Technology-enabled higher education academic writing feedback: Practices, needs and preferences

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.8557

Keywords:

higher education, digital feedback, academic writing, feedback perception, feedback practice, feedback needs, online learning

Abstract

Student and teacher perceptions of feedback practices, preferences and awareness of feedback needs may differ and detract from learning. This article explores alignment or misalignment in higher education to argue alignment suggests needs are being met on these issues via technology-enabled feedback on writing. Within the context of academic training, we take a broad view of writing supervision along a continuum that comprises digital feedback on writing assessments at an Australian university. We used a survey comparison of teachers’ and students’ self-reported data to answer the following questions: (1) What digital feedback and assessment practices are reported by teachers and students in Australian higher education? (2) What e-feedback needs are self-declared through teachers’ and students’ self-awareness of assessment practices in that context? (3) What e-feedback preferences are reported by teachers and students? Students and teachers from different academic programmes and levels from social science self-reported their experiences of digital feedback on writing assessments. The quantitative and open-ended responses covered technology-enabled feedback experiences up to PhD supervision. The results on alignment and misalignment of participants’ needs and preferences suggest a need to increase dialogue and incorporate student agency into feedback processes. We discuss further implications for feedback experiences in this context.

Implications for practice or policy

  • Programme assessment designers might reconsider policies requiring online collaborative work since teachers and students prefer individual assignments.
  • Assessors might improve digital assessment tools, to increase teacher and student interaction and expediency, without losing individual feedback, in line with unanimous claims that such tools support feedback processes on writing.
  • Course leaders could implement practices buffering the effect of negative feedback because teachers perceive few complaints, but students react badly to negative comments through digital channels.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biographies

Carmen López Ferrero, Universidad Pompeu Fabra

Dr Lopez Ferrero teaches doctoral, postgraduate and master's degree courses on discourse studies, text linguistics and language pedagogy at universities and academic institutions in Spain and abroad. From 2008 to 2016 she coordinated the Erasmus Mundus MULTIELE (Master in Learning and Teaching of Spanish in Multilingual and International Contexts) interuniversity master's degree at UPF; since 2008 she has been the interuniversity coordinator at UPF of the Official Master's Degree in Teacher Training in Spanish as a Foreign Language (FPELE). She teaches on the Inter-University Master's Degree in Discourse Studies: Communication, Society and Learning (UPF-UAB), and on the Master's Degree in Theoretical and Applied Linguistics (UPF).

She is currently leading the research project Inter_ECODAL: Interculturality and intercomprehension in the assessment of multilingual discourse competence: training in digital feedback, 2021-2025 (ref. PID2020-113796RB-I00/MICINN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033), of the Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2017-2020, call 2020 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. She has also been the principal investigator of the ECODAL project: Evaluation of the discourse competence of multilingual adult learners: detection of training needs and guidelines for autonomous learning, 2016-2020 (ref. EDU2016-75874-P, AEI/FEDER, EU), National Plan for Scientific Research, Development and Technological Innovation 2016 of the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, with funding also from the State Research Agency (AEI) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF).

 

M. Teresa Mateo-Girona, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

PhD in Education from the Complutense University of Madrid, Spanish Philologist from the University of Murcia and English Philologist from the Complutense University of Madrid. Master's Degree in Educational Innovation from the Carlos III University of Madrid and Master's Degree in the Training of Teachers of Spanish as a Foreign Language from the University of Barcelona. Full-time Assistant Professor in the Department of Language, Arts and Physical Education Didactics, Faculty of Education, Complutense University of Madrid. Director of the Didactext research group (no. 931766, Complutense University of Madrid), member of the DiLeMa group (University of Quindío) and member of research networks, including: the RIEA-EA Network (Ramon Llull University), the RELEED Network (Network of Excellence on Reading and Literary Education) and the ALES Network (Latin American Association of Writing Studies in Higher Education and Professional Contexts).

 

Downloads

Published

2023-11-23

How to Cite

Ducasse, A. M., López Ferrero, C., & Mateo-Girona, M. T. (2023). Technology-enabled higher education academic writing feedback: Practices, needs and preferences. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 39(4), 48–73. https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.8557