Abstract
Assessing student writing assignments and providing effective feedback are a complex pedagogical skill teacher candidates need to master. Scarce literature has closely examined the type of feedback that pre-service high-school teachers spontaneously deliver when assessing student writings, which is the main goal of our study. In a sample of 255 high school teacher candidates, we examined the type of feedback that they provided when assessing two writing assignments that differed in quality. One thousand eight hundred thirty-five comments were analyzed and coded into 11 sub-categories. Results showed that candidates’ feedback not only focused on task performance but also on the writing process. Although candidates provided critical and past-oriented evaluations frequently, they also crafted feedback in a neutral tone and included future-oriented suggestions. Further, feedback varied as a function of candidates’ gender, academic discipline, and students’ quality of writing. Teacher training programs may use this information to design resources to address nuances of feedback provision.
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Máñez, I., Lipnevich, A. A., Lopera-Oquendo, C., & Cerdán, R. (2024). Examining pre-service teachers’ feedback on low- and high-quality written assignments. Educational Assessment, Evaluation and Accountability, 36(2), 225–256. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11092-024-09432-x
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