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3.1.4. Extensive Writing
Extensive writing (also known as
freewriting) is a type of writing
performance that leads to the creation
of long texts such as full-length
essays, articles, term papers, project reports, and even
theses and
dissertations.
To create such texts, writers must be able to manage all
processes and strategies of writing successfully. Freewriting is a useful and
motivating assessment tool if the topics are realistic and carefully selected
because it provides students with the opportunity to “demonstrate their
ability to organise language materials, using their own words and ideas, and
to
communicate” (Heaton, 1990, p. 137).
Formative assessment is expected to serve as
a scaffolding tool that
supports learning improvements. Therefore, according to Heaton (1990),
extensive writing tests/tasks creators should “find
out how composition is
tested in the first language” of the students (p. 136). He accepts that the
skills emphasised in teaching and testing the writing skill in English as a
foreign/second language may be quite different from the skills in the first
language. However, he still underlines that it is “clearly ludicrous, for
instance, to expect in a foreign language those skills which the students do
not possess in their own language” (Heaton, 1990, p. 137). Therefore, in
writing classes, foreign language teachers are advised to work closely with
first language writing teachers.
Instructors following formative assessment rules should also be careful
not to expect and require their students to create free composition work too
early. Only learners who have successfully mastered
controlled and semi-
controlled compositions should be asked to produce free writing texts.
Freewriting tests developers should
(i)
give students authentic, meaningful situations/contexts that
include well-defined problems that will motivate students to
write;
(ii)
get to know the group they are assessing well and make sure that
those students have something to say about the given topics and
a reason to say it;
(iii) specify the audience
to whom the text is addressed;
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(iv) indicate the genre in which the students are expected to write
(e.g., formal vs informal; a short story, a newspaper article, an
email, a personal letter);
(v)
avoid giving students composition titles that fail to guide them as
to what is expected from them (e.g.,
A pleasant day; My
weekend);
(vi) avoid topics/titles that are controversial or distressing for the
students completing the tasks (e.g.,
Genocide; Racial Inequality;
Religious Beliefs).
(vii) ensure that students taking the test are neither advantaged nor
disadvantaged by the topics included in the exam (Jennings et al.,
1999).
For more reliable results and to be able to assess a wider variety of
language skills, students should be asked to write two or three short distinct
compositions (e.g., a book review and a newspaper article) rather than one
long essay. When the aim is to assess and compare students’ progress, they
should not be asked to choose among the topics included in the assessment
because:
(i)
research shows that students may
waste valuable writing time
while trying to select the topic they would like to develop further
(Barry & Nielsen, 1996);
(ii)
when students choose different topics assessing different
registers, exam markers might lose the common basis for
comparison and evaluation of the students.
Example 7 shows how B1-B2 level students can be guided to create
extensive writing texts and how, through self-, peer- and teacher evaluation,
a collaborative classroom environment benefiting all participants can be
built. The example also shows how parents and
other grade-level students
can be included in the journey aiming to show students that English is not
only a school subject but a tool that can connect and unite communities.
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