TESL-560:
Second Language Writing Assessment
(a one-credit
course)
An
Overview
Large numbers of international
students come to the United States to study in American universities.
The majority of these students are
intelligent, hard-working, and very well educated. Typically, they do
well on standardized tests. Most will have scored over 600 on the TOEFL.
On the whole, they were excellent students in their home countries. However,
they may find the concept of classroom participation in an American setting
difficult. Frequently, they discover that the reading assignments they
need to do have little relation to what they have experienced as "reading"
in their home country's English classes. Most significantly, they very
often seem to have genuine difficulty producing acceptable academic writing
in English.
International students may have difficulty writing academic English for
many reasons: relative inexperience writing in any language, differing
cultural values and face systems, the amount of language distance between
their language and English, insufficient training in the accepted form
of written academic discourse at American universities, and/or a lack
of awareness of what is considered "general knowledge" by either
the American public or particular academic communities. TESL-560, Second
Language Writing Assessment is a one-credit course for learning about
the writing dilemmas that many international students face, while at the
same time allowing TESOL students to gain practice assessing student writing.
Consequently, writing assessment
will be the core activity of the Second Language Writing Assessment course.
The writing samples will be provided by group members. Each meeting, participants
will be given a writing sample (or group of samples) to read, assess,
and comment on before the next meeting. We learn to be good writing evaluators
by sharing our reactions to writing with others.
Typcially, our first writing
assessment activity is to read a group of writing
samples and categorize them according to the TWE (Test of Written
English) holistic scoring rubrics. In the following meeting, we compare
results, particularly for samples where there was much variation in ratings,
and we discuss our ratings to achieve consensus.
In addition to discussing our
evaluations of writing samples at each meeting, we also have a discussion
topic. The topic is related to what constitutes good academic writing
(by American university standards) or why it is difficult for international
students to organize their writing appropriately. Topics will include
issues like plagiarism, reasons for choosing deductive or inductive organization,
the features of good introductions and conclusions, the convention of
audience in academic writing, and creating appropriate patterns of assertion/support.
Soon many of the text resources
and student writing samples from the Second Language Writing Assessment
course will be added to this page for your use and reference.