Automated feedback and teacher feedback: Writing achievement in learning English as a foreign language at a distance
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Erişim
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessTarih
2022Yazar
Anadolu Üniversitesi
0000-0003-1913-7296
0000-0002-3447-2722
Taşkıran, Ayşe
Göksel, Nil
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Taşkıran, A., Göksel, N. (2022). Automated feedback and teacher feedback: Writing achievement in learning English as a foreign language at a distance. The Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education (TOJDE), 23 (2), 120-139.Özet
Information and communication technologies have been transforming the way we teach and learn. Either
for facilitating teaching practices or for making learning more interesting and joyful for the learners, artificial
intelligence-based applications are utilized in recent years. In this connection, this study intends to examine
if automated feedback and teacher feedback contribute to academic writing achievement and whether they
differ in their effect on achievement in learning English as a foreign language in an open and distant learning
context. The participants of the study were open education faculty students in a higher education institution in
Turkey. In this quasi-experimental quantitative study repeated measures design was adopted. the participants
were given writing tasks each week in a nine-week writing activity and they received feedback from their
English language teachers for the first three tasks, and they received feedback from the software for the last
three tasks. All participants wrote an English text as a diagnostic test at the beginning of the process. At the
end of the teacher and software feedback phases, they took post-tests. All grades were statistically analyzed
in order to find any effect of regular feedback either from a language teacher or from an online software on
academic writing achievement. Results revealed significant differences between the diagnostic test and two
achievement tests. Participants tended to improve their academic writing skills by taking regular feedback,
and it was observed that the writing scores increased slightly more when receiving feedback from teachers
compared to automated feedback software.