1 / 13

Instructor Feedback 2.0: Shifting from Grammar-Based to Content-Based Feedback

Enhance student agency by providing feedback that focuses on critical thought and connects ideas to the central focus. Bust myths about grammar-based feedback and promote student engagement throughout the writing process.

Download Presentation

Instructor Feedback 2.0: Shifting from Grammar-Based to Content-Based Feedback

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Instructor Feedback 2.0: Shifting from Grammar-Based to Content-Based Feedback Lindsay E. Lassen, M.ed. Shannon l. meers, mat, med.

  2. Objective: To promote student agency through enhancement of feedback on student composition through out the writing process.

  3. Activity #1 • Using the student sample essay, take a moment to grade this as you usually would for your class.

  4. Promote Student Agency • To allow students to express their voice, demonstrate their critical thinking, and analyze learned concepts through discourse. • To allow students to construct their own meanings of course content.

  5. Feedback Grammar-Based Traits Content-Based Traits Focuses on critical thought Links support to central focus or thesis Encourages development of ideas Connects student’s ideas with support from the text • Identification of: • Punctuation errors • Spelling and usage errors • Sentence structure errors • Diction

  6. Myth #1 Busted: Good teachers mark all grammar and language errors.

  7. What is the outcome? • Students maybe learn to use commas effectively (which they will forget before the very next essay) • Student agency is compromised and limited.

  8. Myth #2 Busted: • Commenting on only the final draft is a best practice.

  9. During the writing process: • Engage in conversations with your students throughout the draft process: • Content development • Thesis statements • Supports • Questioning to prompt student agency • Meaning construction • Grammar • Punctuation • Fluidity

  10. Myth #3 Busted: • The more problems identified in the paper the better.

  11. Quality over Quantity • Focusing on giving specific and constructive feedback to encourage student • Comment on student’s strengths and what they did correctly. • Rather than commenting in the margins, place comments at the end of the writing.

  12. Round #2 • Using a more content-based approach grade and comment on the student work sample.

  13. What’s the outcome? • Holds students accountable for their own content • Allows students to demonstrate their critical thinking skills • Promotes student agency

More Related