[Xmca-l] Re: studies of feedback on student writing?

Shirin Vossoughi shirinvossoughi@gmail.com
Mon Jul 31 07:32:41 PDT 2017


Thank you for these David, very interesting. I sympathize with many of your
comments and am drawn to the moments when the more complex and dialectical
understandings of the ZPD become a meaningful tool for mediation and
practice.

Your thoughts on the term "feedback" also got me thinking about the
ideological baggage that term may carry so thank you for that. What I'm
after these days is a way to understand the specific qualities of
educators' written commentary on student writing that support shifts
towards more expansive relationships with writing, ideas, self and world.
feedback as dialogue, in a sense. but also as writing in itself.

Shirin

On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 5:44 PM, David Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com> wrote:

> Dear Shirin:
>
> I'm currently writing a rather tiresome article on the distortions of
> Vygotsky's ideas we find in Lantolf, Thorne, and  "sociocultural theory"
> generally. I won't bore you with the details: the gist is that the "zone of
> proximal development" was never designed to be tautological: Vygotsky did
> not think that the "next zone" was defined by being able to do tasks, and
> being able to do tasks was how you knew that the child was ready for the
> next zone of development (i.e. "the child is ready to learn whatever the
> child is ready to learn"). It was based on a serious study of child
> development and an attempt to establish age periods that were immanent to
> the process of development itself (i.e. defined by the pace of
> development--crises and stable periods--but relatable to the fruits of
> development--as observable in language and verbal thinking).
>
> But inevitably part of what I have to do is to take out the garbage that
> has accrued around Vygotsky's name, to show how sociocultural theory
> popularized Vygotsky by reducing all his ideas into extant "best
> practices". At the time (the early nineties in second language writing
> instruction) best practices were starting to move away from whole language
> ideas based on providing the young writer with a "print rich environment"
>  and plentiful "input" towards more social-behaviorist notions of "focus on
> form" and "corrective feedback". The theoretical rationale was that the
> former approach had been "cognitivist" whle the latter was "sociocultural",
> because it involved interaction between minds which was then "internalized"
> within the learner's mind.
>
> Here are some key articles from Lantolfian "sociocultural theory" which do
> this:
>
> Aljaafreh, A. & Lantolf, J.P. (1994). Negative feedback as regulation and
> second language learning in the zone of proximal development. Modern
> Language Journal, 78, 465-483.
>
> De Guerrero, M.C.M. & Villamil, O.S. (2000). Activating the ZPD: Mutual
> scaffolding in L2 peer revision. Modern Language Journal, 84, 51-68.
>
> Poehner, M.E. (2012). The zone of proximal development and the genesis of
> self-assessment. Modern Language Journal, 96 (4) 610-622.
>
> Poehner, M.E. & Lantolf, J.P. (2010). Vygotsky’s teaching-assessment
> dialectic and L2 education: The case for Dynamic Assessment. Mind, Culture,
> and Activity, 17 (4) 312-330.
>
> Poehner, M.E. and Lantolf, J.P. (2013). Bringing the ZPD into the equation:
> Capturing L2 development during Computerized Dynamic Assessment (C-DA).
> Language Teaching Research, 17 (3) 323-342.
>
> Needless to say, I don't recommend any of these. Don't get me wrong: I too
> am an agitator  and not a propagandist; I want a few simple ideas I can
> give to lots of teachers rather than a whole complex system that can only
> be mastered by a few. Like you, I firmly I believe that it is possible to
> popularize without vulgarizing, and I even think the demotic forms of
> theory are the most democratic and ultimately the most profound.
>
> I too have a strong sympathy for the teacher training approach that
> analyzes best practices and tries to abstract best principles, and then
> shows how these are perfectly compatible with high theory. I even think
> that at some point it is useful to try to show teachers that they were
> "unconscious" Vygotskyans all the long.
>
> But this stuff isn't that. It's just bait and switch: The zone of proximal
> development was not and never will be a form of corrective feedback, and
> the very word "feedback" suggests the behaviorist theory that it really
> belongs to.
>
> David Kellogg
> Macquarie University
>
>
>
> On Fri, Jul 28, 2017 at 3:46 AM, Shirley Franklin <
> s.franklin08@btinternet.com> wrote:
>
> > I know people in this project have done research on feedback on academic
> > writing.
> > Also, we  discussed people's work on this in the Academic Literacies
> > Forum in the Institute of Education in London.  Brian Street, who sadly
> > died recently, had a lot to say about it.
> >
> > http://www.thinkingwriting.qmul.ac.uk/
> >
> > Shirley
> > Sent from my iPad
> >
> > On 27 Jul 2017, at 19:00, Shirin Vossoughi <shirinvossoughi@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > Dear all,
> > > I am writing to ask if anyone might have suggestions for CHAT or
> > > socio-cultural studies of written feedback on student writing?
> > > Thank you,
> > > Shirin
> >
> >
>


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