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What's in a Grade? A Mixed Methods Investigation of Teacher Assessment of Grammatical Ability in L2 Academic Writing

Posted on:2012-11-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Neumann, HeikeFull Text:PDF
GTID:1465390011462157Subject:Education
Abstract/Summary:
This study investigates how grammatical ability is assessed in L2 academic writing classrooms. In the assessment literature, grammatical ability is defined to include syntax and morphology (Purpura, 2004; Weigle, 2002) and lexical forms, cohesion, and information management on the subsentential, sentential, and suprasentential levels (Purpura, 2004). Writing teachers would, therefore, need to attend to morphosyntactic and other grammatical aspects in L2 texts that serve to organize information and create cohesion on the sentence, paragraph, and text levels. In a mixed methods triangulation design (Creswell & Plano Clark, 2007) using both quantitative and qualitative methods, this study examines the indicators of grammatical ability that writing teachers (n = 2) attend to when assessing their students‘ (n = 33) grammatical ability in academic essays in one high-intermediate and one advanced L2 writing course at an English-medium university in Canada. In addition, the study considers to what extent the students‘ learning is affected by the teachers‘ assessment criteria. In the first phase of this study, the students‘ essay exams and the teacher-assigned grammar grade were collected and analyzed quantitatively using accuracy and complexity measures as indicators of morphosyntactic ability. They were also examined qualitatively within a framework of systemic functional linguistics to assess the students‘ ability to manage information in their texts. In phase two, student questionnaires were administered, and student interviews were conducted to determine the students‘ knowledge of the teachers‘ assessment criteria for grammar. In phase three, the teachers were interviewed about their criteria and their priorities in the assessment of grammar. Finally, the results from all three phases and all four data sources were integrated to come to an overall interpretation of the findings. The results indicate that writing teachers focus above all on grammatical accuracy when assessing their students‘ grammatical ability. Consequently, writing teachers seem to assess a reduced construct of grammatical ability in academic writing, compared to definitions in the L2 assessment literature. This emphasis has an impact on how students learn in these L2 writing classrooms. This dissertation concludes with a discussion of implications and makes recommendations for L2 writing assessment based on the findings of this study.
Keywords/Search Tags:Writing, Grammatical ability, Assessment, Academic, Methods
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