introducing the feedback file for online course design in...
TRANSCRIPT
Title:
Introducing the Feedback File for Online Course Design in Technical and Professional
Communication
Meredith Singleton
Visiting Assistant Professor; Literature, Languages and Writing
Miami University
236 Rentschler Hall
Hamilton, OH 45011
513-785-3200
Lisa Meloncon
Associate Professor, Technical Communication
University of Cincinnati
P O Box 210069
Cincinnati, OH 45221
803-370-0008
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Introducing the Feedback File for Online Course Design
in Technical and Professional Communication
Providing individualized comments on student drafts has long been a hallmark of
writing pedagogy. Most instructors who teach the ubiquitous “service course” in technical
and professional communication (TPC) also incorporate this teaching strategy. The
problem, however, is that the use of individualized comments may not be effective. This
problem is exacerbated in online environments because instructors may feel these
individualized comments can serve as one-on-one teaching opportunities. However, limited
empirical research (e.g., Still and Koerber, 2011) and our own teaching practices suggest
that often students pay little attention to the meticulously written comments. Thus, we
asked the question: is there a more effective way to provide feedback to students?
In this essay, we explore a potential answer to this question by introducing an
alternate pedagogical practice for providing comments to students: the Feedback File. We
define the Feedback File as an assignment-specific document that contains three main
elements: (1) a compilation of the most common errors in student draft submissions; (2)
an explanation of why these examples are errors; and (3) an example of how to correct or
improve the error. We begin by surveying current scholarship that highlights the necessity
of rethinking the field’s reliance on individualized feedback. Then, we discuss how to create
the Feedback File and how to use it in an online TPC service course. Finally, we end with
highlighting the benefits of the Feedback File for online writing pedagogy.
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Current TPC OWI Commenting Practice
Online learning continues to be a powerful force in higher education. According to
the National Center for Education Statistics’ Integrated Postsecondary Education Data
Systems (IPEDS) data, in 2014 (Allen & Seaman), 70.8% of higher education academic
leaders reported that online learning is critical to institutional long-term strategies, and
public, four-year institutions showed the greatest growth rate in online offerings of 7.2%.
This increased emphasis on online learning has spawned a need in not only fully online
degree programs, but also a diversification of course offerings. More and more,
departments seek opportunities to place certificate programs and individual courses
online. Currently, 11% of degree programs in TPC are offered fully online (Meloncon,
2012), and in a sample of 96 schools, 21% of service courses were being offered online or
in a hybrid format (Meloncon, 2009).
As the ‘“introductory courses for nonmajors delivered primarily as a service to other
departments and programs on campus” (Meloncon & England, 2011, p. 398), the service
course has long been a staple of TPC programs. Therefore, we focus our attention on the
service course because of its prevalence in TPC programs. Knievel (2007) writes that the
service course “remains a crucial curricular site, significant to the long-term health,
credibility, and viability of the field. This is, of course, because the service course touches so
many students it functions as a distillation and encapsulation of the field’s values” (p. 89).
Thus, because of its prevalence in our programs and the number of them being delivered
online, the online TPC service course provides an ideal location to explore pedagogical
practices in online educational spaces, which we use here as both fully online (no face-to-
face meetings) or hybrid (some face-to-face meetings).
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Even though TPC has a growing body of scholarship around online course delivery
(e.g., Cook & Grant-Davie, 2005 and 2013), TPC instructors continue to rely on traditional
feedback practices that emerged out of composition studies—individualized comments
throughout student drafts focused on specific technical elements and theoretical concepts,
saving summary views for a final critical paragraph at the end of the essay. The implicit
expectation is that students will consider the comments’ meaning and apply the
suggestions to the particular assignment and future writing tasks.
Additionally, instructors have traditionally expected that “the end comment,” final
thoughts at the end of the paper, creates an opportunity for students to engage in a
conversation with the instructor. As reinforcement to this thinking, scholars have argued
that the content of these final comments can have significant impact on the student writer.
Comments that convey a negative message or are perceived as impersonal can have
dramatic, destructive effects on a student’s self-confidence in writing and willingness to
revise (Cho, Schunn & Charney, 2006). Additionally, Scrocco (2012) found that when
instructors use comments as a dialogic tool to generate thinking through open-ended
suggestive, discussion-like feedback, students engaged more frequently with such
comments. In the online space in particular, instructors tend to rely heavily on this view of
commenting and feedback as dialogic engagement tool because it serves to fill the void of
little one-to-one direct interaction with their students.
Instructors have become so reliant on this method of feedback that , in fact, that
Smith’s (1997) highly influential, and widely recognized work becomes a cautionary tale to
faculty in becoming too comfortable in this “genre of the end comment,” this formulaic
balance between supportive comments and constructive feedback. Smith urged faculty to
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challenge themselves to vary responses to students. Ultimately, Smith warns, faculty who
rely on this genre of commenting confine themselves to finding elements within the writing
that fit the conventions of the end comment, rather than fully exploring and sharing truly
beneficial comments with students that may ultimately fall outside of the end comment
comfort zone. This brings to the fore that in the often time-constrained environment of
online writing courses, instructors fall back onto commenting habits that are both easier
and familiar for the instructor and the student—line-by-line editing or short, extremely
condensed comments that hopefully convey the issue in the space and time available.
While TPC instructors may relate to Smith’s “genre of the end comment,” the field
has little empirical research to the effectiveness of direct commenting efforts. One of the
only empirical studies (that we could locate) on commenting is Still and Koerber (2010).
Their work seeks to understand student engagement with TPC instructor feedback through
the lens of usability testing. In contrast with many studies before it, this particular study
framed the usefulness of comments from the student perspective, rather than from the
perceived usefulness from the instructor’s position. From this user-centered approach to
student-feedback engagement, the field can learn precisely how students view comments
and feedback and how they prioritize attending to instructor comments.
Specifically, Still and Koerber (2010) sought to understand the usefulness of
instructor comments in five areas: (1) whether or not students remember comments from
assignment to assignment; (2) the amount of feedback that is useful to students; (3) how
well students interpret feedback; (4) whether or not students transfer lessons learned
from feedback; and (5) whether or not students find feedback satisfactory to improving
their writing. To answer these questions, Still and Koerber surveyed 54 students from four
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sections of a service TPC course taught by the same instructor. From this group, Still and
Koerber selected a sample of 12 students who submitted a memo assignment and received
written feedback from the instructor. The feedback included in-text notes addressing both
micro- and macro-level issues. In addition to the textual comments, the instructor also
provided a rubric with comments addressing each category within the rubric. The focus
group was asked to engage with the commentary within an environment that mimicked
how they would interact with the feedback if revising outside of the study. Students were
given two hours to review the comments electronically while attempting to revise their
assignment. During the study, students were asked to think aloud while moving through
the revision process. Their comments were recorded and evaluated later to determine
themes in usability.
The pre-study surveys indicated that students relied more on broader instructions
from lectures and readings to guide their writing than they did on more individualized
comments. Analysis of the commentary itself revealed that students struggled to
understand particular grammatical terminology that instructors commonly included in
feedback, such as “awk,” “verb tense,” and “tone.” Furthermore, students revealed that
particular symbols and shorthand that instructors used presented frustration, including
circled words, underlined phrases, and “=”. Most notably, post-test surveys revealed that
students sought feedback that helped them to improve their writing “as efficiently as
possible” (Still & Koerber, 2010, p. 220). Ultimately, this study tells us that while
instructors believe that students ignore comments on writing, students are actually not
ignoring comments; rather they are engaging with comments that they can use,
understand, and interpret as opposed to “wasting” time on comments they cannot. Still and
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Koerber suggest that to create usable comments, instructors should avoid using unfamiliar
terminology for students, ensure comments are legible, avoid using ambiguous circles and
lines to highlight content, and distribute comments throughout papers (even on sections
that work well). Finally, and most importantly, Still and Koerber suggest that comments
offer solutions rather than simply pointing out problems. This study brings to bear the
disconnect between the kind of commenting time-constrained instructors are reliant on
providing with the kind of feedback students find useful. This may be why instructors are
consistently asking themselves, “Why aren’t my students reading my comments?”
Shifting Online Pedagogies: Feedback File
As we had wrestled with this question ourselves, ultimately, we wanted to know if
feedback could be re-contextualized as a learning activity within an online class that also
serves as an effective, meaningful, and efficient interaction between instructor and student.
In thinking of feedback in this pedagogical framework, we propose that a change to a more
usable form of feedback through collective feedback strategies that would assist students in
relying less on specific comments from one reader and more on their ability to assess their
own writing to apply concepts.
In the context of a TPC classroom, meaningful, usable feedback does not come in the
common form of the individualized feedback that emerged from composition studies. To
provide meaningful, we suggest that usable feedback in the TPC service course classroom
must be an adaptation of those long held feedback strategies. We base this suggestion on
initial research on commenting practices in industry – research that revealed practitioners
approach the commenting process as tool used to complete a task or document rather than
as a dialogue between writer and editor/reader. (Results of that study will be reported in a
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separate article.) If feedback is viewed as a tool, one that helps students to complete a task
(revision), what does such a tool look like that addresses the limitations of current
feedback practices? For us, the new tool became the “Feedback File.”
First, we should clarify that in using the Feedback File, the emphasis on feedback in
placed at the draft stage only. Students are typically poised and ready to receive feedback
during the drafting stage more than in the final grading stage; therefore, it is logical that
instructors would provide the most comprehensive feedback at this stage, rather than in
the final reading stage. This shift in pedagogical approach still follows sound pedagogical
practice by providing feedback at the draft stage (e.g., Kramer Simpson, 2012) and further,
it specifically addresses the student concerns found in Still and Koerber’s study (2010).
Feedback Files also resolve many of the limitations of individualized feedback and provide
specific pedagogical benefits, which we will briefly explain before discussing how to create
and use the Feedback File.
One such limitation of individualized commenting is that of physical space in
marginal comments. Marginal comments, left either through tracking tools in word
processors or as hand-written comments, leave little room to provide usable comments
that are detailed and explicit. In response, instructors often rely on shorthand or
abbreviated comments, resulting in cryptic messages that students regularly simply ignore
rather than trying to decipher the comments and address them in the revision process
(Carless, 2006). Marginal comments can also lead to vague feedback, including comments
such as “?” or “awk”, that students find themselves unable to interpret and use (Higgins,
Hartley & Skelton, 2002; Hattie and Gan, 2011). Knowing that students prefer comments
that are clear and directive (Still and Koerber, 2009), individualized comments commonly
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provided seem to contradict what students perceive as usable information that they can
and will apply to future drafts.
In contrast, the unlimited length, space and organization of a Feedback File offer the
flexibility that allows instructors to provide detailed examples and explanations of the
issues within student drafts. Students can be referred to the file to review the issue, read an
explanation of the error, and see a revision example. Because of space limitations, rather
than choosing to provide only certain comments to avoid cognitive student overload
(Moreno, 2004), instructors have the flexibility to determine their own length of a
Feedback File as it fits their needs for the course. Feedback Files can be as lengthy as an
instructor needs, as they are built based on the common revisions the instructor wishes to
share with the class as a whole. An additional benefit of the Feedback File as it relates to
space and detail is that the Feedback File allows for visuals to be included in the
explanation or examples provided. This is simply not possible if instructors provide
individual, marginal comments. Finally, Feedback Files remain available and easily
accessible throughout the course, so instructors can use it as another pedagogical tool for
students to reference.
An additional benefit of the Feedback File is that in some ways it is a collaborative
endeavor. It brings together multiple examples from student documents, and then engages
both the instructor and the students with these collective examples. Students, in turn, use
the Feedback File as a communal tool to guide their revisions. The Feedback File, thus,
extends collaboration into the feedback process. Through the lens of viewing feedback as a
collaborative learning activity, we believe that feedback can be used to meet the one of the
defined outcomes of the TPC service course (Henschel and Meloncon, 2014). In fact,
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collective Feedback Files provide an opportunity for students to meet several of the
conceptual and practical outcomes outlined by the meta-analysis of Henschel and
Meloncon (2014): rhetorical proficiency, specifically user analysis, writing, and editing;
social proficiency, specifically collaboration and communication; experimentation,
specifically problem-solving thinking and self-evaluation; and system thinking, specifically
critical thinking. Feedback Files ask students to critically think through their own papers
and apply editing tactics after reviewing overall expectations. Conversely, individualized
feedback is perceived as presenting quick “fixes” to students without requiring critical
analysis of their own writing to determine problematic areas. As a collaborative writing
opportunity, Feedback Files engage students in the process of pulling together samples
from the class’s collective writing in order to apply each other’s strengths and weaknesses
to each student’s own document. In this way, writing becomes a much more collective,
collaborative effort, where students interact with their own document as well as that of
their peers. When instructors build Feedback Files through this method, students are able
to view writing as a collective process, which enables writer’s to tap into the experiences
and knowledge of their peers on their “team.” This collective approach to writing in the
classroom allows students to pool together resources and prepares them for writing as a
collaborative process rather than an individualized act.
Focusing on the learning outcomes of the TPC service course, Feedback Files can
also assist students in becoming more rhetorically proficient by requiring them to assess
their own writing to identify areas of improvement and highlight points of revision. If the
TPC service course aims to develop a literacy of document and contextual analysis in its
students, learning activities should ask students to perform such analyses of their own
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work. Feedback Files ask instructors and students to consider the writing process outside
of the classroom, beyond being “concretely connected to academic communicative
practices” (Dannels, 2000). Feedback Files are thus used as a tool to prepare students to be
effective writers in the field. This shifts the usefulness of feedback toward a professional
training tool and away from a simply academic instrument.
Ultimately, the Feedback File answers Smith’s (1997) call for critical consideration
of usable and valuable feedback and further asks the TPC field to reconsider its long-
standing reliance on composition’s traditional use of feedback. Recent research (Singleton,
2016) indicates that the Feedback File does not negatively affect student writing, and may,
in fact, improve it. An initial pilot study assessing the performance of students in two
sections of the same TPC service course indicated that when students received collective
feedback, there were no noticeable negative differences on their final products from their
peers who received individualized commenting.
Similar results were found in a second larger study that compared the performance
of six online TPC service courses across three separate institutions, taught by three
separate instructors. Outside reviewers assessed 43 student writing submissions across
instructor assigned grade levels (A, B, etc.) and found that in all but one grade level with
one instructor, when students received collective feedback, they performed better than
their peers who received individualized comments. A larger study is currently in process.
Creating the Feedback File
We now shift focus to the composition of Feedback Files. Feedback Files pull
together into one document the most common errors instructors see repeated in student
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drafts. Feedback Files typically include anonymized examples from student work, detailed
explanations of the issue shown, and the corrections of such issues. Instructors are then
able to use Feedback Files for particular assignments as starting points for the revision
process. Following are the steps necessary to create a Feedback File. The way we have
described creating the file is from the perspective of someone who is relatively new to
teaching.
Step 1: Read student drafts and Identify common errors or issues
Instructors building a Feedback File read through student rough drafts just as they
would when providing individualized comments. However, they do this quickly, without
making any comments. Instead, instructors make quick notes on common errors or issues
that appear frequently and are tied directly to the learning outcomes of the assignment.
The only points they note are errors and major issues that are directly relevant to the
assignment. With an open, blank document that will become the Feedback File, the
instructor makes notes of common errors or issues that highlight those that appear
frequently in the student drafts. As the instructors is making notes, he or she also captures
examples of these errors or issues from the student drafts. These will be used as examples
in the Feedback File.
Step 2: Create the Feedback File
Using the rough list created in step 1, the instructor then uses the list to create
entries in the Feedback File. Each error or issue that was identified in Step 1 becomes an
entry in the Feedback File. For example, in an instructions or process assignment—a
common assignment in the TPC service course—the instructor may see the consistent
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problem with failing to use the imperative or mixing instruction and explanation in the
same step. These common errors are noted, along with a reference to a student draft, and
these errors and issues will become the main points in the Feedback File.
The error or issue is identified by number. The student example of the error or issue
is then copied and pasted from the student draft into the Feedback File. Again, one of the
strengths of the Feedback File is that their limitless space and length allows instructors to
provide detailed examples of the common errors from the student submissions. These
anonymous examples serve to help student identify the common error in their own writing.
Using the example above and the use of the imperative when writing instructions,
an instructor would create an entry like that in Figure 1 in the Feedback File for the issues
of using the imperative.
Figure 1. Sample Feedback File entry regarding imperative writing in process/instructions assignment.
In Figure 1, the instructor has created an entry about using action words. #6 identifies the
error or issue, then provides an example from a student paper (anonymously), Then, the
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“revision” shows the students how to correct the error or address the issue. This process
would be repeated for each entry in the Feedback File.
Feedback Files are incredibly flexible because they can include as many errors or
issues that the instructor finds within the student drafts. Unlike individualized comments
where the instructor may only have the time to address the most egregious issues, the
Feedback File method allows for addressing most every error or issue because the
instructor is only explaining it once. Figure 2 shows a larger example of a Feedback File for
process writing that displays several entries. The total number of entries in this particular
file is six.
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Figure 2. Sample Feedback File reflecting multiple, detailed entries.
While this proposed process may seem no more efficient than individualized
commenting, we note that experienced instructors may be able to combine these first two
steps because they can start a Feedback File by knowing what the common errors and or
issues are in typical assignments. Additionally, after taking time to create an initial
Feedback File, experienced instructors may use Feedback Files from previous terms as a
starting point for future terms. Because the Feedback File includes common errors seen in
each assignment, instructors would need only to collect examples from the current term’s
student work to update the Feedback File term over term. If instructors see additional
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errors they would like to include in the Feedback File, they can easily be adapted and
expanded.
However, because Feedback Files deliver the same comments to multiple students
only once, as opposed to repeating the same comment over multiple drafts, Feedback Files
may also save considerable time while still providing necessary feedback on drafts.
Step 3: Provide an explanation for the error or issue
The strength of a Feedback File as a usable tool comes from the detailed explanation
an instructor can provide in the common error entry. For example, the information
provided in the explanation can refer to course readings or exercises, which is a more
effective pedagogical approach that actually encourages student learning. Unlike the
limitation of marginal comments, the explanation in the Feedback File can be as involved
and as long as needed. We have found this to be the strongest feature of the Feedback File
approach. Their limitless spaces allows instructors to provide visuals, links to outside
resources, and full explanations of issues that are much more in-depth than marginal
comments.
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Figure 3. Sample Feedback File displaying flexibility in length of entries.
Figure 3 shows the flexibility in length that instructors have of the entries in a
Feedback File. Notice in this example from a Feedback File for a memo/policy assignment
(a second common assignment in the TPC course) that the instructor is able to use a
lengthy student example, provide a detailed explanation, and include a revision. The
instructor is able to take a more conversational approach in the feedback because there is
adequate space to do so. Particularly in online classes where the course loses the
impromptu discussions about writing and writing approaches, the Feedback File provides
an opportunity for instructors to engage more deeply with students on where and how to
make revisions. Marginal, individualized comments cannot provide such opportunities
beyond providing a link or short entry.
Step 4: Show how to correct the error or issue
In this step, an instructor can provide an example of how to correct the error or issue. Or,
this step can also be completed using good examples from student papers. Using student
work in positive ways is important because it can serve as the balancing positive feedback
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students appreciate when receiving instructor comments. In the example in Figure 2, we
see that an instructor has taken a screenshot of a student draft that exemplifies the concept
well executed. This figure also represents the true flexibility of the Feedback File in length,
adaptability, and media integration.
Figure 4. Sample of visual used in Feedback File entry.
Using the Feedback File
Creating the Feedback File is only one aspect of the pedagogical process of collective
feedback. Unlike individualized comments, the use of the Feedback File requires an
additional pedagogical move where students are asked to engage with both their own work
and the Feedback File.
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As we noted, Feedback Files are only used during the draft stage of the writing
process because this is the stage where students need to learn how to critically engage with
and make adjustments to their own writing to produce an effective text. To provide
students with such detailed information at the end of the writing process would not allow
them to apply the information or further engage with the content moving forward.
Following are ways to integrate and use the Feedback File in an online TPC course.
Statement on syllabus
While not specific to the Feedback File itself, students need to be told that the course will
be using an alternate form of feedback. This announcement on the course syllabus/website
mitigates any potential for student complaints, and more importantly, it provides an
upfront notice for students. In our experience, students have not complained about this
change and course evaluations have remained strong. An example statement may read, “I
will provide feedback on drafts via one posting (the Feedback File) that lists multiple areas
that need attention. While I will not comment specifically on each draft individually, these
Feedback Files will provide helpful information that will be useful to everyone. It is
important that you reference the draft Feedback Files, in addition to those of your peers.”
Including such a statement prepares students for the reality that they will not receive
comments in the way they are accustomed to, and it serves as an entry point into a
discussion about how the instructors will provide feedback.
Post the full document to the course website
The Feedback File should be posted to the course website or content management system
for use during the revision stages of the writing process. Posting the files in a communal
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area of the course essentially builds a repository of Feedback Files that, by the end of the
term, students may use for references on their final projects. Posting the information online
has a greater potential for the feedback to become part of a larger review process to be
used multiple times throughout the course, as opposed to as singular instance of feedback
in an individualized comment.
Create a contextual text
Using the affordances of online technologies, instructors can post Feedback Files
through a short video or audio file, providing additional context for the File. Instructors can
also share these documents through cloud-based collaborative tools like Google Docs or
Dropbox. Instructors can also reference prior Feedback Files easily when reoccurring
issues across assignment genres exist. Many instructors choose to use screencasting
software or other oral/visual based tools (e.g., audio inserts into PowerPoint) to create a
personal and contextual delivery of the Feedback File. No matter the format, a contextual
document needs to be included that provides additional information for students on how to
use and interpret the Feedback File. These videos, PPTs or other contextual documents
would then be posted to the content management system, notifying students that the
feedback is available and how to use it. For example, instructors may create course
announcements that notify students that the Feedback Files are available and where to
access them.
Students would then reference the Feedback File (and perhaps video) provided by
the instructor. Students then review the error example, the explanation, and the revision,
and apply this to their own writing.
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References to the file in the student drafts
The way the Feedback File is integrated into the student drafts varies based on the
preference of the instructor (another benefit of the flexibility of the Feedback File!). Some
instructors have chosen to only review student drafts without leaving any comments.
Others choose to review student drafts while simply highlighting the errors and identifying
which entry on the Feedback File a student should reference. This method will be explained
further below. Regardless of approach, the key pedagogical move that must be made is that
students need to know that their individual work includes the common errors or issues
that are in the Feedback File, and that they need to review the Feedback File and apply the
concepts to their own writing.
The latter method described above includes noting the error entry number from the
Feedback File (i.e. “See Feedback File #1”) as a comment on the student draft. The
instructor can choose whether or not to highlight this issue in each appearance on the
draft, or highlight it only one time and explain to the student that the error should be
addressed and revised throughout the text. This method would be implemented by writing
on the student draft “see Feedback File numbers 2,6,7 when you revise.” Using our
previous example from process writing, Figure 6 below exemplifies how an instructor
would provide limited comments on student drafts directing students toward specific
entries in the Feedback File.
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Figure 6. Sample student feedback using collective feedback method.
Another way is to have students use the Feedback File more generally. That is, the
instructor may direct students to revise using the Feedback File, and then have students
write a short memo explaining what errors they corrected that were represented in the
Feedback File.
No matter the specific approach the instructor takes, students need to incorporate
the information from the Feedback File into their final drafts, and if the errors presented in
the Feedback File remain in the final drafts, the instructors know where to focus further
discussion in other course assignments and Feedback Files.
We return to our question of whether or not the use of individualized commenting
in TPC service courses is the most effective pedagogical approach to help students learn
how to write for the workplace. Current TPC pedagogy asks students to engage in an
analysis of their peers’ texts, it often does not include such an analysis of the student’s own
texts. Feedback comes in the form of individual, yet sometimes cryptic, messages that
students can either “fix” or choose to ignore. By contrast, delivering collective feedback
through a Feedback File asks students to analyze their own documents while armed with
areas of revision that include descriptions, examples, and explanations. Revision through
this method becomes an individual act, asking students to develop their skills as their own
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critics and as writers. Still and Koerber’s (2010) study found students wanted instructors
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avoid using unfamiliar terminology, ensure comments are legible, avoid using ambiguous circles and lines to highlight content, distribute comments throughout papers (even on sections that work well), suggest that comments offer solutions.
The Feedback File addresses each of these student preferences for feedback. Most
importantly, the Feedback File provides examples of problems with specific information on
solutions for those same problems.
Next Steps
The next steps for the use of the Feedback File include an expanded research study
with additional instructors at different institutions to replicate (or not) the initial results of
using the Feedback File in a TPC service course. This method of feedback is also being
piloted in different types of writing classes (such as composition).
We are also working on a student addendum to the study, which would follow the
same sort of pattern as Still and Koerber (2010) but would ask students their perceptions
of the Feedback File. This would also then follow some students into the workplace to
determine how well they are being prepared to write for the workplace.
Additionally, we are working with practitioners to get a better sense of the types
and processes of feedback in workplace settings. This information from practitioners will
be used to guide the next phases of the research study and hone the creation and use of the
Feedback File.
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Conclusion
Even though TPC has begun to innovate in online writing instruction and move
beyond simply porting face-to-face practices into online environments, long standing
feedback methods from face-to-face classes are being used without much, if any critical
reflection. One of the most significant implications for using the Feedback File is that it
encourages alternative ways of providing comments for works-in-progress that are just as
effective, with more flexibility, than traditional individualized comments.
TPC would be well served for instructors to re-evaluate their traditional classroom
pedagogy and course design because “to teach online is not an easy or automated transfer
of face-to-face instructional strategies” (Grant-Davie & Cargile Cook, 2013, p.4). In some
ways, TPC instructors have wholeheartedly adopted long accepted feedback and
commenting practices without benefit of research into what are effective practices. Rather,
to teach well online means TPC instructors need to rethink and innovate their online
writing course design.
We need to be doing more than just “moving a course online,” which means we
should also not simply move current commenting practices without critical reflection. In
other words, the use of the Feedback File is modeling a reflective and innovative pedagogy
where TPC instructors critically assess current practices, try something new, conduct
empirical research on that practice, and then share those results.
While we await the findings of additional research studies on the Feedback File, we
are reminded that online writing instruction “thrives when instructors who experiment
with new approaches reflect upon and share what they learn with those who follow”
(Cargile Cook & Grant-Davie, 2013, p. 311). Our reflection on current feedback practices
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led us to develop an alternative commenting strategy, and what we learned using the
Feedback File is that it has the potential to be an effective tool for student learning and can
positively impact instructors by creating efficiencies in time they can then transfer to other
pedagogical functions in the online course.
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