re-
sult, in the post questionnaires the experimental students responded in favour of the
252
treatment of both the strong and less strong points of their writings carried out by the
ered it as a waste of time. This is an obvious consequence of the regular practice in the
Greek school system, in which the students are not encouraged to draft and redraft their
texts, while writing, with the aim of improving it. Later, when they realised that in this
way their final product was polished, they accepted it as a useful means of improve-
ment. This change of attitude is apparent in the final questionnaires of the experimental
participants (Table 12.6), whereas the control group members remained indifferent to
this unfamiliar technique. These conclusions are contradictory to the ones in Ham-
mouda’s (2005) study whose students reacted to drafting and sought for ready-made an-
swers.
and Carson (1998) and the present one under discussion. Whereas in the former the sub-
jects showed preference to global feedback believing that sentence-level and grammar
comments were not very helpful in reshaping their drafts, the participants of the latter
students of the experimental group highly rated the elements of the approach, namely,
specification of purpose, audience and social context, elicitation of relevant ideas and
vocabulary, collaboration, rereading and revising. This can be attributed to two factors:
(a) the special treatment they received under the process writing philosophy by the re-
253
searcher, which led them to grant credit to its gains, and (b) the reflection of the re-
searcher’s preference of the application of the approach on the students’ positive atti-
tudes. Their teachers of English as well as their teachers of Greek also acknowledged
the significance of the impact of the process-focused pedagogy both in L1 and L2 writ-
ing. In the same line, although conducted with a dissimilar target, Pennington et al.’s
(1996) study had consistent results with the present research. She observed eight classes
focused approach, with the aim of investigating the teachers’ and students’ reactions to
this application. The results demonstrated a causal relationship between the learners’
attitudes and the teachers’ options. The classes who rated the new approach more posi-
tively were the ones whose teacher favoured the process paradigm.
to familiarisation with the discourse type of a text, which can aid the students to pro-
duce a similar text. They also agreed that the target reader and the purpose are signifi-
cant components to be taken into account while writing. These similar preferences were
evident in the beginning and the end of the research and mirror that all the students, no
matter what instruction techniques were used during teaching writing, can appreciate the
whole class before starting writing their text, neither group endorsed this practice, due
to the fact that they were not aware of its usefulness in the beginning of the study. In the
end of the study, the control group yielded a similar low preference towards elicitation
of ideas, as they were unfamiliar with this technique. On the other hand, the experimen-
254
tal group prioritised this practice, which reflects the impact of the employment of
The participants of the experimental group of this study became aware of the benefits of
teacher feedback at the end of the intervention in the form of pre-, while- and post-
writing help regarding experimentation with ideas and forms, topic exploitation, organi-
sation of their text, and error correction. Furthermore, they realised the importance of
being given a special code for correction by their teacher in order to trace and rectify
their errors by themselves and be actively involved in the learning process through in-
teresting problem-solving activities. On the contrary, the control group members did not
favour this kind of guidance, as they had not been provided with any of these proce-
Zamel’s (1985) study is in compliance with the preferences of the present expe-
rimental group members at the end of the intervention. Particularly, she concluded that
instructors should be more specific in the corrections, avoiding vague remarks and give
The experimental subjects of the current research seem more confident on how
to benefit from help given to them during a writing lesson than the students participat-
ing in Cohen & Cavalcanti’s (1990) research in a university department of English, who
canti (1990), the teacher focused more on form resulting to the students’ preference for
more assistance with content. The attitude of these students is in line with the percep-
tions of the experimental subjects of the current thesis as expressed in Table 15, where
255
they admit with a statistical significance of 0.000 that they need attention to all levels,
The preference to be given a special code in order to correct their texts articu-
lated by the members of the present experimental group is in the same vein with La-
lande’s (1982) findings. Having carried out a study, where he corrected the errors of the
control group while he provided a correction code to the experimental group in order to
rectify their deficiencies themselves, Lalande found out that the experimental group im-
Finally, the experimental subjects of our study realised that the teacher should be
of all errors in a piece of writing as bad practice. This was due to the fact that each writ-
ing lesson concentrated on different aspects of errors dealing with two or three types of
mistaken performance at a time. This method, rather than entangling learners with all
errors, gave them the opportunity to concentrate on a limited number of errors of similar
nature providing them with a specific focus and maximising their benefits. This percep-
tion is in accordance with Ferris’s (1999: 4) tenet that teacher correction should be “se-
As far as peer feedback is concerned, the findings of the current research are consistent
with the results of the related studies presented in Chapter Three (section 3.5.2) al-
though the subjects involved in those experiments had received more detailed training at
peer feedback, because that was the focus of their research. Moreover, in this thesis the
main purpose was to examine the process approach as a whole rather than divide it in its
The students of the experimental group in the present study opted for peer com-
mentary as their answers clearly indicated in the questionnaires at the exit point (Table 8
and 9 - item 14, Table 12.10, and Table 19). These results revealed that the student col-
laboration at commenting on each other’s texts influenced positively their stances to-
wards their partner’s contribution to the improvement of their writings. They even ac-
knowledged the importance of receiving feedback on their weak points by their fellow
students, although this kind of commentary was a source of embarrassment for them in
1992; Villamil & De Guerrero, 1996; Villamil & De Guerrrero, 1998; Jacobs et al.,
1998) showed that SL students, who are familiar with the process-oriented pedagogy,
Part 7.2.3 of this thesis discussed whether the third research question was con-
firmed. As was demonstrated, the final questionnaires showed an alteration of the atti-
tudes of the experimental students towards writing in general and the application of
process writing in specific. Almost all their responses exhibited a statistically significant
difference from their original answers in favour of the process writing paradigm. This
change of stances was expected by the researcher, since it was deemed that the duration
of the study would not be enough for spectacular changes in the numerical performance
of the participants, but it would be adequate in rendering their perceptions more posi-
tive.
Summarising section 7.2 it can be said that the target of this research has been to
investigate the applicability of the process writing approach to the Greek state primary
school and its possibility for replicability. The statistical data help us posit that the re-
sults are sustainable, that is, it can be claimed with certainty that the present research
257
substantiated the general hypothesis of this thesis that the process approach to writing
helps the sixth grade students of the Greek government primary schools to develop their
writing skills in English. The term skills implies both the students’ writing performance
with certainty that the applicability and the efficacy of the suggested model of the cog-
nitive process writers go through (Figure 4 - page 258) as well as the proposed process-
As far as the first model is concerned, the topic, the target, the intended audience
and the discourse type determine the formulation of the text. To this end, the relevant
ideas and the social situation whereby the writing takes place play an important role. As
soon as these subcomponents have been specified, the process of writing is initiated,
during which the text under preparation is formed, tested, rewritten, and corrected until
the polished product is produced. This model indicates that the linguistic, textual, orga-
nisational and ideational elements of writing, the social variables, and the mental
process of the writer are interwoven in the creation of the required piece of writing.
The above model is the general framework within which writing is created.
However, the second proposed schematic representation is more elaborate and detailed,
since it analytically represents the whole procedure followed during the process writing
approach. It clearly shows that the process of writing is recursive rather than linear and
explicitly displays the relationships and interactions between the various subelements of
MENTAL REPRESENTATION
OF ASSIGNMENT
KNOWLEDGE-
CONTENT DISCOURSE
KNOWLEDGE TELLING KNOWLEDGE
PROCESS
TASK
CONSTRUCT
MEMORY PROBES
FAIL
RUN TESTS OF
APPROPRIATENESS
PASS
WRITE
(NOTES, DRAFTS, ETC)
FAIL
REREAD - REVISE
PASS
UPDATE MENTAL SOCIAL
TEXT REPRESENTATION OF TEXT CONTEXT
KNOWLEDGE KNOWLEDGE
Figure 4: The suggested model of the writing procedure based on Bereiter & Scarda-
malia, 1987
In particular, the writer should conceptualise the knowledge he/she shares with
the intended reader, be aware of the generic type and the purpose of the text, read care-
fully and ponder about the topic, and last take into consideration the social context with-
in which the writing takes place. The teacher is also connected with all these elements in
an effort to aid the learner to fully comprehend and monitor the task requirements.
Moreover, these task requirements interact with the text, in the sense that they deter-
Planning entails eliciting the required information in order to generate relevant ideas
259
and result in the first draft. Responding by the teacher or the partner evokes revising,
which in turn leads to redrafting and a new response to the written piece so far. Revising
is activated again to result in editing. Revising plays a vital role in the procedure, be-
cause it relates to all stages, feeding most of them and being triggered by responding.
Rather than following a sequence in line, the whole process is cyclical, whereby the
writer can move backwards and forwards. This process and the text are interdependent
with each other, as the process generates the text and the text mobilises the process.
Both the teacher and the writer are involved in the writing process and in the
creation of the text. Furthermore, they enter a mutual relationship in the entire endea-
vour.
This framework is fully developed if writing is integrated with the other skills,
as was discussed in section 2.5, and when it is congruent with the crosscurricular orien-
tation of the national curriculum, which was articulated in part 4.5 of this thesis.
In this way, the writers can maximise their writing capacity, adopt positive men-
tality towards writing and acquire transferable writing techniques as was the case with
Moreover, this framework proved appropriate for young learners for the follow-
ing reasons: (1) they learnt to read the rubrics of an assignment carefully to determine
the audience, topic specifications, purpose, layout of the text and context of the writing
task, (2) they realised the contribution of collaboration in boosting their performance,
(3) they became aware that writing is not a finite, predetermined product to be corrected
in red pencil, but a dynamic creation amenable to change and amelioration, and (4) they
Social
Situation
+
Purpose
+
Audience
+
Gentre
+
Topic
Text
cus of teaching writing, the significance of collaboration, the design of appropriate ma-
261
terials, the training of teachers and the need for further research about the process of
writing. Being by no means hard-and-fast rules that instructors must blindly follow,
The following recommendations are provided concerning the process of writing, which
1. Train students in the process of writing and show them the importance of plan-
ning, drafting, redrafting (as a result of feedback) and revising before the final
ideational level. This will boost the learners’ linguistic and cognitive develop-
ment.
2. It is worthwhile to devote time to writing in the state school, since writing does
not entail only presenting a good piece of a specific genre but it also enables
students to express their thoughts correctly in writing, which is necessary for all
students as all major exams in Greece are in written form depending, therefore,
The suggestions offered in this section are not meant to be a kind of prescription for
successful writing, but they point to a meaningful exploitation of one of the most centre-
tunities. In this way, young learners will engage in the process of writing in a
challenging context, they will be active participants in the learning process and
improve their writing skills through social interaction. Students will work in
262
pairs or groups or as a whole class during generating ideas, planning, giving and
2. Encourage more collaboration between the teacher and the students, providing
thus children with input within the Zone of Proximal Development with the as-
sistance from one more knowledgeable than themselves. The teacher can aid the
students produce better writings during the various stages of the process ap-
The analysis of the teachers’ interviews has shown that the materials designated by the
Ministry of Education, the time allotted to the teaching of writing and pre- or in-service
training courses for state EFL teachers are not adequate. Consequently, the present
writer’s suggestions as to how the above mentioned parameters will be improved are as
follows:
1. The materials used at state school should be optional rather than predetermined
by the Ministry of Education giving each teacher the opportunity to select the
this matter there is a disagreement with Nikolaou’s (2004: 329) viewpoint who
claims that teachers are “ignorant of - and more often than not indifferent to”
their students’ needs for L2 learning. The present author contends that teachers
are the most appropriate decision makers in detecting their students’ motivation
and choosing the relevant materials. The school committee can cover the ex-
penses as has been the case with the books for the third grade of the primary
these expenses. In the case of the novice teachers, they can consult more experi-
2. Should the Ministry of Education, following the maxim “free education for all
citizens”, select to produce a set book for all schools, which is the norm for pri-
mary schools, they have to hire well-qualified materials writers, who are familiar
with process pedagogy, to produce syllabuses equipped with lessons which will
foster the procedure of writing. At the same time, teachers should be given the
3. The next step would be to familiarise teacher trainers with the process approach
who will sensitise instructors to the usefulness of the chosen writing framework.
Pre- and in-service courses for EFL teachers should be designed focusing on the
teaching of process writing. In this way, instructors will get familiar with this
approach, realise its merits and become fully equipped to teach their students the
emphasising that special training courses should be organised for state school
teachers regularly to offer them expertise not only in teaching writing but gener-
ally provide them with adequate theoretical and practical information about ad-
4. As far as the syllabus under discussion is concerned (Fun Way English 3),
were presented in chapter four of this thesis. Specifically for writing, they could
develop writing lessons under the process writing approach to concentrate on the
means is it posited that the foreign language teachers should turn into materials
writers, but the most resourceful of them can create new or adapt the existing
264
materials. Moreover, they could incorporate in the writing lesson elements of the
other subjects in alignment with the directives of the new Crosscurricular Pro-
grammes of Study. In this light, the necessity to link the English writing lesson
with the other subjects taught at school will be highlighted stressing, therefore,
5. The teachers need to reconsider their role as feedback and reward providers. As
it was fully explicated in section 3.2.1 of the present thesis, the teacher’s role is
redefined leaving the position of a judge to proceed to the fruitful post of a fa-
cilitator. They should centre more on what the students have achieved rather on
what they have done wrongly. A balance can be stricken between criticism and
encouragement giving all students, especially the weaker ones, the opportunity
to have the sense of accomplishment and feel the need to improve their perform-
ance.
three hours per week in primary school, and the first grade of both junior high
school and senior high school, whereas two teaching sessions per week are allot-
ted for the second and third grades of lower secondary school and upper second-
ary school. If teaching time is increased by one hour, then there will be more
approach to fulfil different learning and educational contexts, the current author
recommends that the teachers in Greek state primary schools should devote
some time to adjust the students to work cooperatively and get used to the idea
that other students will see and correct their errors. This is very significant, due
265
to the fact that cooperation during writing and exposure to peers’ criticism is less
showed, however, as soon as the learners overcame the inconvenience they felt
and received their partners’ correction without embarrassment, they realised the
importance of cooperation, and both criticism and praise becoming, thus, more
than willing to cooperate with the other students in order to provide and receive
tional mentality, nor be too negative and reject methodologies which have been
tested in other learning milieux. They can choose the golden mean and try to use
approaches that have been successful in other countries being ready to do any
necessary adjustments to fit the local context and boost the motivational disposi-
8. A final suggestion is that writing instruction must start from a young age as the
and strenuous one. The present writer believes that students can start discussion
the fourth grade. This procedure will allow the writing skills to develop little by
they were presented in chapter six, to analyse the pedagogical implications and to make
recommendations in order to improve the existing practices in the Greek state primary
266
schools as far as the teaching of writing is concerned. The verification of the hypothesis
and the research questions was discussed and the relevance of the current study to other
similar ones was investigated. The following chapter will describe the final conclusions
of the whole thesis, offering, at the same time, suggestions for further research and out-
Chapter 8
8.1 Introduction
Having interpreted the results of the research and discussed the pedagogical implica-
tions of the findings in the previous chapter, this chapter will summarise and present the
final conclusions of the whole thesis in light of the findings of the present study. Fur-
thermore, the limitations of the current research will be presented and accounted for,
► The process approach to writing helps the sixth grade students of the Greek state
and at the same time investigate whether the students of the experimental group will
outperform the ones of the control group in writing performance and attitudes towards
writing and if the girls will respond more positively than the boys.
substantiated the general hypothesis and proved its possibility for replicability. More-
over, the main findings of the research questions are: (a) the experimental group stu-
dents outperformed the control group members due to the application of the process
writing approach, (b) the girls of the experimental group performed better than the boys
but both genders exhibited similar, parallel improvement of their written performance,
and (c) the experimental group subjects developed positive attitudes towards pre-,
while- and post- writing assistance both by the teacher and their peers, they valued col-
laboration and active participation in the formulation of their text through drafting, re-
268
vising, rereading and redrafting. These results were compared and contrasted with the
findings of similar studies, and their pedagogical implications were discussed along
ments, that is, private schools and “frontisteria”. Nevertheless, due to the impressive-
ness of the results, since statistically significant findings were obtained and because an
that “when modified to meet the needs of different instructional settings, the techniques
advocated in this study are worthy of implementation on a trial basis” (Lalande, 1982:
146). Furthermore, Cohen et al. (2000) claim that generalisability in research may be
refers to the study under consideration, since the findings can be applied to the general
population exhibiting similar traits, that is, the students of the sixth grade of Greek state
primary schools.
It should have become apparent from the discussion of the curriculum require-
ments, the syllabus deficiencies as well as the presentation of the findings coupled with
the detailed discussion of the data that the teaching of writing in Greek state schools
leaves a lot to be desired, on the one hand, (as was shown with the control group) but,
on the other hand, could be drastically ameliorated if the process writing approach is
introduced (as was clearly indicated with the experimental group). As a result, the
teaching of process writing can be integrated in the syllabus of English in both primary
and secondary schools, following Cotterall & Cohen’s (2003) advice to incorporate the
process of learning and model the kind of learning, which the students will try indepen-
269
dently in the future, if we want to create curriculums and syllabuses that promote learn-
er autonomy.
practical status despite the many references and seminars on this issue in Greece, should
ing should be given prominence in the EFL context. In this learning environment, the
knowledge and writing potential will accrue as a result of student participation in pur-
poseful activities which synthesise background knowledge with newly obtained data.
and the teachers themselves with a view to improving the existing situation. It is more
than sensible that the overwhelming responsibility lies on the Ministry of Education and
the Pedagogical Institute, since these are the main administrative authorities in charge of
setting the educational goals, preparing the appropriate materials and training the teach-
educators, become more reflective about their teaching practices and seek opportunities
for professional development. Only in this way will the students be enabled to learn
how to write in L2 and transfer these skills to their mother tongue and any other foreign
languages they learn in order to be equipped with the ability to express themselves in
writing and take advantage of the prestige the written medium gives to the person who
by Villamil & De Guerrero (1998) that in no case does the intermediate ESL student’s
maximum writing skills match those of the expert writers, irrespective of whether they
teachers demand error-free revised drafts. This remark stresses the importance of feed-
270
back which, nevertheless, must be altered to avoid the frequent phenomenon where cor-
rection starts positively only to end in rendering the students demotivated. Consequent-
ly, feedback can act as “an initial stimulus” (Hyland, F. 1998: 264) implying that it can
trigger a series of revisions which further the issues that the original feedback intended
to address. In other words, feedback can develop into a useful tool with the aim of aid-
ing students to rectify their texts, in the short term, and apply the gains of correction in
future writing, retaining, in this way, the benefits of corrective feedback so as to pro-
As already stated above the focal purpose of this thesis was to explore whether
the process writing (White & Arndt, 1991) approach to teaching writing, which focuses
on the process rather than the product of writing, can enable young learners of the sixth
grade of the Greek state primary schools to become more independent writers in their
L2. The results substantiated the efficacy of the process writing approach and more spe-
cifically it was shown that it is of utmost importance to help students realise that a piece
of writing is not a final, predetermined product but a dynamic procedure, which follows
a cyclical process and can be reorganised and improved. Only if we give them ample
time in practising how sentences and ideas can be formed and reformulated through
drafting, revising and redrafting can we equip students with the necessary skills in writ-
ing. Moreover, familiarisation with the expectations of the audience, the target and the
topic of writing provides them with the ability to cope with the context of different writ-
ten texts assigned to them. Another important factor is to stress the importance of colla-
boration between the teacher and the students, and among the students in pairs, groups
students into meaningful activities, since, being young learners, they are in need to be
271
The contribution of this thesis has been to show that the process writing ap-
proach can turn sixth grade learners of the Greek state school into more autonomous,
competent users of written discourse. The aspirations of the present author were not to
provide a new recipe for successful writing, but to test the applicability in the English
classrooms. It is hoped that this study has offered useful insights into what procedures
can aid students become better writers in their L2. Specifically, the application of the
and in learning, in general. Learners in the process classroom were aided to assume
learning. Finally, one major contribution of the present thesis is the fact that it has
shown that pedagogical and methodological innovations can succeed in the Greek state
attributable to the employment of the intervention or lack thereof, eliminating the effect
of other variables. Time constraints made the administration of a delayed post-test im-
possible, as the school year finished rendering the investigation of the students’ profi-
272
ciency in L2 writing over time unfeasible. This delayed test might include the influence
of other intervening factors but it would examine the retention rate of the positive ef-
fects of the process writing approach on students’ written output and of their changed
attitudes after a period of time. Therefore, a clearer picture might emerge if both short-
fected the results in a systematic manner” (Dörnyei, 2003: 124), there were some limita-
tions in the implementation of the study showing inherent problems in education in gen-
eral and the Greek educational reality in specific. Some students were absent during
some writing lessons, being deprived consequently of the opportunity to capitalise fully
on the collaboration during the teaching sessions. A lot of hours were missed, as is the
norm in the Greek state school, due to excursions, educational visits to various places,
rehearsals for theatrical plays and participation in sports events to mention but a few.
This entailed the researcher to go to school for a programmed writing lesson and be ob-
liged to leave and come again on another day, because half of the students were absent
rupted the lesson. These incidents were obstacles in the continuation of the study.
process writing paradigm can function effectively in the primary school milieu. How-
ever, further research is proposed in other contexts, such as secondary schools and terti-
ary education, so as to test and prove its usefulness. The present writer believes that this
research could be extended to private language schools, although they are exam-
273
oriented and seem to prefer providing students with ready-made formulas about writing
process writing approach to students of primary, junior high and senior high school in-
cacy of the process writing paradigm to the Greek language classroom. To the best of
the present writer’s knowledge, there are very few studies in Greek so far. One of them
was the one conducted by Fterniati & Spinthourakis (2004) in the fifth and sixth grade
of three Greek primary schools. They investigated the efficacy of the process-focused
Greek. Three experimental and three control groups participated in this study, whereby
the former followed materials specially designed by the researcher whereas the latter
attended the state produced coursebook. The findings proved that both good and weak
students of the experimental groups benefited from the intervention, which corroborates
the view that the focus on the process of writing appears to be fundamental to the stu-
It is well known that writing in an L2 is a difficult task especially for young learners. It
is hoped that by investigating the efficacy of “process writing” (White& Arndt, 1991) in
training the students of the sixth grade of the Greek state primary schools to receive
practice in the procedure of writing and become autonomous writers in English, the pre-
274
sent thesis has contributed to the facilitation of teaching and learning in this specific
area.
275
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294
REFERENCES IN GREEK
by
Alexandra Anastasiadou
at
School of English
VOLUME 2
November 2010
Table of contents
List of tables
Table 11.1 Familiarisation with the organisation of a text in facilitating pro-
Table 11.2 The importance of target reader when writing a text in English 57
Table 11.4 Brainstorm some ideas alone or with the whole class before Writ-
ing 58
Table 11.6 Draft and redraft the text and try to improve before presenting the
final product 58
Table 11.7 Student participation in revising their text when they finish it 58
Table 11.10 The contribution of one’s partner to the correction of one’s errors 59
Table 12.2 The importance of target reader when writing a text in English 60
Table 12.7 Student participation in revising their text when they finish it 61
Table 23.5 Learning English because I want to get a certificate (i.e. Lower,
Proficiency) 64
ers 65
tive speakers 65
APPENDIX 1
PILOT QUESTIONNAIRE
IN GREEK AND IN ENGLISH
2
Στα παρακάτω 2 ερωτηµατολόγια θα βρεις προτάσεις σχετικά µε τρόπους που µας βοη-
θάνε να γράφουµε εκθέσεις µας στα αγγλικά.
Αφιέρωσε λίγο από το χρόνο σου, 20-30 λεπτά της ώρας, για να διαπιστώσεις µε ποιους
τρόπους µπορείς να βοηθηθείς να παράγεις γραπτά κείµενα καλύτερα.
Σχολείο:_______________________________________
Έτος γέννησης: _________________________________
Φύλο Αγόρι Κορίτσι
Ερωτηµατολόγιο 1
Παρακαλώ να διαβάσεις προσεκτικά την πρώτη πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα µέσα
σε ένα µόνο τετράγωνο από τα πέντε που είναι δίπλα της προς τα δεξιά και που σε εκ-
φράζει περισσότερο. Μετά θα διαβάσεις την δεύτερη και θα βάλεις πάλι ένα σε ό,τι
ταιριάζει περισσότερο σε σένα. Μετά θα κάνεις το ίδιο και για τις υπόλοιπες ερωτήσεις
µέχρι την 15.
Ερωτηµατολόγιο 2
Παρακαλώ να διαβάσεις προσεκτικά την πρώτη πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα µέσα
σε ένα µόνο τετράγωνο από τα δύο που είναι δίπλα της προς τα δεξιά και που σε εκ-
φράζει περισσότερο. Μετά θα διαβάσεις την δεύτερη και θα βάλεις πάλι ένα σε ό,τι
ταιριάζει περισσότερο σε σένα. Μετά θα κάνεις το ίδιο και για τις υπόλοιπες ερωτήσεις
µέχρι την 10.
Στο παρακάτω ερωτηµατολόγιο θα βρεις προτάσεις που αναφέρονται στην γνώµη που
έχεις για τα Αγγλικά, το λόγο που µαθαίνεις Αγγλικά και άλλες πληροφορίες για το
χρονικό διάστηµα που ασχολείσαι µε τα Αγγλικά.
Σχολείο:_______________________________________
Έτος γέννησης: _________________________________
Φύλο Αγόρι Κορίτσι
Ερωτηµατολόγιο 3
Α
1. Τι γλώσσα µιλάς στο σπίτι σου _____________________
2. Πώς θα χαρακτήριζες τις γνώσεις σου στα Αγγλικά σε σχέση µε τους συµµαθητές/
τις συµµαθήτριες σου;
Πάρα πολύ καλές Αρκετά Καλές Καλές Μέτριες
3. Πώς θα χαρακτήριζες τις γνώσεις σου στα Αγγλικά σε σχέση µε τους ανθρώπους που
η µητρική γλώσσα τους είναι τα Αγγλικά;
Πάρα πολύ καλές Αρκετά Καλές Καλές Μέτριες
Β
Παρακαλώ να διαβάσεις προσεκτικά την πρώτη πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα µέσα
σε ένα µόνο τετράγωνο από τα δύο που είναι δίπλα της προς τα δεξιά και που σε εκ-
φράζει περισσότερο. Μετά θα διαβάσεις την δεύτερη και θα βάλεις πάλι ένα σε ό,τι
ταιριάζει περισσότερο σε σένα. Μετά θα κάνεις το ίδιο και για τις υπόλοιπες ερωτή-
σεις., µέχρι την 7.
Στo παρακάτω ερωτηµατολόγιο θα βρεις προτάσεις σχετικά µε τρόπους που µας βοη-
θάνε να διορθώνουµε και να βελτιώνουµε τις εκθέσεις µας στα αγγλικά.
Αφιέρωσε λίγο από το χρόνο σου, 20-30 λεπτά της ώρας, για να διαπιστώσεις µε ποιους
τρόπους µπορείς να βοηθηθείς να παράγεις γραπτά κείµενα καλύτερα.
Σχολείο:_______________________________________
Έτος γέννησης: _________________________________
Φύλο Αγόρι Κορίτσι
Ερωτηµατολόγιο 4
(Βασισµένο σε ερωτηµατολόγιο που χρησιµοποιήθηκε από τους Hedgecock, J. and Lefkowitz, N. (1994)
“Ανατροφοδότηση στην ανατροφοδότηση: Αξιολόγηση της ανταπόκρισης των µαθητών στην ανατροφο-
δότηση του δασκάλου/της δασκάλας κατά την παραγωγή λόγου στην ξένη ή δεύτερη γλώσσα” in Journal
of SLW 3: 141-163)
In the two following questionnaires you will find statements about the ways which help
us to write our essays in English.
Please read them for 20 to 30 minutes to find out the ways which you can help you to
produce better written texts.
School ___________________________________________________
Year of birth_______________________________________________
Gender Boy Girl
Questionnaire 1
Please read carefully the first sentence and then put a only in one square from the five
which are on the right and which you feel best expresses your opinion. Then read the
second and put a again to what is right for you. Then do the same for the rest of the
questions until the 15th.
Put a ( ) in the phrase which Always Usually Some- Rarely Never
shows your opinion about each
times
sentence.
1. I like writing in my English
class
2. I can write good texts in Eng-
lish
3. I can think of ideas about a
topic easily
4. I can write better if the topic
is familiar to me
5. I know how to organise my
texts (paragraph sequencing,
logical development of ideas,
etc.)
6. I can write alone (without
help)
7. I want my teacher to help me
when I write
8. I need help in order to come
up with relevant ideas
9. I need help before writing
(with the topic, organisation)
10. I need help when writing to
organise my ideas and my
10
Questionnaire 2
Please read carefully the first sentence and then put a only in one square from the five
which are on the right and which you feel best expresses your opinion. Then read the
second and put a again to what is right for you. Then do the same for the rest of the
questions until the 10th.
Are the following ideas good or bad? GOOD BAD
Read carefully and mark your opinion with a ( ). IDEA IDEA
1. When you know the organisation of a text , you can pro-
duce a similar text easily
2. When you write a text, try to think of the target reader
3. Before you write, try to brainstorm some ideas alone or
with your class
4. Use linking words to produce a well-organised text
5. When you finish your text, try to revise it
6. You can learn from your own mistakes
7. You can participate in the correction of your text
8. Your partner can help you to correct your errors
9. Your teacher must correct all your mistakes
10. When you don’t know a word, use your dictionary
12
In the following questionnaire you will find statements which refer to your opinion
about the English language, your reason for learning English and some other informa-
tion about the how long you have been learning English.
School ___________________________________________________
Year of birth_______________________________________________
Gender Boy Girl
Questionnaire 3
(Based on an idea by Oxford, R. (1990) Language Learning Strategies. Boston: Heinle & Heinle Pub-
lishers)
A
ALL YOUR ANSWERS WILL BE TREATED AS CONFIDENTIAL
YOUR BACKGROUND: (Put a in the correct answer)
School ___________________________________________________
Year of birth_______________________________________________
Gender Boy Girl
3. How would you rate your overall proficiency in English as compared to the profi-
ciency of the native speakers of the language?
B
Please read carefully the first sentence and then put a only in one square from the two
which are on the right and which best expresses your opinion. Then read the second
and put a again to what is right for you. Then do the same for the rest of the questions
until the 8th.
In the following questionnaire you will find statements about the ways which help us to
correct and improve our essays in English.
Please read them for 20 to 30 minutes to find out the ways which you can help you to
produce better written texts.
School ___________________________________________________
Year of birth_______________________________________________
Gender Boy Girl
Questionnaire 4
(Based on the questionnaire used by Hedgecock, J. and Lefkowitz, N. (1994) “Feedback on feedback:
Assessing Learner Receptivity to Teacher Response in L2 Composing” Journal of Second Language
Writing 3: 141-163)
APPENDIX II
ENTRY QUESTIONNAIRE
IN GREEK AND IN ENGLISH
17
Ερωτηµατολόγιο µαθητών
Τo ερωτηµατολόγιο αυτό στοχεύει στην εξεύρεση µεθόδων που µπορούν να βοηθήσουν
τα παιδιά να βελτιώσουν την παραγωγή γραπτού λόγου (σκέφτοµαι και γράφω) στα
Αγγλικά.
Πρώτο µέρος
Παρακαλώ διάβασε προσεκτικά την κάθε πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα µέσα σε ένα
µόνο τετράγωνο από τα πέντε που είναι δίπλα της και που σε εκφράζει περισσότερο.
ΚΑΛΗ ΚΑΚΗ
ιδέα ιδέα
1. Όταν γνωρίζεις την οργάνωση ενός κειµένου στα Αγγλι-
κά, µπορείς εύκολα να γράψεις ένα παρόµοιο κείµενο
2. Όταν γράφεις ένα γραπτό κείµενο στα Αγγλικά, προσπά-
θησε να έχεις στο µυαλό σου τον αναγνώστη στον οποίο
απευθύνεσαι
3. Όταν γνωρίζεις για ποιο σκοπό γράφεις το γραπτό σου,
τότε µπορείς να παράγεις καλύτερο κείµενο
4. Πριν αρχίσεις να γράφεις, προσπάθησε να καταγράψεις
σχετικές ιδέες µόνος/µόνη ή µε την τάξη σου
5. Χρησιµοποίησε συνδετικές λέξεις για να παρουσιάσεις
ένα καλά δοµηµένο κείµενο (κείµενο που έχει καλή σύνδεση)
6. Είναι καλύτερο να γράψεις δύο ή τρεις φορές το γραπτό
σου και να προσπαθήσεις να το βελτιώσεις προτού το ο-
λοκληρώσεις, παρά να γράψεις ένα µόνο τελικό κείµενο
7. Όταν τελειώσεις το γραπτό σου, προσπάθησε να το διορ-
θώσεις
8. Μπορείς να συµµετέχεις στη διόρθωση του γραπτού σου
κειµένου
Β. Βελτιώνοµαι στο γραπτό λόγο στα Αγγλικά όταν ο διπλανός/ η διπλανή µου:
∆εύτερο µέρος
Α. Πώς θα χαρακτήριζες τις γνώσεις σου στα Αγγλικά σε σχέση µε τους συµµαθητές/
τις συµµαθήτριες σου;
Πάρα πολύ καλές Αρκετά Καλές Καλές Μέτριες
∆.
Παρακαλώ διάβασε προσεκτικά την κάθε πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα στην αντίστοι-
χη λέξη σε ένα µόνο τετράγωνο και που σε εκφράζει περισσότερο.
Ε.
Αν στην ερώτηση νούµερο 2 του προηγούµενου µέρους ∆ Aj Bj As Bs Cs
έχεις απαντήσει ναι, σε παρακαλώ κύκλωσε δεξιά ποια τά-
ξη τελείωσες πέρυσι.
Σε παρακαλώ κύκλωσε δεξιά ποια τάξη παρακολουθείς Aj Bj As Bs Cs
φέτος και γράψε στην παρακάτω γραµµή ποιο βιβλίο διδά-
σκεσαι
ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΩ
24
This questionnaire aims at finding methods that can help students improve writing in
English.
Part one
General attitudes towards writing
Please read carefully every sentence and then put a only in one square from the five
ones which are next to it and which you feel that best expresses your opinion.
me
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
5. I know how to organise my texts (para-
graph sequencing, logical development, etc.)
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
6. I can write alone (without help)
7. I want my teacher to help me when I Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
write
8. I need help in order to come up with rele- Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
vant ideas
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
9. I need help before writing (with the topic,
organisation)
10. I need help when writing to organise my Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
my errors
12. I can spot my mistakes if our teacher Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
know my mistakes
14. I would like my partner to help me to Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
GOOD BAD
idea idea
1. When you know the organisation of a text in English, you
can produce a similar text easily
2. When you write a text in English, try to think of the target
reader
3. When you know the target of your writing, then you can
produce a better text
4. Before you write, try to brainstorm some ideas alone or
with your class
Please read the following statements carefully and mark with a (only one box) if you
agree or disagree.
Α. I improve in writing in English when my teacher …..
Part two
Background information about self-evaluation, purpose for studying
English and attendance of lessons in private language schools or pri-
vate lessons at home
Α. How do you rate your overall proficiency in English as compared with the profi-
ciency of your classmates?
Excellent Good Fair Poor
D. Please read carefully every sentence and then put a in only one box with the word
which best expresses your opinion.
Ε.
If you have answered YES in question number 2 of the Aj Bj As Bs Cs
previous part D, please circle on the right which grade you
attended last year.
Please circle on the right which grade you are attending Aj Bj As Bs Cs
this year and write on the following line which book you
use.
_______________________________________________
THANK YOU
31
APPENDIX III
EXIT QUESTIONNAIRE
IN GREEK AND IN ENGLISH
32
Παρακαλώ διάβασε προσεκτικά την κάθε πρόταση και µετά βάλε ένα µέσα σε ένα
µόνο τετράγωνο από τα πέντε που είναι δίπλα της και που σε εκφράζει περισσότερο.
ΚΑΛΗ ΚΑΚΗ
ιδέα ιδέα
1. Όταν γνωρίζεις την οργάνωση ενός κειµένου στα Αγγλι-
κά, µπορείς εύκολα να γράψεις ένα παρόµοιο κείµενο
2. Όταν γράφεις ένα γραπτό κείµενο στα Αγγλικά, προσπά-
θησε να έχεις στο µυαλό σου τον αναγνώστη στον οποίο
απευθύνεσαι
3. Όταν γνωρίζεις για ποιο σκοπό γράφεις το γραπτό σου,
τότε µπορείς να παράγεις καλύτερο κείµενο
4. Πριν αρχίσεις να γράφεις, προσπάθησε να καταγράψεις
σχετικές ιδέες µόνος/µόνη ή µε την τάξη σου
5. Χρησιµοποίησε συνδετικές λέξεις για να παρουσιάσεις
ένα καλά δοµηµένο κείµενο (κείµενο που έχει καλή σύνδεση)
6. Είναι καλύτερο να γράψεις δύο ή τρεις φορές το γραπτό
σου και να προσπαθήσεις να το βελτιώσεις προτού το ο-
λοκληρώσεις, παρά να γράψεις ένα µόνο τελικό κείµενο
7. Όταν τελειώσεις το γραπτό σου, προσπάθησε να το διορ-
θώσεις
8. Μπορείς να συµµετέχεις στη διόρθωση του γραπτού σου
κειµένου
Β. Βελτιώνοµαι στο γραπτό λόγο στα Αγγλικά όταν ο διπλανός/ η διπλανή µου:
ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΩ
37
This questionnaire aims at finding methods that can help students improve writing in
English.
Part one
General attitudes towards writing
Please read carefully every sentence and then put a only in one square from the five
ones which are next to it and which you feel that best expresses your opinion.
me
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
5. I know how to organise my texts (para-
graph sequencing, logical development, etc.)
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
6. I can write alone (without help)
7. I want my teacher to help me when I Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
write
8. I need help in order to come up with rele- Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
vant ideas
Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
9. I need help before writing (with the topic,
organisation)
10. I need help when writing to organise my Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
my errors
12. I can spot my mistakes if our teacher Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
know my mistakes
14. I would like my partner to help me to Always Usually Sometimes Rarely Never
GOOD BAD
idea idea
1. When you know the organisation of a text in English, you
can produce a similar text easily
2. When you write a text in English, try to think of the target
reader
3. When you know the target of your writing, then you can
produce a better text
4. Before you write, try to brainstorm some ideas alone or
with your class
Please read the following statements carefully and mark with a (only one box) if you
agree or disagree.
THANK YOU
42
APPENDIX IV
ENTRY WRITING TEST
43
You are Dimitris. You live in Katerini. This is the beginning of the school year. Send a
letter to your cousin George who lives in Boston with his family.
Say: How you are and how you feel about the beginning of the school year.
Where you went for holidays and what you did there.
Start and finish your letter appropriately and at the end of your letter add something you
have forgotten.
1. How Dimitris is and how he feels about the beginnning of the school year.
2. Where he went for holidays and what he did there.
3. Dimitris asks about George’s holidays during summer.
4. The letter begins with the address and Dear George, and finishes with Love Di-
miitris and a P.S.
All the above parts are underlined in the instructions of the test in order to guide the
students.
Sample
15 Marathonos Street,
60 100 Katerini,
Greece.
September 20th 2007
Dear George,
I am fine. How are you? This is the beginning of our school year and I feel a little
sad. Lessons and tests start again! We relaxed for three months. Now we have to get up
early in the morning. I hate getting up early. What about you?
We had wonderful holidays this summer. We went camping in a camping site near
Litohoro. We swam in the sea in the morning and in the afternoons we sometimes went
climbing on mountain Olympus. We met new friends and played a lot of games.
What about you? Where did you go on holidays? Did you go to Disneyland? Please
tell me all about it.
Love
Dimitris
P.S. I’m sending you some photos of my holidays. Don’t forget to send me some of
your photos, too.
45
APPENDIX V
EXIT WRITING TEST
46
You are Dimitris. You live in Katerini. Your cousin George, who does not speak Greek
well, lives in Boston with his family. This is the end of the school year. Send a letter to
your cousin George.
Write: How you are and how you feel about the end of the school year.
Where you will go for holidays and what you will do there.
Start and finish your letter appropriately and at the end of your letter add something you
have forgotten.
APPENDIX VI
MARKING SCHEME
48
Marking scheme
All four parts of message clearly com- Minor spelling and punctuation errors 10
municated. Good organisation of ideas. which do not impede communication
Fully coherent text. Simple connectors of meaning. Uses simple grammatical
‘and’, ‘but’, ‘because’ have been used. structures correctly most of the times.
No effort is required by reader. Use of simple vocabulary that is in
his/her range.
All four parts of message communi- Few spelling and punctuation errors 9
cated. Good organisation of ideas. Co- which do not distort meaning. Uses
herent text. Simple and mostly correct simple grammatical structures cor-
connectors used. No effort is required rectly but occasionally mixes tenses
by reader. and forgets agreement. Occasionally
uses inappropriate words.
All four parts of message attempted or Some spelling and punctuation errors 8
three parts of message are clearly com- which do not affect meaning seriously.
municated but one is unattempted. Uses simple grammatical structures
Quite good organisation of ideas. Co- but often mixes tenses and forgets
herent text. Simple and mostly correct agreement. Repetition of vocabulary.
linking words used. Minor effort re-
quired by reader.
Only three parts of message attempted Some incorrect spelling and punctua- 7
or two parts of message are clearly tion, and simple grammatical struc-
communicated but two are unattempted. tures with a few errors which do not
Quite good organisation of ideas. Fairly interfere with intelligibility seriously.
coherent text. A few incorrect cohesive Some incorrect words.
devices. Minor effort required by
reader.
Only two parts of message are ade- Some incorrect spelling and punctua- 6
quately communicated. Fairly good or- tion. A few problematic grammatical
ganisation of ideas. Cohesion devices structures. Some incorrect vocabulary.
are sometimes incorrect or inappropri- These problems partly affect intelligi-
ate. A little effort may be required by bility.
reader.
49
Only two parts of message communi- Frequent spelling and punctuation er- 5
cated. Somewhat disorganised ideas but rors which affect interpretation of
the text is generally coherent. Fre- meaning.
quently incorrect and inappropriate co- Frequent errors in grammar. Limited
hesive devices. A little effort is required vocabulary.
by reader.
APPENDIX VII
ERROR CORRECTION
51
(Based on the symbols by Pinheiro Franco, 1996:130 and Chryshoshoos et al., 2002:
82)
VM
VM Verb missing He a doctor.
He is a doctor.
WM
WM Word missing was born in New York.
He was born in New York.
WV
WV Something wrong with the He go to school.
verb form He goes to school.
VT
VT Verb tense I go to Athens last week.
I went to Athens last week.
52
G
G Something else grammatical The twin are in the
is wrong garden.
The twins are in the garden.
C
C, C Capitalisation error both brothers are Universi-
C
ty Students.
Both brothers are Universi-
ty students.
WW
WO
WO Word order errors I went yesterday to the club.
I went to the club yesterday.
GP good point
53
Text one
P WM WV G
my favourite animal is lion. It is a strong. It live in Africa. It has got four leg
VT WV C
GP
Text two
SP VM P
Mary is my best freend. She twelve years old, and is short. She has blonde hair,
green eyes and wears glass. Mary likes playing tennis but she does not like other sports.
WW
She likes wearing jeans and T-shirts. She is very well at maths and science.
WO
She is quiet and funny but she sometimes gets. I love her because I can tell her all my
SP
secreets. P
WO
Text three
Vienna St.,
30 700 Salsburg,
Austria.
January 20th 2008
Dear penfriend,
my name Stephanie Dullnig. I’m twelve year old. I’m tall with blond hair and blu
My father is taxi-driver and my mother is hairdresser. I have one sister Her name
I’m of high school in the first grade. My favourite lessons are German and English.
I’m very good at basketball and I like watching TV. When I’m older I want to be a.
Love,
Stefanie.
56
APPENDIX VIII
NON SIGNIFICANT RESULTS
57
Table 11.1
When you know the EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
organisation of a text,
Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
you can produce a
similar text more eas- N % N % N % N % N % N % χ2(1)= 1.606
ily p=0.205
41 93.2 3 6.8 39 84.8 7 15.2 80 88.9 10 111.1
Table 11.2
When you write a EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
text in English, try to
think of the target Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
χ2 (1)= 0.045,
reader N % N % N % N % N % N % p=0.831
38 86.4 6 13.6 39 84.8 7 15.2 77 85.6 13 14.4
Table 11.3
When you know the EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
purpose of your writ-
ing, then you can pro- Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
duce a better text N % N % N % N % N % N % χ2(1)= 0.912
p=0.340
42 97.7 1 2.3 43 93.5 3 6.5 85 95.5 4 4.5
58
Table 11.4
Before you write, try EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
to brainstorm some
ideas alone or with Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
your class χ2(1)= 1.710,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
p=0.191
15 34.1 29 65.9 10 21.7 36 78.3 25 27.8 65 72.2
Table 11.6
It is better to draft EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
and redraft your text
and try to improve it Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
instead of presenting a χ2(1)= 1.621,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
final product
p= 0.203
5 11.6 38 88.4 10 21.7 36 78.3 15 16.9 74 83.1
Table 11.7
When you finish your EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
text, try to revise it
Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
χ2(1)= 1.957,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
p= 0.162
44 100 0 0 44 95.7 2 4.3 88 97.8 2 2.2
59
Table 11.9
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
You can learn from
your own mistakes Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea χ2(1)= 2.671,
N % N % N % N % N % N % p= 0.102
Table 11.10
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
Your partner can help
you to correct your Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
errors N % N % N % N % N % N % χ2(1)= 0.956,
p= 0.328
1 2.3 43 97.7 3 6.5 43 93.5 4 4.4 86 95.6
Table 11.11
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
Your teacher must
correct all your mis- Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
takes χ2(1)= 0.079,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
p= 0.779
40 90.9 4 9.1 41 89.1 5 10.9 81 90.0 9 10.0
60
Table 11.12
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
When you don’t know
a word, use your dic- Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
tionary χ2(1)= 0.556,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
p= 0.456
38 86.4 6 13.6 42 91.3 4 8.7 80 88.9 10 11.1
Table 12.1
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
When you know the
organisation of a text, Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
you can produce a χ2(1)= 2.969,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
similar text more eas- p= 0.085
ily 44 100 0 .0 43 93.5 3 6.5 87 96.7 3 3.3
Table 12.2
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
When you write a text
in English, try to Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
think of the target χ2(1)= 0.001,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
reader p= 0.975
43 97.7 1 2.3 45 97.8 1 2.2 88 97.8 2 2.2
61
Table 12.3
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
When you know the
purpose of your writ- Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
ing, you can produce a χ2(1)= 0.002,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
better text p= 0.964
42 95.5 2 4.5 44 95.7 2 4.3 86 95.6 4 4.4
Table 12.5
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
Use linking words to
produce a well- Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
χ2(1)= 0.956,
organised text N % N % N % N % N % N %
p= 0.328
43 97.7 1 2.3 43 93.5 3 6.5 86 95.6 4 4.4
Table 12.7
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
When you finish your
text, try to revise it Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea
χ2(1)= 1.957,
N % N % N % N % N % N %
p= 0.162
44 100.0 0 0.0 44 95.7 2 4.3 88 97.8 2 2.2
62
Table 12.9
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL TOTAL χ2
You can learn from
your own mistakes Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea Good idea Bad idea χ2(1)= 2.969,
N % N % N % N % N % N % p= 0.085
44 100.0 0 0.0 43 93.5 3 6.5 87 96.7 3 3.3
63
Table 23.2 Learning English because I have friends or classmates who learn this lan-
guage
GROUP CODE
TOTAL
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL
43 44 87
NO
97.7% 95.7% 96.7%
1 2 3
YES
2.3% 4.3% 3.3%
44 46 90
TOTAL
100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
N = 90, χ2 (1) = 0.301, p = 0.584
GROUP CODE
TOTAL
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL
23 33 56
NO
52.3% 71.7% 62.2%
21 13 34
YES
47.7% 28.3% 37.8%
44 46 90
TOTAL
100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
N = 90, χ2 (1) = 3.625, p = 0.057
Table 23.5 Learning English because I want to get a certificate (i.e. Lower, Proficiency)
GROUP CODE
TOTAL
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL
11 8 19
NO
25.0% 17.4% 21.1%
33 38 71
YES
75.0% 82.6% 78.9%
44 46 90
TOTAL
100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
2
N = 90, χ (1) = 0.782, p = 0.377
20 26 46
YES
45.5% 56.5% 51.1%
44 46 90
TOTAL
100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
N = 90, χ2 (1) = 1.102, p = 0.294
Table 23.10 Learning English because I am interested in the culture of native speakers
GROUP CODE
TOTAL
EXPERIMENTAL CONTROL
41 45 86
NO
93.2% 97.8% 95.6%
3 1 4
YES
6.8% 2.2% 4.4%
44 46 90
TOTAL
100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
N = 90, χ2 (1) = 1.142, p = 0.285
APPENDIX IX
SAMPLES OF WRITING LESSONS
67
Lesson 1
(Experimental group)
Tasks
A. In pairs discuss what students at your age usually write about.
B. I am going to give you five different kinds of texts: instructions, poems - nursery
rhymes, an invitation card, a fairy tale-fable and a description of a person. You will
work in four groups to find: a) the purpose of the text b) the people it refers to and c) the
characteristics of each text type following the cues:
Text type Cues
Instructions Watch the verb form and the first word of each
sentence. Examine if there is an order.
Poems-nursery Look at the last word of the sentences. Watch
rhymes the position of the verb in the first text.
Invitation card Watch the organisation, the length and the to-
ne of the text.
Fairy tale-fable Examine how the text starts and ends and if
there is an order. Watch the verb form.
Description of a person Look at the organisation: How do we describe
a person?
Group one will examine the instructions. Group two will examine the description of a
person and the invitation card. Group three will examine the poems-nursery rhymes.
Finally, group four will examine the fairy tale-fable. First find the purpose and the audi-
ence of each text and write them down. Then find the characteristics of the text and
write them in a table. When you finish, you will tell the other groups what you have
found. Then, all together try to form your own rules about the different types of texts.
C. Try to compare all the texts to find out which ones follow a chronological order (se-
quence) and which do not. Work in pairs.
68
D. Discuss if it is important to know why we are writing a text and who we are writing
it to. Work in pairs.
Texts
1. Instructions.
A.
Mr Papadopoulos has asked the arts and crafts teacher to write the materials and the in-
structions to make a treasure chest. He will use these instructions with his students to
make a treasure chest and play treasure hunt.
Materials Needed
A small shoe box
Coloured paper
A pencil
Glue
Paints
A pair of scissors
Gold coins
How to make a treasure chest
All you need for this easy craft is a small shoe box with a lid.
New words:
Lid: the piece that covers the box.
B.
Mrs Leontiou, the teacher of English at the sixth form of a primary school has asked her
American cousin Helen to write instructions on how to make a Halloween pumpkin
mask so as to show her students how American and English people celebrate Hallow-
een.
How to make
a Halloween pumpkin mask.
Halloween is a time for fun. In U.S.A. and Great Britain people buy pumpkins and
make lamps or they make pumpkin masks. It is very easy to make your own pumpkin
mask. Just follow these instructions:
Materials needed:
• A paper plate
• Coloured pencils
• Scissors
• Hole punch
• Green string or elastic
70
Now you’ve got a beautiful pumpkin mask. You can go trick or treat with it. Happy
Halloween!!!!
New words:
Jack-o-lantern: a pumpkin used in Halloween. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hole punch: a tool for cutting holes. (Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English)
71
Mary is my best friend. She is twelve years old and is short. She has blonde
hair, green eyes and wears glasses. Mary likes playing tennis but she does not like any
other sports. She likes wearing jeans and T-shirts. She is very good at maths and science
and always helps me with my homework.
She is quiet and funny but she sometimes gets quite angry. I love her because I can tell
her all my secrets.
We play computer games on weekdays and go to the cinema on weekends. We have a
great time together.
15 Cheltenham Str.
Oxford
September 12th 2007
Dear Sara,
Please, come to my birthday party next Sunday 15th September. It starts at 6.00
p.m. There will be clowns, too. Please, phone me or send me an SMS to say if you can
come. Ask your cousin Tony to come with you.
See you soon
Peter
72
From http://www.lovepoems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_itsy_bitsy_spider.htm
New words:
fleece: a sheep’s wool
it was against the rule: it was wrong
he turned it out: he made it leave
linger: wait for some time, not leave
reply: answer
(From:http://www.love-
poems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_mary_had_a_little_lamb.htm)
73
5. Fable-Fairy tale.
This is a very famous fable written by Aesop for young children.
The Tortoise and the Hare
Once upon a time there was a speedy hare who bragged about how fast he could
run. Tired of hearing him boast, Slow and Steady, the tortoise, asked him to run a race.
All the animals in the forest came to watch.
Hare ran down the road for some time and then stopped to rest. He looked back
at Slow and Steady and cried out, "How do you think you can win this race when you
are walking along so slowly?"
Hare sat down and fell asleep, thinking, "There is plenty of time to relax." But
he slept too long.
Slow and Steady walked and walked. He never, ever stopped until he came to
the finish line.
The animals who were watching cheered so loudly for Tortoise, they woke up Hare.
Hare stretched and yawned and began to run again, but it was too late. Tortoise was
over the line.
After that, Hare always remembered, "Don't brag about your running very fast, for
New words:
fable: a short story where animals or objects speak like people
speedy: quick, fast
brag: boast, speak proudly about myself
steady: something that is steady continues in the same way
cheer: to shout loudly when you are happy
stretch: when you put your arms and legs out (Collins Cobuild Student’s Dictionary)
yawn: open your mouth wide when you are sleepy or tire
75
Lesson 1
(Control group)
Tasks
I am going to give you five different kinds of texts: instructions, poems - nursery
Texts
1. Instructions.
A.
Mr Papadopoulos has asked the arts and crafts teacher to write the materials and the in-
structions to make a treasure chest. He will use these instructions with his students to
make a treasure chest and play treasure hunt.
Materials Needed
A small shoe box
Coloured paper
A pencil
Glue
Paints
A pair of scissors
Gold coins
How to make a treasure chest
All you need for this easy craft is a small shoe box with a lid.
New words:
Lid: the piece that covers the box.
B.
Mrs Leontiou, the teacher of English at the sixth form of a primary school has asked her
American cousin Helen to write instructions on how to make a Halloween pumpkin
mask so as to show her students how American and English people celebrate Hallow-
een.
How to make
a Halloween pumpkin mask.
Halloween is a time for fun. In U.S.A. and Great Britain people buy pumpkins and
make lamps or they make pumpkin masks. It is very easy to make your own pumpkin
mask. Just follow these instructions:
77
Materials needed:
• A paper plate
• Coloured pencils
• Scissors
• Hole punch
• Green string or elastic
Now you’ve got a beautiful pumpkin mask. You can go trick or treat with it. Happy
Halloween!!!!
New words:
Jack-o-lantern: a pumpkin used in Halloween. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hole punch: a tool for cutting holes. (Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English)
Mary is my best friend. She is twelve years old and is short. She has blonde
hair, green eyes and wears glasses. Mary likes playing tennis but she does not like any
other sports. She likes wearing jeans and T-shirts. She is very good at maths and science
and always helps me with my homework.
She is quiet and funny but she sometimes gets quite angry. I love her because I can tell
her all my secrets.
We play computer games on weekdays and go to the cinema on weekends. We have a
great time together.
15 Cheltenham Str.
Oxford
September 12th 2007
79
Dear Sara,
Please, come to my birthday party next Sunday 15th September. It starts at 6.00
p.m. There will be clowns, too. Please, phone me or send me an SMS to say if you can
come. Ask your cousin Tony to come with you.
See you soon
Peter
From http://www.lovepoems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_itsy_bitsy_spider.htm
New words:
fleece: a sheep’s wool
80
(From:http://www.love-
poems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_mary_had_a_little_lamb.htm)
5. Fable-Fairy tale.
This is a very famous fable written by Aesop for young children.
The Tortoise and the Hare
Once upon a time there was a speedy hare who bragged about how fast he could
run. Tired of hearing him boast, Slow and Steady, the tortoise, asked him to run a race.
All the animals in the forest came to watch.
Hare ran down the road for some time and then stopped to rest. He looked back
at Slow and Steady and cried out, "How do you think you can win this race when you
are walking along so slowly?"
Hare sat down and fell asleep, thinking, "There is plenty of time to relax." But
he slept too long.
Slow and Steady walked and walked. He never, ever stopped until he came to
the finish line.
81
The animals who were watching cheered so loudly for Tortoise, they woke up Hare.
Hare stretched and yawned and began to run again, but it was too late. Tortoise was
over the line.
After that, Hare always remembered, "Don't brag about your running very fast, for
New words:
fable: a short story where animals or objects speak like people
speedy: quick, fast
brag: boast, speak proudly about myself
steady: something that is steady continues in the same way
cheer: to shout loudly when you are happy
stretch: when you put your arms and legs out (Collins Cobuild Student’s Dictionary)
yawn: open your mouth wide when you are sleepy or tire
82
Part of Lesson 4
(Experimental group)
tasks
A. You will work in pairs. I’m going to give you six pictures in a jumbled order.
(Based on an idea by Heaton, J.B. 1967)
B. The following verbs show what the man and the monkeys are doing in each picture.
In pairs try to match the verbs with the pictures. Then try to describe what is happening
in each picture:
1. slept was sleeping got down
took
C. The following adjectives describe the man in each picture. Try to match the adjec-
tives with the pictures:
disappointed tired sleepy
exhausted glad puzzled
angry happy relaxing
confused surprised
84
Lesson 4
(Control group)
Your teacher asked you to write a story describing the following pictures. Give a title to
your story. The class will choose the best story which will appear in the next issue of
our school newspaper “the Pen”.
85
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………
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86
Part of Lesson 7
(Experimental group)
Tasks
A. Let’s talk about what we expect to read in a description of a pet.
C. Your teacher has asked you to write a description of your favourite animal/pet. You
can stick a picture of your pet. The class will decide on the best description which will
be published in the school newspaper ‘The Pen’. Use the notes in exercise A and B and
the information on page 81 of your book and page 12 of your workbook to help you.
D. I will give you a description of a pet. Olga, a twelve-year old girl, describes her pet
to her penfriend Pablo from Spain. Read her description and compare it with your text.
Are there any similarities or differences? Underline them.
My pet is a dog. His name is Hercules and he comes from Greece. He sleeps in his
house in the balcony.
87
He is brown and white and his eyes are brown. His eyes sometimes become sad be-
cause I’ve got homework and he is alone. He likes sleeping. He eats meat and food for
dogs but he doesn’t like bread.
I love Hercules very much because he is a good friend. In my free time, we play
together with a ball. He can run fast and he brings my schoolbag. My mother takes him
for a walk every day. I take him out on Saturdays and Sundays. We go to the park. He
plays with other dogs but he doesn’t like cats.
E. Is there any information in Olga’s description which is not in your draft? What is it?
Now that you have compared your draft with Olga’s, would you like to add or delete
anything in your draft?
88
Lesson 7
(Control group)
Your teacher has asked you to write a description of your favourite animal/pet. You can
stick a picture of your pet. The class will decide on the best description which will be
published in the school newspaper ‘The Pen’. Use the information on page 81 of your
book and page 12 of your workbook to help you.
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89
APPENDIX X
PAGES FROM FUN WAY ENGLISH 3
STUDENTS’ BOOK AND WORKBOOK
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
APPENDIX XI
TEACHERS’ INTERVIEWS
IN GREEK AND IN ENGLISH
100
ΟΡΓΑΝΙΚΗ ΑΠΟΣΠΑΣΗ
ΘΕΣΗ
ΑΝΑΠΛΗΡΩΤΗΣ/ΤΡΙΑ ΜΕΤΑΤΑΞΗ
ΠΕΡΙΟΧΗ
Α. Γενικές ερωτήσεις:
1. Έχετε παρακολουθήσει ειδική εκπαίδευση για τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής του
γραπτού λόγου κατά τη διάρκεια των σπουδών σας ή σε κάποιο σεµινάριο;
2. Τι διδακτικά µέσα υπάρχουν για τους καθηγητές/τις καθηγήτριες Αγγλικών για να
διδάξουν την παραγωγή γραπτού λόγου; Πιστεύετε ότι το βιβλίο του Υπουργείου
Παιδείας επαρκεί για τη βελτίωση της ικανότητας των παιδιών να παράγουν γραπτό
λόγο;
3. Γνωρίζετε για τις κλίµακες αξιολόγησης των γραπτών κειµένων;
4. Γνωρίζετε µορφές ανατροφοδότησης;
2. Τι συµβουλή θα δίνατε σε ένα νέο καθηγητή/µία νέα καθηγήτρια που δεν γνωρίζει
την κουλτούρα σας και τα χαρακτηριστικά των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
104
(Based on an idea by Hyland, F. & Hyland, K. (2001) “Sugaring the pill: Praise and
criticism in written feedback” Journal of Second Language Writing 10: 185 - 212
and
Reichelt, M. (2005) “English-language writing instruction in Poland” Journal of Second
Language Writing 14: 215-232)
This interview is part of my research for my thesis which aims at finding methods
which can help students improve writing in English. The content is confidential and will
be used only for this thesis.
During the interview we will talk about the ways you use to help your students to pre-
pare their written assignments in English.
PERMANENT TRANSFERRED
PRESENT
POSITION
TEMPORARY SECONDED
AREA ______________________________________________________
A. General questions:
1. Have you received any specific training for teaching writing during your studies or
in an in-service seminar?
2. What resources exist for teachers of English-language writing in order to teach writ-
ing? Do you believe that the materials assigned by the Ministry of Education are
sufficient for improving the students’ writing ability?
3. Are you familiar with the marking schemes for written texts?
4. Are you familiar with various ways of feedback?
10. When you give feedback, which of your comments do you expect to be most useful
to students to help them improve their writing?
11. What form of written feedback do you usually give to students on language prob-
lems in their written texts?
APPENDIX XII
TRANSCRIPTIONS OF INTERVIEWS IN CD
108
APPENDIX XIII
REFERENCES
109
References
Anastasiadou, A. (2003) Improving the Teaching of Writing in the Greek State Primary
Schools: Developing Supplementary Writing Materials for the Sixth Form Students.
Unpublished master’s thesis, Hellenic Open University: Patras.
Andrews, J., Hunter, M., Joyce, H., Superfine, W., O’Brien, T. & Thorp, D. (2000)
Teaching English to Young Learners Volumes 1, 2, 3 Patras: Hellenic Open Univer-
sity.
Coakley, J., Fairlamb, D., Robinson, J. & Whitcut, J. (1978) Longman Dictionary of
Contemporary English. London: Longman Group Ltd.
Chrysochoos, J.; Chrysochoos, N. & Thompson, I. (2002) The Methodology of the
Teaching of English as a Foreign Language with Reference to the Crosscurricular
Approach and Task-Based Learning. Athens: The Pedagogical Institute.
Council of Europe. (2001) Common European Framework for Reference for Language:
Learning, Teaching, Assessment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Dedrinos, B. (2007) KPG Script Rater Guide. Athens: National and Kapodistrian Uni-
versity of Athens Faculty of English Studies.
Heaton, J. B. (1967) Composition through Pictures. London: Longman.
Hedgecock, J. and Lefkowitz, N. (1994) “Feedback on feedback: Assessing Learner Re-
ceptivity to Teacher Response in L2 Composing” Journal of Second Language Writ-
ing 3: 141-163.
Hyland, F. & Hyland, K. (2001) “Sugaring the Pill: Praise and Criticism in Written
Feedback” Journal of Second Language Writing 10: 185-212.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/crafts/halloween/jolmask/.
http://www.dltk-teach.com/fables/tortoise/)
http://www.kidsturncentral.com/themes/piratecrafts.htm.
http://www.lovepoems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_itsy_bitsy_spider.htm.
http://www.lovepoems.me.uk/childrens_nursery_rhymes_mary_had_a_little_lamb.htm.
http://www.storyarts.org/library/aesops/stories/tortoise.html.
KET (1998) Cambridge: University of Cambridge.
KET (2006) Cambridge: University of Cambridge.
Oxford, R. (1990) Language Learning Strategies. Boston: Heinle & Heinle Publishers.
110
Teacher one
∆: Και ο διάλογος που υπάρχει πριν το γραπτό λόγο, πριν δοθεί ο γραπτός λόγος..
Ε: Ναι, ναι…και ο διάλογος
∆: Και ο διάλογος πριν το writing, πριν το γραπτό λόγο.
Ε: Και έτσι κι αλλιώς εφόσον είναι το δηµόσιο σχολείο πρέπει να ακολουθούµε αυτά
που µας ορίζει το Υπουργείο..
∆: Αυτά που µας ορίζει το υπουργείο.
Ε: ΟΚ. Ναι.
∆: Αν γνωρίζω για τις κλίµακες αξιολόγησης των γραπτών κειµένων; Ε.. δεν γνωρίζω
ακριβώς. ∆εν έχω κάνει αξιολογήτρια. ∆εν….
Ε: Μάλιστα για µορφές αξ.., ανατροφοδότησης. Γνωρίζετε κάποιες διάφορες µορφές
ανατροφοδότησης;
∆: Μάλλον όχι.
Ε: Άρα είναι ό,τι κάνετε εσείς.
∆: Ναι. Ό,τι κάνω σαν καθηγήτρια.
Ε: Πάµε στο δεύτερο µέρος για τις απόψεις σας σχετικά µε τη διδασκαλία της
παραγωγής του γραπτού λόγου.
∆: Μπορείτε να περιγράψετε τη µεθοδολογία που χρησιµοποιείτε για τη διδασκαλία της
παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα Αγγλικά µε τους µαθητές/τις µαθήτριες σας; Ε, βασικά
στηρίζοµαι στο µοντέλο που υπάρχει στο βιβλίο του µαθητή, δηλαδή το διαβάζουµε
προσεκτικά, το επεξεργαζόµαστε από άποψη λεξιλογίου..
Ε: Μισό λεπτό.
∆: Ναι.
Ε: Το επεξεργάζεστε;
∆: Το επεξεργαζόµαστε τονίζοντας ε.. ιδιαιτερο.. ε.. κάποια σηµεία…
Ε: Από λεξιλόγιο;
∆: Λεξιλογικά σηµεία. Ιδιωµατισµούς ή εκφράσεις. Αν είναι γράµµα, ε.. τονίζω το
layout του γράµµατος.
Ε: Μάλιστα.
∆: Πώς πρέπει να γράφω ένα γράµµα στα Αγγλικά. Αν είναι story ε.. τονίζουµε τα
θετικά σηµεία, πώς πρέπει να αναπτυχθεί µια ιστορία, να αποφεύγουν τις επαναλήψεις,
να χρησιµοποιούν κάποιες συνδετικές λέξεις..
Ε: Ναι.. πώς να αναπτυχθεί. Ναι, οι συνδετικές λέξεις είναι πολύ σηµαντικές.
∆: Ναι. Να αποφεύγουν τις επαναλήψεις, να είναι πρωτότυπη και όχι συνηθισµένη η
ιστορία.
3
Ε: Α, ναι.
∆: Να χωρίζουν παραγράφους, τονίζουµε το θέµα των παραγράφων.
Ε: Ναι, ναι, να αποφύγουν επαναλήψεις. Ε.. για τις ιδέες πώς το είπατε;
∆: Να είναι πρωτότυπες οι ιδέες δηλαδή όσον το δυνατόν να βασίζονται σε δικές τους
εµπειρίες και όχι σε αντιγραφή παρόµοιας ιστορίας που έχουνε διαβάσει.
Ε: Ναι, να είναι πρωτότυπες οι ιδέες και να στηρίζονται σε δικές τους εµπειρίες
∆: Εµπειρίες ναι.
Ε: Και µετά να κάνουν καλές παραγράφους.
∆: Να χωρίζουν παραγράφους και όσο µπορούνε να αποφεύγουν λεξιλογικά λάθη ε..
και λάθη γραµµατικοσυντακτικά. Να εφαρµόζουν τους κανόνες που έχουν διδαχθεί
στη γραµµατική…
Ε: Να αποφεύγουν…..
∆: Ορθογραφικά, γραµµατικά και συντακτικά λάθη όσο το δυνατόν µέσα στο πλαίσιο
αυτών που έχουν διδαχθεί.
Ε: Τα γραµµατικά και συντακτικά λάθη.
∆: Και όταν πρόκειται για φιλικό γράµµα. Συνήθως φιλικά γράµµατα γράφουµε όχι
τυπικά. Το λεξιλόγιο, σύντοµους τύπους, καθηµερινές εκφράσεις, δεν µπορούν να
χρησιµοποιήσουν παθητική φωνή και δύσκολες εκφράσεις.
Ε: Ναι, είναι µικρό το επίπεδο.
∆: Ναι είναι µικρό το επίπεδο.
Ε: Ε… στα γράµµατα φιλικό ύφος.
∆: Στα γράµµατα φιλικό ύφος.
Ε: ΟΚ.
∆: Ποιες συγκεκριµένες δυσκολίες έχουν οι µαθητές/µαθήτριες σας όταν παράγουν
γραπτό λόγο στα Αγγλικά;
Ε: Ναι.
∆: Ένα από τα µεγαλύτερα προβλήµατα…
Ε: Μάλιστα…
∆: Είναι η παρεµβολή της µητρικής γλώσσας.
Ε: Μάλιστα.
∆: Mother tongue interference, ε… της µητρικής γλώσσας, ε….Είναι πιο εύκολο γι
αυτούς να εκφραστούν σκεφτόµενοι ή πιο εύκολο να σκέφτονται Ελληνικά και απλά να
µεταφράζουνε και εδώ τους υπενθυµίζω πάντα το think in English που λέµε να
4
Ε: Μάλιστα.
∆: Και πολλά παιδιά τα οποία εκφράζονται προφορικά σωστά ιδιαίτερα αυτά που
εκφράζονται προφορικά σωστά δεν έχουν πρόβληµα στο να καταγράψουν και τις ιδέες
τους σωστά.
Ε: Ναι.
∆: Στα Ελληνικά περισσότερο δηλαδή πιστεύω ότι έχουν πρόβληµα ….. τα παιδιά…
Ε: Ναι, στα Αγγλικά….
∆: Ενώ στα Αγγλικά πρέπει να αφιερώσουν λίγο χρόνο, να αφιερώσουν λίγο χρόνο στο
να σε εισαγωγικά αυτό που λέµε πρώτα απ’ όλα να κατεβάσουν ιδέες, να κατεβάσουν
το brainstorming που λέµε.
Ε: Ναι, ναι.
∆: Να κατεβάσουν ιδέες και µετά να τις βάλουνε σε σωστό, ε.. πώς να το πούµε ε…
λούκι, ε…
Ε: Σε σωστή σειρά;
∆: Σε σωστό αυλάκι, σε σωστή σειρά;
Ε: Σε σωστό δρόµο;
∆: Σε σωστό δρόµο, σε σωστό δρόµο. Όχι απλά µεταφράζοντας αλλά σκεπτόµενοι στα
Αγγλικά, είναι πιο σύνθετο δηλαδή ακόµα και για έναν καλό µαθητή.
Ε: Είναι πιο σύνθετο…
∆: Είναι πιο σύνθετο, ακόµα και για τους καλούς µαθητές. Η παραγωγή λόγου στα
Ελληνικά είναι πιο …. σύνθετη µε περισσότερα καλολογικά στοιχεία, µε περισσότερα
επίθετα
Ε: Α, ναι, ναι.
∆: Ενώ στα Αγγλικά είναι πιο απλοποιηµένη, µε πιο σύντοµες προτάσεις.
Ε: Στα ελληνικά.
∆: Ναι. Στα ελληνικά η έκφραση είναι πιο σύνθετη µε περισσότερα επίθετα,
καλολογικά στοιχεία….µε µεγαλύτερες προτάσεις και φυσικά γιατί χειρίζονται τη
γλώσσα καλύτερα, είναι η µητρική τους γλώσσα.
Ε: Ενώ στα Αγγλικά είναι….
∆: Στα Αγγλικά είναι πιο απλή, πρέπει να είναι σύντοµες οι προτασούλες για να είναι
σίγουροι ότι αυτό που λένε είναι σωστό. ∆εν πρέπει να ξεφεύγουν δηλαδή να
ξεχνιούνται και να κάνουν αυτό που λέµε ατέλειωτες προτάσεις γιατί εκεί σίγουρα θα
κάνουν λάθος…. για να µην κάνουνε λάθος.
6
∆: Τέσσερα. Νumber four. Eεε. Τι είδους εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου δίνετε
στους µαθητές/στις µαθήτριες σας;
Ε: Ναι.
∆: Συνήθως στο δηµόσιο σχολείο δίνουµε εργασίες όπως προβλέπει το αναλυτικό
σχολικό πρόγραµµα, α… σύντοµες περιγραφές όπως π.χ.
Σ: Σύντοµες περιγραφές…
∆: ∆ωµατίου, σπιτιού, σχολείου, φιλικά γράµµατα…
Ε: Α, ναι φιλικά γράµµατα, ναι.
∆: Φιλικά γράµµατα ναι.
Ε: Μάλιστα.
∆: Ή σύντοµες ιστοριούλες…
Ε: Ή και περιγραφή προσώπων.
∆: Ή και περιγραφή προσώπων, ναι.
Ε: ∆ηλαδή µε λίγα λόγια είστε υποχρεωµένοι να ακολουθήσετε αυτό που λέει… εεε και
δεν ξεφεύγετε.
∆: Ακολουθούµε και είναι αρκετές ήδη οι µορφές γραπτού λόγου που υπάρχουν στο
βιβλίο οπότε δεν χρειάζεται , δεν προλαβαίνουµε, δεν υπάρχει και ο χρόνος για να
κάνουµε και κάτι επιπλέον. Νοµίζω όµως ότι είναι αρκετά αυτά.
Ε: Ναι. Πού γράφουν τα γραπτά κείµενα στο σπίτι ή στο σχολείο;
∆: Τα περισσότερα στο σπίτι, τα περισσότερα γράφονται στο σπίτι αφού βέβαια γίνει
και η ανάλογη επεξεργασία πριν στο σχολείο.
Ε: Στο σπίτι, αφού γίνει……..
∆: Αφού έχει γίνει η προφορική επεξεργασία στο σπίτι.
Ε: Στο σχολείο.
∆: Εεε, στο σχολείο.
Ε: Όταν λέτε.., τι εννοείτε επεξεργασία;
∆: Επεξεργασία. Προφορική συζήτηση…
Ε: Προφορική συζήτηση….
∆: Προφορική συζήτηση, λεξιλόγιο που θα χρειαστούν. Προφορική συζήτηση όπως
πόσο θα γράψουνε,
Ε: Πόσο θα γράψουν….
∆: Πόσο θα γράψουν, πόσο θα είναι το length, το µήκος της έκθεσης…
Ε: Ναι, ναι.
∆: Έτσι, ο αριθµός των λέξεων.
7
Ε: Ναι.
∆: Πιθανό λεξιλόγιο άγνωστο, πιθανό λεξιλόγιο άγνωστο, κάποιες νέες ιδέες όπως στα
project ας πούµε που έχει πολλές εργασίες…είχε ένα για το mythology και τους είπα να
ανατρέξουνε…
Ε: Κάποιες ιδέες που έχει στα project…
∆: Ναι, κάποιες ιδέες….ή το funny accident, εκεί ας πούµε.
Ε: Στο mythology;
∆: Στο mythology αναφέρουµε συγκεκριµένα παραδείγµατα, λέµε για το Μίνωα στην
αρχαία Κρήτη…
Ε: Μίνωα, ναι.
∆: Για το funny accident τους διάβασα ένα, τους διαβάζω συνήθως ένα funny accident
που έχω διαβάσει σε Αγγλική εφηµερίδα, ένα παρόµοιο.
Ε: Ένα άρθρο από Αγγλική εφηµερίδα..
∆: Ναι. Ή τα παιδιά τα ίδια διηγούνται σύντοµα, πολύ σύντοµα προφορικά µέσα στην
τάξη δικές τους εµπειρίες αστείες.
Ε: Ναι. Πάµε στο επόµενο. Για τις απόψεις και τη µεθοδολογία σχετικά µε την
αξιολόγηση και ανατροφοδότηση. Η πρώτη ερώτηση είναι : «Πώς αξιολογείτε τα
γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας στα Αγγλικά;
∆: Ε, ναι. Η αξιολόγηση γίνεται, εεεε, στο σπίτι αφού µαζευτούν οι εργασίες τους
……σε ειδικά τετράδια ή φύλλα…..εεεε.
Ε: Α, έχετε χωριστά τετράδια.
∆: Υπογραµµίζω… χωριστά τετράδια έκθεσης εεε, ή φύλλα ντοσιέ…. Υπογραµµίζω τα
λάθη, υπογραµµίζω τα λάθη διορθώνοντας τα ορθογραφικά από πάνω….
Ε: Μάλιστα, Άρα τα διορθώνετε. Έτσι;
∆: Ναι. Τα διορθώνω. Ναι.
Ε: Τα ορθογραφικά από πάνω;
∆: Ναι, τα ορθογραφικά από πάνω, σβήνω τη λεξούλα µε µία γραµµούλα, και από κάτω
γράφω το σωστό. Αν είναι ορθογραφικό ή γραµµατικό όπως απλός ενεστώτας do,
does….
Ε: Μισό λεπτό….Σβήνετε τη λέξη και τη διορθώνετε από πάνω….
∆: Ναι….
Ε: Άρα τα ορθογραφικά και τα γραµµατικά;
∆: Και τα γραµµατικά.
Ε: Όπως do, does.
8
∆: Όπως do, does ή για παράδειγµα, εεε….Τώρα τι άλλο; Και ζητώ από τους µαθητές
να την ξαναγράψουν σε καθαρό χαρτί, σε καθαρό φύλλο, να καθαρογραφεί µία ακόµα
φορά η έκθεση για να …..
Ε: Όταν έχει πολλά λάθη.
∆: Όταν υπάρχουν υπερβολικά λάθη. Ναι. Έτσι ώστε…..
Ε: Να το καθαρογράψουν…..
∆: Να το καθαρογράψουν…, διορθωµένη για να προβληµατιστούν έτσι και πάνω στα
λάθη τους.
Ε: ∆ιορθωµένη… όταν υπάρχουν πολλά λάθη. Έτσι;
∆: Ναι….Και όταν υπάρχει λάθος….. Εεεε. Πόσο χρήσιµη….
Ε: Πόσο χρήσιµη νοµίζετε ότι είναι η γραπτή ανατροφοδότηση του καθηγητή/της
καθηγήτριας για τη βελτίωση της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου των µαθητών/µαθητριών;
∆: Ε….είναι αρκετά χρήσιµη µε την έννοια ότι …..
Ε: Με την έννοια ότι….
∆: Με την έννοια ότι …στο επόµενο writing….. στο επόµενο writing…θα αποφευχθούν
λάθη που γίνανε….
Ε: Παρόµοια…
∆: Έτσι παρόµοια λάθη και θα εµπλουτισθούν οι γνώσεις τους πάνω στο πώς να
γράψουνε.
Ε: Ε…, πότε αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας όταν τους
αναθέτετε εργασίες παραγωγής λόγου στο σχολείο;
∆: Ε… πότε; Γί….την επόµενη µέρα, µόλις τα πάρω, την επόµενη µέρα στο σπίτι και
προσπαθώ στο επόµενο µάθηµα αν είναι δυνατόν να τους τα δώσω.
Ε: ΟΚ. Άρα τα κάνετε στο σπίτι και τους τα δίνετε.
∆: Ναι…
Ε: Μάλιστα….Πάµε µετά….
∆: Αξιολογείτε….
Ε: Αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας όσο γράφουν ή αφού
έχουν τελειώσει το γραπτό τους;
∆: Ε… αφού έχουν τελειώσει το γραπτό τους.
Ε: Εεεεε, στην επόµενη ερώτηση. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος ρόλος σας όταν
αξιολογείτε γραπτά ένα προσχέδιο της έκθεσης των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
∆: ∆εν διορθώνω προσχέδιο.
9
Ε: Α….Τώρα. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος ρόλος σας όταν αξιολογείτε γραπτά το
τελικό κείµενο των µαθητών ή µαθητριών σας;
∆: Εεε, ο κύριος ρόλος είναι να µπορέσω…. να µεταδώσω στα παιδιά, να τα πείσω ότι
…..αυτά που έγραψαν ή που δεν έγραψαν πόσο ανταποκρίνονται σ’ αυτά που…..είχαµε
τονίσει στη θε…σ το µάθηµα της θεωρίας, πόσο εφάρµοσαν τους κανόνες….που
…….µέχρι ποιο βαθµό δηλαδή εφάρµοσαν τους κανόνες που είπαµε και από κει και
πέρα να τα βοηθήσω…ε…..
Σ: Μισό λεπτό…..
Να βελτιωθούνε…..
Ε: Στο µάθηµα της θεωρίας….πόσο εφάρµοσαν… ∆: Πόσο εφάρµοσαν.
Πόσο…αξιοποίησαν τις γνώσεις που τους… που πήραµε από το µάθηµα της θεωρίας.
Ε: Ναι…. Τι ς γνώσεις….εεεε…. Όταν σχολιάζετε τα προσχέδια των γραπτών κειµένων
των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας, επικεντρώνεστε σε κάποια σηµεία περισσότερο από
άλλα; Και ποια είναι αυτά τα σηµεία;
∆: Είπαµε ότι δεν…. µε το προσχέδιο δεν ασχολούµαστε.
Ε: Ναι αφού είπατε ότι δεν έχετε χρόνο.
∆: Ναι.
Ε: Τώρα. Εεε, σε ποια σηµεία τώρα επικεντρώνεστε όταν σχολιάζετε τα τελικά κείµενα;
Τώρα επικεντρώνεστε στα ίδια σηµεία; Α, εδώ µάλλον δεν µπορείτε να απαντήσετε…
ήδη έχετε πει σε ποια σηµεία επικεντρώνεστε. Είχατε πει…
∆: Ε, ναι στα σηµεία…
Ε: Είχατε πει, είχατε πει.
∆: Σ’ αυτά τα σηµεία που αναφέρθηκα πριν δηλαδή στην ποσότητα του λόγου, στο
πόσο ναι, στο layout όταν πρόκειται για γράµµα κ.λ.π.
Ε: Κρίνετε ότι η ανατροφοδότηση του δασκάλου/της δασκάλας σε ένα γραπτό είναι πιο
χρήσιµη κατά τη διάρκεια που οι µαθητές/µαθήτριες διαµορφώνουν το γραπτό τους ή
µόλις το ολοκληρώσουν; Και γιατί έχετε αυτή τη γνώµη;
∆: Σίγουρα είναι πολύ χρήσιµη, σίγουρα είναι πολύ χρήσιµη… κατά τη διάρκεια που οι
µαθητές διαµορφώνουν το γραπτό τους….
Ε: Ναι.
∆: Γιατί τότε επεµβαίνουµε… ουσιαστικά, επεµβαίνουµε ουσιαστικά… στη σκέψη
τους.
Ε: Μάλιστα.
10
∆: Σίγουρα θα είναι χρήσιµη αλλά δεν έχω χρόνο να το κάνω µέσα στην τάξη, είναι
παρά πολλά τα παιδιά και ανοµοιόµορφο το επίπεδο. Επίσης υπάρχει φόβος
διακωµώδησης.
Ε: Α, µάλιστα. Πώς περιµένετε να αξιοποιήσουν οι µαθητές τη γραπτή
ανατροφοδότηση που τους δίνετε στα κείµενα τους;
∆: Περιµένω βελτίωση…. στον επόµενο γραπτό λόγο και αυτό θα φανεί στο επόµενο
writing, θα φανεί στη δουλειά τους τη γραπτή…
Ε: Ααα, µάλιστα. Το επόµενο. Τι περιµένετε να κάνουν οι µαθητές και οι µαθήτριες σας
εάν δεν καταλαβαίνουν τα σχόλια σας ή δεν µπορούν να διορθώσουν τα λάθη τους
αφού πάρουν την ανατροφοδότηση;
∆: Περιµένω να το συζητήσουµε κατ’ ιδίαν στην τάξη….Εάν παρόλα αυτά υπάρχουν
απορίες κοιτάω κάποιες ασκήσεις για να τα βελτιώσουν.
Ε: Α, µάλιστα οπότε ναι… για να τα βελτιώσουν. Εεεε… θα µπορούσατε να αναφέρετε
µία περίπτωση κατά την οποία αισθανθήκατε ότι δώσατε πετυχηµένη ανατροφοδότηση;
Αυτή µπορεί να αναφέρεται είτε σε ένα µαθητή/µαθήτρια ή σε ολόκληρη την τάξη.
∆: Θα τον ή την συµβούλευα να γράφουν τα παιδιά εεε…. ατοµικά γιατί δεν έχουν
µάθει να δουλεύουν µε pairs και groups.
Ε: Α, ωραία. Ευχαριστώ πάρα πολύ. Ευχαριστώ που µε βοηθήσατε.
∆: Να’ στε καλά. Καλή επιτυχία στο έργο σας.
12
Teacher two
E: Ε…καλησπέρα.
Κ: Καλησπέρα.
Ε: Να ξεκινήσουµε τη συνέντευξη µας. Θα ξεκινήσουµε µε τις γενικές
ερωτήσεις…Ε…. Έχετε παρακολουθήσει ειδική εκπαίδευση για τη διδασκαλία της
παραγωγής του γραπτού λόγου κατά τη διάρκεια των σπουδών σας ή σε κάποιο
σεµινάριο;
Κ: Ε…ναι. Όχι δεν έχω παρακολουθήσει κάποια συγκεκριµένη εκπαίδευση για την
παραγωγή γραπτού λόγου. Ε…βέβαια κάποια στοιχεία και ιδέες έχω πάρει από διάφορα
σεµινάρια που παρακολούθησα κατά καιρούς.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ναι, ναι ωραία. Πάµε στη δεύτερη ερώτηση. Τι διδακτικά µέσα υπάρχουν
για τους καθηγητές και τις καθηγήτριες Αγγλικών για να διδάξουν την παραγωγή
γραπτού λόγου;
Κ: Ε…τώρα. Για εµάς τους καθηγητές του δηµοσίου στην πρωτοβάθµια υπάρχει το
student’s book και το workbook. Άλλα βοηθήµατα…δεν υπάρχουν.
Ε: Το υλικό δηλαδή του υπουργείου.
Κ: Ε, ναι αυτό ό,τι µας στέλνουν από το Υπουργείο, ναι. Κάποιες ιδέες βέβαια όσον
αφορά το γραπτό λόγο µπορούµε να πάρουµε πιστεύω από το teacher’s book που
συνοδεύει τα βιβλία.
Ε: Πιστεύετε ότι το υλικό αυτό του Υπουργείου επαρκεί για τη βελτίωση της
ικανότητας των παιδιών να παράγουν γραπτό λόγο;
Κ: Ε..όχι δεν έχει αρκετά στοιχεία. Πιστεύω ότι δεν βοηθάει πολύ.
Ε: ∆εν βοηθάει, ναι.
Κ: ΝαιΕίναι και λίγο παλιό.
Ε: Είναι και παλιό το βιβλίο. Κάτι…γίνεται µια προσπάθεια για αλλαγή µου φαίνεται,
µάλιστα. Πάµε στην επόµενη ερώτηση. Γνωρίζετε για τις κλίµακες αξιολόγησης των
γραπτών κειµένων;
Κ: Όχι δεν …ξέρω ποιες είναι αυτές οι κλίµακες.
Ε: Ε, όχι αυτά…
Κ: Ε, όχι…
13
Σ: Ε: στα Αγγλικά
Κ: στα Αγγλικά
Ε: µε τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα Ελληνικά;
Κ: Τώρα βέβαια δεν ξέρω και ποιο τρόπο χρησιµοποιούν οι δάσκαλοι για να διδάξουν
παραγωγή γραπτού λόγου στα ελληνικά, αλλά φαντάζοµαι…
Ε: Μµµµ….
Κ: ότι ο τρόπος θα είναι περίπου ο ίδιος. Γραπτό λόγο παράγουµε. Ναι.
Ε: Ε..απλώς στα Ελληνικά είναι και λίγο πιο εύκολο…
Κ: Θα είναι γιατί είναι η µητρική γλώσσα.
Ε: Ναι, ναι είναι λογικό. Ε… Τι είδους εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου δίνετε
στους µαθητές/τις µαθήτριες σας;
K: Τώρα τι εργασίες; Ναι. Συνήθως ασχολούµαστε µε τα projects που υπάρχουν στο
τέλος της ενότητας του student’s book.
E: Α, µάλιστα.
Κ: Όχι µε όλα βέβαια τα projects γιατί ούτε και χρόνος αρκετός υπάρχει… αλλά και
κάποια από αυτά τα θέµατα… φαντάζουν και λίγο ανιαρά στους µαθητές. Ε…
υπάρχουν βέβαια και ασκήσεις παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στο workbook και οι
περισσότερες είναι ειδικά στα πρώτα units.
E: Άρα ό, τι ….
Σ: Ε: υπάρχει στο υλικό του υπουργείου.
Κ: είναι ό, τι υπάρχει στο υλικό.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ε.. Πού γράφουν τα γραπτά κείµενα- στο σπίτι ή στο σχολείο;
Κ: Εγώ θα προτιµούσα να γίνονται στο σχολείο αλλά…αυτό είναι και πολύ δύσκολο.
Χάνουµε πάρα πολύ χρόνο και γι’ αυτό το λόγο η άσκηση δίνεται συνήθως σαν
homework.
Ε: E…πάµε στην τρίτη ενότητα σχετικά µε τις απόψεις και τη µεθοδολογία σχετικά µε
την αξιολόγηση και ανατροφοδότηση. Ε… Πώς αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των
µαθητών/µαθητριών σας στα Αγγλικά;
Κ: Αυτό που µε ενδιαφέρει είναι να…αυτά που γράφουν να είναι κατανοητά …
Ε: Μάλιστα.
Κ: να βγαίνει νόηµα. Nα χρησιµοποιούν βέβαια όσο περισσότερο µπορούν γραµµατικά
φαινόµενα και…στη συνέχεια να κάνουν όσο το δυνατόν και λιγότερα ορθρογραφικά
λάθη.
15
Κ: Ναι.
Ε: Ε….τώρα η επόµενη ερώτηση. Ε…τώρα αφού είπαµε ότι προσχέδιο…
Σ: Κ: ..ναι συνήθως δεν…
Ε: .. ε… ναι δεν κάνετε..
Ε: άρα δεν ισχύει αυτή η ερώτηση…Επικεντρώνεστε στα ίδια σηµεία, δηλαδή σε ποια
σηµεία επικεντρώνεστε όταν σχολιάζετε τα τελικά κείµενα;
Κ: Το τελικό κείµενο, ε; Στο τελικό κείµενο, ναι. Πρώτα βέβαια στην παραγωγή ιδεών,
αυτός είναι και ο κύριος στόχος…
Ε: Μάλιστα…
Κ: …και έπειτα βέβαια στα γραµµατικά και ορθογραφικά λάθη.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ε… Κρίνετε ότι η ανατροφοδότηση του δασκάλου ή της δασκάλας σε ένα
γραπτό είναι πιο χρήσιµη κατά τη διάρκεια που οι µαθητές/µαθήτριες διαµορφώνουν
το γραπτό τους ή µόλις το ολοκληρώσουν και γιατί έχετε αυτή τη γνώµη;
Κ: Εννοείτε ότι βοηθάει περισσότερο κατά τη διάρκεια…
Ε: ναι…
Κ: της παραγωγής του λόγου γιατί, της παραγωγής του λόγου γιατί µ’ αυτόν τον τρόπο
ή διορθώνουν, µπορεί και να αποφεύγουν κάποια λάθη.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Απλώς λέµε δεν έχουµε χρόνο στο δηµόσιο σχολείο.
Κ: Ε, ναι, βέβαια.
Ε: Εποµένως δεν µπορούµε να…δεν προλαβαίνουµε να…
Κ: Ε, ναι….
Ε: …να βοηθήσουµε τα παιδιά στις…. Όταν δίνετε ανατροφοδότηση, ποια από τα
σχόλια σας πιστεύετε ότι είναι περισσότερο χρήσιµα στους µαθητές/στις µαθήτριες για
να βελτιώσουν το γραπτό τους;
Κ: Ε…πιστεύω ότι είναι τα σχόλια που αφορούν την οργάνωση του κειµένου τα πιο
χρήσιµα.
Ε: Ναι. Μάλιστα, ναι. Ε… Τι είδους γραπτή ανατροφοδότηση δίνετε συνήθως στα
γλωσσικά προβλήµατα των κειµένων των µαθητών/µαθητριών;
Κ: Ναι. Επισηµαίνω τα λάθη…ε…διορθώνω τα πιο σηµαντικά από αυτά…
Ε:..ναι…
Κ: …στη συνέχεια µπορεί να τα σχολιάσουµε κιόλας µε τα παιδιά, ε… για να τους
βοηθήσω να αποφύγουν την επανάληψη τους.
Ε: Πολύ ωραία. Πάµε στην επόµενη ενότητα «Απόψεις για άλλες µορφές
ανατροφοδότησης. Ε… Νοµίζετε ότι η ανατροφοδότηση που δίνεται προφορικά από
17
Ε: ….και εκδόθηκε µετά στο περιοδικό. Ναι, πολύ ωραία. Καλή περίπτωση, µάλιστα,
ναι. Τι συµβουλή θα δίνατε σε ένα νέο καθηγητή ή µία νέα καθηγήτρια που δεν
γνωρίζει την κουλτούρα σας και τα χαρακτηριστικά των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
Κ: Ναι, τώρα τι συµβουλή…αν θέλει βέβαια τώρα να εφαρµόσει κάποιες µεθόδους που
είναι ασυνήθιστες εδώ στους µαθητές µας, στις τάξεις που έχουµε..
Ε: Ναι, ναι.
Κ: …ασυνήθιστες όπως είναι το pair work, το group work….
Ε:…ναι….
Κ: …κάποια τέτοια, κάποιους τέτοιους τρόπους…
Ε: …ναι…
Κ: …θέλει να έχει πολύ υποµονή και…
Ε: …ναι…
Κ: …επιµονή…για να έχει αποτελέσµατα.
Ε: Γιατί δεν είµαστε και µαθηµένοι και σαν λαός…ε…µόνο στο ατοµικό…
Κ: Ούτε τα παιδιά είναι µαθηµένα σε τέτοιους τρόπους εργασίας.
Ε: Ωραία, ευχαριστώ πολύ.
Κ: Να’ στε καλά.
Ε: Ευχαριστώ που µου αφιερώσατε και όλο το απόγευµα σας.
20
Teacher three
Κ: Ε… κατ’ εξοχήν στο σπίτι και κάποιες φορές στο σχολείο εε… λόγω έλλειψης
χρόνου.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ωραία. Πάµε στην επόµενη σειρά ερωτήσεων σχετικά µε τις απόψεις και
τη µεθοδολογία σχετικά µε την αξιολόγηση και ανατροφοδότηση. Η πρώτη ερώτηση
είναι: «Πώς αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας στα Αγγλικά;»
K: Εµµ…κυρίως επικεντρώνοµαι στη δοµή και την οργάνωση ε…
Ε: Μάλιστα…
Κ: και λιγότερο στα γραµµατικά λάθη και το λεξιλόγιο….
Ε: Άρα περισσότερο στο νόηµα.
Κ: Στο νόηµα.
Ε: Στο νόηµα και τις ιδέες. Ναι. ∆εύτερο. Πόσο χρήσιµη νοµίζετε ότι είναι η γραπτή
ανατροφοδότηση του καθηγητή ή της καθηγήτριας για τη βελτίωση της παραγωγής
γραπτού λόγου των µαθητών/µαθητριών;
Κ: Ε… είναι χρήσιµη…ε…αν … εξηγήσουµε στα παιδιά..ε..κάποια
πράγµατα…ε…αλλιώς …δεν την παίρνουν υπόψη.
Ε: Χρειάζεται και επεξήγηση σ’ αυτό
Σ: Ε: δηλαδή
Κ: Ναι, ναι.
Ε: Ναι, έχετε δίκιο, ναι, ναι. Ε…. Πότε αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των
µαθητών/µαθητριών σας όταν τους αναθέτετε εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στο
σχολείο;
Κ: Εµ…τις λίγες φορές που το κάνουµε στο σχολείο τα αξιολογώ…και κατά τη
διάρκεια …της παραγωγής του γραπτού λόγου και στο τέλος.
Ε: Μάλιστα. ∆ηλαδή και όσο γράφουν και στο τέλος
Σ: Ε: ναι
Κ: Ναι.
Ε: Αλλά είπατε δεν έχετε χρόνο ας πούµε πολλές φορές, ναι στο δηµόσιο σχολείο
εε….ναι.
Κ: Ναι, τις περισσότερες φορές.
Ε: Τώρα. Αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας όσο γράφουν ή
αφού έχουν τελειώσει το γραπτό τους;
Κ: Ε… και όσο γράφουν και ….όταν…τελειώνουν.
23
Ε: Στο τέλος. Ναι. Είναι όπως και την προηγούµενη ερώτηση. Μάλιστα. Ε….την
επόµενη ερώτηση. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος ρόλος σας όταν αξιολογείτε
γραπτά ένα προσχέδιο της έκθεσης των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
Κ: Ε…πρέπει να βοηθήσω τα παιδιά να εντοπίσουν και να βρουν µόνα τους τα λάθη
τους.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Άρα δηλαδή να µπορέσουν
Σ: Ε: µόνα τους
Κ: ναι
Ε: να κάνουν, να διαµορφώσουν την έκθεση τους. Ναι. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο
κύριος ρόλος σας όταν αξιολογείτε γραπτά το τελικό κείµενο των µαθητών/µαθητριών;
Κ: Ε…να δω αν εφάρµοσαν αυτά που είπαµε στα drafts. E… τι επωφελήθηκαν δηλαδή
….από τη βοήθεια µου.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ναι. Πολύ ωραία. Όταν σχολιάζετε τα προσχέδια των γραπτών κειµένων
των µαθητών ή µαθητριών, επικεντρώνεστε σε κάποια σηµεία περισσότερο από άλλα,
και ποια είναι αυτά τα σηµεία;
Κ: Ε.. στο πρώτο draft επικεντρώνοµαι κυρίως στο νόηµα και τη δοµή…ε.. τη σειρά
των παραγράφων.. βασικά αυτά.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Άρα βασικά πάµε το νόηµα και οι ιδέες και δοµή.
Σ: Κ: Ναι.
Ε: ναι.
Ε: Ε… Επικεντρώνεστε στα ίδια σηµεία όταν σχολιάζετε τα τελικά κείµενα;
Κ: Ε…και στα ίδια σηµεία …αλλά …και στο σύνολο..
Ε: Και στο σύνολο…Μάλιστα. Ε…πάµε στην επόµενη ερώτηση. Κρίνετε ότι η
ανατροφοδότηση του δασκάλου ή της δασκάλας σε ένα γραπτό είναι πιο χρήσιµη κατά
τη διάρκεια που οι µαθητές/µαθήτριες διαµορφώνουν το γραπτό τους ή µόλις το
ολοκληρώσουν και γιατί έχετε αυτή τη γνώµη;
Κ: Ναι, ε…. είναι πιο χρήσιµη κατά τη διάρκεια γιατί τους βοηθάµε στη διαδικασία να
διορθώσουν τα λάθη ε… να τα βρουν µόνοι τους.
Ε: Ναι. Απλώς είπαµε ότι δυστυχώς δεν έχουµε το χρόνο…
Κ: να το κάνουµε…
Ε: να το κάνουµε συχνά στο σχολείο µας. Ναι. Κατάντησε να είναι πολυτέλεια. Είναι
και µικρές οι ώρες! Τώρα. «Όταν δίνετε ανατροφοδότηση, ποια από τα σχόλια σας
πιστεύετε ότι είναι περισσότερο χρήσιµα στους µαθητές-τις µαθήτριες για να
βελτιώσουν το γραπτό τους;»
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σχόλια σας ή δεν µπορούν να διορθώσουν τα λάθη τους αφού πάρουν την
ανατροφοδότηση;»
Κ: Ε.. περιµένω να µου ζητήσουν διευκρινήσεις για τα λάθη τους και πάλι ίσως
κάνουµε remedial work.
Ε: Ναι. Εποµένως η ανατροφοδότηση είναι συνεχόµενη…
Κ: συνεχόµενη….ναι.
Ε: Ναι,ναι. Πολύ σωστό αυτό, ναι. Τώρα κάποιες σκέψεις θέλω από την εµπειρία
σας για την ανατροφοδότηση. Θα µπορούσατε…τώρα είναι λίγο…δεν είναι και
εύκολη η πρώτη ερώτηση… να αναφέρετε µία περίπτωση κατά την οποία
αισθανθήκατε ότι δώσατε πετυχηµένη ανατροφοδότηση; Αυτή µπορεί να
αναφέρεται σε ένα µαθητή/µία µαθήτρια ή και σε ολόκληρη την τάξη.
Κ: Ε…ναι…ε…θυµάµαι δύο περιπτώσεις όπου ε…σε ζευγάρια προσπαθούσαν να
βοηθήσουν ο ένας τον άλλον να βελτιώσουν το γραπτό τους…ε…
Ε: Και είδατε ότι είχαν βελτίωση, ε;
Κ: Είχαν βελτίωση.
Ε: Ε…ναι…είναι καλό όταν έχουν εξασκηθεί κιόλας που είπαµε …και κάτι
τελευταίο… Τι συµβουλή θα δίνατε σε ένα νέο καθηγητή ή µία νέα καθηγήτρια που
δεν γνωρίζει την κουλτούρα σας και τα χαρακτηριστικά των µαθητών/µαθητριών
σας;
Κ: Εµ…ότι.. γενικά τα παιδιά µας προτιµούν να δουλεύουν ατοµικά και ντρέπονται
να δουλέψουν…σε ζευγάρια ή …σε οµάδες.
Ε: Όπως το έχουν όλοι οι Έλληνες δηλαδή; Έχουµε και µεγάλα τµήµατα
συνήθως…ε;
Κ: Ναι.
Ε: Είναι και αυτό, οπότε δεν …ευνοεί την εργασία
Σ: Ε: σε οµάδες
Κ: σε οµάδες. Μάλιστα.
Ε: Λοιπόν. Ευχαριστώ πολύ.
Κ: Και εγώ.
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Teacher four
Σ: Ναι…
Κ: ιδίως στους χρόνους.
Σ: Ναι…
Κ: ∆ηλαδή σκέφτονται στα Ελληνικά.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Πάµε στην επόµενη ερώτηση. Σε ποια σηµεία διαφέρει η διδασκαλία της
παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα Αγγλικά µε τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής γραπτού
λόγου στα Ελληνικά;
Κ: Με λίγα λόγια….
Σ: Μµµµ …µάλιστα
Κ: Πιστεύω ότι ο τρόπος είναι ίδιος….
Ε: Ναι…
Κ: Απλά χρησιµοποιούν άλλη γλώσσα.
Ε: Μάλιστα.
Ε: Εεε…. Τι είδους εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου δίνετε στους µαθητές και τις
µαθήτριες σας;
Κ: Τις ασκήσεις που υπάρχουν στο βιβλίο και στο workbook….
Ε: Μάλιστα, το βιβλίο του οργανισµού δηλαδή….
Κ: Ναι.
Ε: Εεε… Πού γράφουν τα γραπτά κείµενα- στο σπίτι ή στο σχολείο;
Κ: Στο σπίτι τα γράφουν απλώς τους δίνω κάποιες οδηγίες για το τι θα γράψουν.
Ε: Μµµµ…
Κ: Αυτά τους τα δίνω στο σχολείο και την εργασία την κάνουν στο σπίτι.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ωραία. Πάµε στην επόµενη σειρά ερωτήσεων για τις απόψεις και τη
µεθοδολογία σχετικά µε την αξιολόγηση και ανατροφοδότηση. Εεε… πώς αξιολογείτε
τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας στα Αγγλικά;
Κ: Επικεντρώνοµαι… περισσότερο στο… στο νόηµα και στη σύνταξη παρά στα
ορθογραφικά λάθη.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Περισσότερο στο νόηµα. ∆εύτερο. Πόσο χρήσιµη νοµίζετε ότι είναι η
γραπτή ανατροφοδότηση του καθηγητή ή καθηγήτριας για τη βελτίωση της παραγωγής
του γραπτού λόγου των µαθητών/ µαθητριών;
Κ: Αν και δεν την προσέχουν πολύ…. Πιστεύω ότι είναι χρήσιµη για να βελτιωθούν.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Ναι…Εεε. Πότε αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών
σας όταν τους αναθέτετε εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στο σχολείο;
Κ: ∆εν τους βάζω εργασίες στο σχολείο.
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Ε: Ναι. Εδώ είπατε ότι δεν τους βάζετε στο σχολείο. Εποµένως ήτανε… περιττή κιόλας
η ερώτηση. Αξιολογείτε…Πάλι εδώ και η τέταρτη δεν ταιριάζει γιατί λέµε
«Αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας όσο γράφουν ή αφού
έχουν τελειώσει το γραπτό τους;» Είναι…
Κ: Όταν τελειώσουν τα γραπτά τους.
Ε: Ναι. Εεε.. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος ρόλος όταν αξιολογείτε γραπτά σε ένα
προσχέδιο της έκθεσης των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
Κ: ∆εν κάνουµε προσχέδια.
Ε: ∆εν κάνετε προσχέδια. Ναι. Αφού δεν τα κάνετε και στο σχολείο και έτσι και
αλλιώς. Εεε.. Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος ρόλος σας όταν αξιολογείτε γραπτά το
τελικό κείµενο των µαθητών/µαθητριών;
Κ: Να …. Βοηθήσω τα παιδιά να εντοπίσουν τα λάθη τους και να βελτιωθούν µ’ αυτόν
τον τρόπο.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Εεε.. Τώρα την επόµενη ερώτηση πρέπει να την παραλείψουµε γιατί λέει
για τα προσχέδια και είπατε δεν κάνετε.
Κ: ∆εν χρησιµοποιούµε προσχέδια.
Ε: Όπως και την ερώτηση οκτώ. Εεε ..πάµε στην ερώτηση εννέα. Εεε.. κρίνετε ότι η
ανατροφοδότηση του δασκάλου ή της δασκάλας σε ένα γραπτό είναι πιο χρήσιµη κατά
τη διάρκεια που οι µαθητές ή οι µαθήτριες διαµορφώνουν το γραπτό τους ή µόλις το
ολοκληρώσουν και γιατί έχετε αυτήν τη γνώµη;
Κ: Αν και τους δίνω σχόλια αφού ολοκληρώσουν, πιστεύω ότι καλό θα ήταν να
βοηθούνται τα παιδιά όσο γράφουνε.
Ε: Ναι. Μάλιστα. Ναι. Εεε.. πάµε στην επόµενη ερώτηση «όταν δίνετε
ανατροφοδότηση, ποια από τα σχόλια σας πιστεύετε ότι είναι περισσότερο χρήσιµα
στους µαθητές/µαθήτριες σας για να βελτιώσουν το γραπτό τους;»
Κ: Τα σχόλια εκείνα που αφορούν την οργάνωση του κειµένου.
Ε: Την οργάνωση περισσότερο. Μάλιστα. Ναι. Και τις ιδέες δηλαδή περισσότερο.
Εεε…
Κ: Ναι.
Ε: Τι είδους γραπτή ανατροφοδότηση δίνετε συνήθως στα γλωσσικά προβλήµατα των
κειµένων των µαθητών/ µαθητριών;
Κ: Επισηµαίνω τα επαναλαµβανόµενα λάθη τους.
Ε: Ναι. Αυτά που επαναλαµβάνονται. Μάλιστα.
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Κ: Να έχει… απλώς να έχει υπόψη του ότι οι Έλληνες µαθητές δεν είναι συνηθισµένοι
να δουλεύουν σε οµάδες.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Εντάξει. Ευχαριστώ πολύ για το χρόνο σας.
Κ: Παρακαλώ.
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Teacher five
Ε-Researcher Κ-teacher Σ-simultaneous talk
E: Καλησπέρα…
Κ: Καλησπέρα.
Ε: Εεε.. Θα ήθελα να σας κάνω µερικές ερωτήσεις σχετικά µε την παραγωγή γραπτού
λόγου. Πάµε πρώτα στις γενικές ερωτήσεις. Εε. Έχετε παρακολουθήσει ειδική
εκπαίδευση για τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής του γραπτού λόγου κατά τη διάρκεια των
σπουδών σας ή σε κάποιο σεµινάριο;
Κ: Κατά τη διάρκεια των κύριων σπουδών µου, όχι. Εε εκπαιδεύτηκα στην παραγωγή
γραπτού λόγου κατά την διάρκεια του µεταπτυχιακού µου.
Ε: Μµµ. Μάλιστα. Τι διδακτικά µέσα υπάρχουν για τους καθηγητές και τις καθηγήτριες
Αγγλικών για να διδάξουν την παραγωγή λόγου;
Κ: Εεε, ουσιαστικά δεν υπάρχουν πολλά µέσα.
Ε: Ε, ναι στο άλλο σκέλος της ερώτησης. Πιστεύετε ότι το βιβλίο του υπουργείου
Παιδείας επαρκεί για τη βελτίωση της ικανότητας των παιδιών να παράγουν γραπτό
λόγο;
Κ: Όχι, όχι…
Ε: Εεε. Μάλιστα. Πάµε στην επόµενη. Εε, γνωρίζετε για τις κλίµακες αξιολόγησης των
γραπτών κειµένων;
Κ: Γνωρίζω λίγα πράγµατα και τις αναλυτικές και για τις ολιστικές κλίµακες.
Ε: Εεε, ωραία. Γνωρίζετε µορφές ανατροφοδότησης;
Κ: Γνωρίζω. Την ανατροφοδότηση εεε του δασκάλου…του συµµαθητή… της οµάδας..
την αυτοαξιολόγηση…
Ε: Ωραία. Εεε. Πάµε στη δεύτερη σειρά ερωτήσεων. Απόψεις σχετικά µε τη
διδασκαλία της παραγωγής του γραπτού λόγου. Μπορείτε να περιγράψετε τη
µεθοδολογία που χρησιµοποιείτε για τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα
Αγγλικά µε τους µαθητές και τις µαθήτριές σας;
Κ: Εεε Εάν και γνωρίζω ότι καλό είναι να γράφουµε τις εκθέσεις στο σχολείο…λόγω
περιορισµένου χρόνου, τους αναθέτω να τις γράψουν στο σπίτι.
Ε: Ωραία. Ποιες συγκεκριµένες δυσκολίες έχουν οι µαθητές/µαθήτριες σας όταν
παράγουν γραπτό λόγο στα Αγγλικά;
Κ: Μµµ Στην ανάπτυξη ιδεών…περιεχόµενο…λεξιλόγιο.
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Ε: Εεε. Σε ποια σηµεία διαφέρει η διδασκαλία της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα
Αγγλικά µε τη διδασκαλία της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου στα Ελληνικά;
Κ: ∆εν ξέρω τι κάνουν οι συνάδελφοι στα Ελληνικά.
Ε: Εεε. Τι είδους εργασίες παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου δίνετε στους µαθητές/ στις
µαθήτριες σας;
Κ: Τις εργασίες… του coursebook και του workbook.
Ε: Ωραία. Πού γράφουν τα γραπτά κείµενα – στο σπίτι ή στο σχολείο;
Κ: Κατ’ εξοχήν … στο σπίτι.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Πάµε στην τρίτη σειρά ερωτήσεων ‘απόψεις και µεθοδολογία σχετικά µε
την αξιολόγηση και ανατροφοδότηση. Εεε. Πώς αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των
µαθητών/µαθητριών σας στα Αγγλικά;
Κ: Τα αξιολογώ ως προς το περιεχόµενο… και τα πιο σηµαντικά γραµµατικά και
συντακτικά φαινόµενα.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Εεε…. Πόσο χρήσιµη νοµίζετε ότι είναι η γραπτή ανατροφοδότηση του
καθηγητή ή της καθηγήτριας για τη βελτίωση της παραγωγής γραπτού λόγου των
µαθητων και των µαθητριών σας;
Κ: Είναι χρήσιµη αν τα παιδιά είναι … εκπαιδευµένα και τη χρησιµοποιούν σωστά.
Ε: Ωραία. Εεε… Πότε αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των µαθητών/ µαθητριών σας
όταν τους αναθέτετε εργασίες παραγωγής λόγου στο σχολείο; …Εδώ είπαµε ότι τα
κάνετε σπίτι, εποµένως την αφήνουµε αυτήν την ερώτηση αφού το περισσότερο είναι
στο σπίτι. Εεε… πάµε στην επόµενη… Εεε… Αξιολογείτε τα γραπτά κείµενα των
µαθητών/ µαθητριών σας όσο γράφουν ή αφού έχουν τελειώσει το γραπτό τους;
Κ: Τα αξιολογώ στο τέλος.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Εεε…Ποιος νοµίζετε ότι είναι ο κύριος λο, ρόλος σας όταν
αξιολογείτε…γραπτά ένα προσχέδιο της έκθεσης των µαθητών/µαθητριών σας;
Κ: ∆εν ….έχουµε χρόνο για προσχέδιο.
Ε: Μάλιστα. Εεε…Όταν σχολιάζετε τα προσχέδια των γραπτών κειµένων των
µαθητών/µαθητριών, επικεντρώνεστε σε κάποια σηµεία περισσότερο από άλλα; Εδώ
είπαµε δεν έχετε τα προσχέδια και εποµένως πάµε στην επόµενη. Μάλιστα.
Επικεντρώνεστε στα ίδια σηµεία όταν σχολιάζετε τα τελικά κείµενα;
Κ: …Επικεντρώνοµαι…στην καλή ανάπτυξη των ιδεών και στη σωστή διατύπωση
τους.
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