EndNote Import
AU - Mollaei, Hoda
AU - McCarthy, Philip
AU - Highland, Kristen
AB - This paper addresses the validity of Auto-Peer, an Automated Writing Evaluation (AWE) tool designed to provide formative feedback by highlighting ‘unusual’ elements in student writing. Unlike traditional AWEs, which tend to focus on errors, Auto Peer encourages critical thinking and self-assessment by prompting students to modify their text or justify their choices. I analyzed 134 student papers and found that the number of highlighted issues by Auto Peer significantly correlated with human evaluations of writing quality. This suggests that Auto-Peer's approach of flagging the ‘unusual’ can be an effective indicator of student writing quality. The paper's findings are of interest to educators and researchers seeking to promote student autonomy and feedback literacy through technology-aided writing instruction. (Author’s abstract) http://search.shamaa.org/abstract_en.gif
OP - The page numbers are unavailable
T1 - Validating an 'unusual' approach to automated formative feedback [Thesis / Dissertation]
AU - McCarthy, Philip
AU - Highland, Kristen
AB - This paper addresses the validity of Auto-Peer, an Automated Writing Evaluation (AWE) tool designed to provide formative feedback by highlighting ‘unusual’ elements in student writing. Unlike traditional AWEs, which tend to focus on errors, Auto Peer encourages critical thinking and self-assessment by prompting students to modify their text or justify their choices. I analyzed 134 student papers and found that the number of highlighted issues by Auto Peer significantly correlated with human evaluations of writing quality. This suggests that Auto-Peer's approach of flagging the ‘unusual’ can be an effective indicator of student writing quality. The paper's findings are of interest to educators and researchers seeking to promote student autonomy and feedback literacy through technology-aided writing instruction. (Author’s abstract) http://search.shamaa.org/abstract_en.gif
OP - The page numbers are unavailable
T1 - Validating an 'unusual' approach to automated formative feedback [Thesis / Dissertation]