• Assessing Writing

    Before looking at specific tasks, we must scrutinize the different genres of written language (so that context and purpose are clear), types of writing (so that stages of the development of writing ability are accounted for), and micro- and macroskills of writing (so that objectives can be pinpointed precisely).

    Genres of Written Language
    1. Academic writing
    Papers and general subject reports
    Essays, compositions
    Academically focused journals
    Short-answer test responses
    Technical reports (e.g., lab reports)
    Theses, dissertations
    2. Job-related writing
    Messages (e.g., phone messages)
    Letters/emails
    Memos (e.g., interoffice)
    Reports (e.g., job evaluations, project reports)
    Schedules, labels, signs
    Advertisements, announcements
    Manuals
    3. Personal Writing
    Letters, emails, greeting cards, invitations
    Messages, notes
    Calendar entries, shopping lists, reminders
    Financial documents (e.g., checks, tax forms, loan applications)
    Forms, questionnaires, medical reports, immigration documents
    Diaries, personal journal
    Fiction (e.g., short stories, poetry)
    Types of writing performance
    1. Imitative
    This category includes the ability to spell correctly and to perceive phoneme-grapheme correspondences in the English spelling system. It is a level at which learners are trying to master the mechanics of writing. At this stage, form is the primary if not exclusive focus, while context and meaning are of secondary concern.
    2. Intensive (controlled)
    Skills in producing appropriate vocabulary within a context, collocations and idioms, and correct grammatical features up to the length of sentence.
    3. Responsive
    Require learners to perform at a limited discourse level, connecting sentences into a paragraph and creating a logically connected sequence of two or three paragraphs.
    4. Extensive
    Implies successful management of all the processes and strategies of writing for all purposes, up to the length of an essay, a term paper, a major research project report, or even a thesis.

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    Assessing Writing

    Further reading :
    Brown, D. (2004). Language Assessment: Principles and Classroom Practices. New York: Pearson Longman.
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