Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 161 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 772 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 1633 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 2443 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 585 |
| Teachers | 484 |
| Researchers | 103 |
| Students | 48 |
| Administrators | 43 |
| Policymakers | 13 |
| Parents | 8 |
| Community | 1 |
| Counselors | 1 |
| Media Staff | 1 |
Location
| Canada | 146 |
| China | 128 |
| Turkey | 72 |
| Iran | 70 |
| Australia | 68 |
| California | 49 |
| United Kingdom | 45 |
| Indonesia | 44 |
| Japan | 44 |
| Thailand | 38 |
| Saudi Arabia | 37 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 1 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 5 |
| Does not meet standards | 4 |
Peer reviewedFerrari, Michel; Bouffard, Therese; Rainville, Line – Instructional Science, 1998
Compares the discourse knowledge and self-regulation of good and poor writers, as well as the quality and length of their final texts; 48 junior-college students wrote a comparative text. Results showed that poor writers were no more linear than good writers, and no less actively self-regulated their writing. Good writers produced larger texts of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Knowledge Level, Two Year Colleges, Writing (Composition)
Peer reviewedBell, James H. – Writing Center Journal, 2000
Suggests that writing centers should conduct more sophisticated evaluations, and should turn to educational program evaluation and select general types of evaluations most appropriate for writing centers. Presents an evaluation which exemplifies and clarifies what is called for in the first half of the article. (SC)
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement, Program Evaluation
Peer reviewedSchendel, Ellen; O'Neill, Peggy – Assessing Writing, 1999
Argues that writing research has not explored the ethical implications of using self-evaluations in classroom and large-scale writing assessment. Explores portfolio cover letters, reflective essays, self-grading, and self-placement as depicted in college composition literature using this postmodern ethical framework. Demonstrates a process of…
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Postmodernism, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
Peer reviewedBroad, Bob – Research in the Teaching of English, 2000
Explores how writing instructors at "City University" grappled with crises of standardization in evaluation of students' portfolios. Details the two most severe experiences in multiple breakdowns in the project of standardization: crises of textual representation and crises of evaluative subjectivity. Examines conflicting interpretations…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Hermeneutics, Higher Education, Portfolio Assessment
Peer reviewedFrick, Jane; Blattner, Nancy – College Composition and Communication, 2002
Presents survey results from 37 different colleges and universities represented in the 13 years of survey results, as compiled by the Missouri Colloquium on Writing Assessment (CWA). Notes the collected data are unique in that the same cohort of schools responded to the same detailed inquiries related to the assessing, curricular design, delivery,…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Curriculum Design, Educational Change, Higher Education
Peer reviewedStarks, Donna; Lewis, Marilyn – New Zealand Journal of Adult Learning, 2001
In a survey of 33 university lecturers and 33 students in a writing course, over one-third of lecturers rated students' writing as poor. Although most indicated that they graded entirely for content not quality, their feedback was heavily weighted toward writing mechanics. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Adult Students, Feedback, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedHindman, Jane E. – Journal of Basic Writing, 1999
Claims compositionists misrecognize stylistic and institutionalized conventions of academic discourse in their own rhetoric and in the evaluation of their students. Argues that students should be included in the practices by which compositionists "normalize" these conventions. Suggests how students might be included in the evaluative…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
Building Bridges to Academic Discourse: The Peer Group Leader in Basic Writing Peer Response Groups.
Peer reviewedGrobman, Laurie – Journal of Basic Writing, 1999
Analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of a project that used a peer group leader to help build bridges between basic writers and academic writers. Discusses the implications for the further use of peer group leaders in basic writing. (NH)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Basic Writing, Freshman Composition, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGray-Rosendale, Laura – Journal of Basic Writing, 1999
Offers a brief Foucauldian archeological history of the "Journal of Basic Writing." Attempts to (1) describe broad historical features of the construction of Basic Writers' identities; (2) examine instances in which critical disruptions and overlaps of such constructions occur; and (3) explore what such moments reveal about trends and…
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Higher Education, Scholarly Journals, Student Centered Curriculum
Peer reviewedHayes, John R.; Hatch, Jill A.; Silk, Christine M. – Written Communication, 2000
Analyzes approximately 4,800 independent evaluations of 796 essays written by 241 students in 13 first-year writing classes at two colleges. Finds very low consistency of holistically scored student performance from essay to essay, suggesting that drawing conclusions from one or even a few writing samples of a particular student is problematic.…
Descriptors: Evaluation Problems, Higher Education, Holistic Evaluation, Reliability
Peer reviewedPerchemlides, Natalia; Coutant, Carolyn – Educational Leadership, 2004
Once students are asked to assess their own writing progress, they will begin to do their best for writing great prose instead of just great grades. Teachers will have to create a grade-free zone, allow students to set their own writing goals, provide a common language such as the Six Traits Model, and provide evaluation and instructional models…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Writing Teachers, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Nongraded Student Evaluation
Kelly, P. Adam – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2005
Powers, Burstein, Chodorow, Fowles, and Kukich (2002) suggested that automated essay scoring (AES) may benefit from the use of "general" scoring models designed to score essays irrespective of the prompt for which an essay was written. They reasoned that such models may enhance score credibility by signifying that an AES system measures the same…
Descriptors: Essays, Models, Writing Evaluation, Validity
Chen, Eva; Niemi, David; Wang, Jia; Wang, Haiwen; Mirocha, Jim – National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing (CRESST), 2007
This study investigated the level of generalizability across a few high quality assessment tasks and the validity of measuring student writing ability using a limited number of essay tasks. More specifically, the research team explored how well writing prompts could measure student general writing ability and if student performance from one…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Writing Ability, Writing Tests, Writing Evaluation
Yu, Guoxing – Language Testing, 2007
Two kinds of scoring templates were empirically derived from summaries written by experts and students to evaluate the quality of summaries written by the students. This paper reports students' attitudes towards the use of the two templates and its differential statistical effects on the judgment of students' summarization performance. It was…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Student Attitudes, Democracy, Educational Assessment
Knoch, Ute; Read, John; von Randow, Janet – Assessing Writing, 2007
The training of raters for writing assessment through web-based programmes is emerging as an attractive and flexible alternative to the conventional method of face-to-face training sessions. Although some online training programmes have been developed, there is little published research on them. The current study aims to compare the effectiveness…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Writing Tests, Professional Training, Interrater Reliability

Direct link
