Brown (2000) asserts
that literate people in developed countries learn the rudiments of writing in their
native language, but ‘very few learn to express themselves clearly with
logical, well-developed organization that accomplishes an intended purpose. And
yet we expect second language learners to write coherent essays with artfully
chosen rhetorical and discourse devices!’(p.218).
The writing skill
then is clearly very hard to improve in every case. The questions for us as
English teachers are: what should we expect from our students writing? How can
we successfully assess their performance? I certainly do not have the answer,
but I am going to share what I believe we should take into account in order to
avoid big mistakes.
From my experience
as an English teacher I have to say that for teaching and assessing writing, as
well as for the other language skills, we go to classrooms without solid bases.
Because of this, we make a lot of mistakes such as: not setting objectives for
the tasks we want our students to perform, not having clear what we want to
assess, not considering our students needs, and more importantly, we tend to
forget that English is not our students’ mother tongue and that the input they
are exposed to is little. As a result of this, our assessment on students
writing ability is poor.
In my personal
case, I used to be very strict with my students writing; for instance, if a student
did not write an accurate sentence that followed all grammar rules, I did not
give any recognition to his/her job. To make matters worse, instead of giving my
students’ accurate performance a thumbs up, I used to punish their mistakes. In
other words, my grading rubric basically consisted of discounting one or two
points for each mistake. Consider the following example:
1. Write about your vacations.
I go to Cartagena last
month.
( -2 )
For this reason, a
lot of my students used to get low grades in writing, which truly did not
reflect their real performance.
As teachers, we
need to understand the process that our students go through in order to improve their
writing ability. Furthermore, we need to be there to help them and to guide
them in their process. To do this, what I now consider is the best way is not to
punish their mistakes, but to encourage their practice.
Now, I would like to leave some
questions for you:
What mistakes do you think you made
when assessing writing?
How would you change your writing
assessment procedures?