Language Assessment - Theory with Practice
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frequently done “according to each society’s needs, expectations, and
desires for future generations” (Uysal, 2008, p. 183). Every society has
unique writing conventions that separate it from others. Once a person is
trained to write in a certain way, it is challenging to change those habits and
get used to the schema expected and accepted in a foreign language (Uysal
2008).
Writing is also a complex productive skill, the successful completion of
which requires the combination of many micro and macro skills and sub-
processes (Casanave, 2004; Manchon, 2009; Uluçay & Hatipoğlu, 2017).
What further complicates teaching and assessing writing is that there are
many writing genres and rhetorical patterns (Devvitt, 2004). To be
successful in each of these, writers have to learn and adhere to different sets
of rules (Claridge & Walker 2001; Grainger & Tyson 1996) that can be
confusing and might require a long time to master. Because of all these,
many researchers argue that it is one of the most challenging skills to master
for foreign language students (Hamp-Lyons, 2019; Zimmermann 2000).
Heaton (1990, p. 135) summarises the sets of skills needed for
successful writing into the following five general components:
(i)
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