Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment

Instructors and students are the pillars of higher education. There is substantial interest in teachers’ beliefs, preferences, and perceptions in language assessment research, with an emphasis on writing assessment. Additionally, there is a growing body of research investigating students’ perception...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2021
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613420086362112
access_status_str Open Access
author Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
author_browse Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
author_facet Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
author_sort Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
collection Thesis
description Instructors and students are the pillars of higher education. There is substantial interest in teachers’ beliefs, preferences, and perceptions in language assessment research, with an emphasis on writing assessment. Additionally, there is a growing body of research investigating students’ perceptions of assessment. However, research that examines how students perceive writing assessment is limited. Therefore, this study investigates two aspects: (a) students’ perceptions of their writing ability and (b) their perceptions of writing assessment in an English-medium private university in Cairo. This study adopts a mixed-methods approach for data collection, which involved distributing student questionnaires, conducting semi-structured interviews, and collecting writing samples from the participants. The participants were selected through convenience sampling, in which L2 participants were randomly selected from two English programs at the American University in Cairo. A sample of participants (n=73) responded to the questionnaire. The questionnaires were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Six semi-structured interviews were conducted to gain a deeper understanding of students’ perceptions of writing quality and writing assessment. The interviews were textually analyzed through coding using content analysis by two coders. These interviews were conducted based on the participants’ interest. The writing samples were analyzed quantitatively; they were first scored by two raters using a holistic rubric for grading the participants’ overall L2 writing quality, and the average score of both raters was calculated. These samples were then analyzed utilizing the descriptors included in the holistic rubric. The results of this study indicated that students perceived themselves to be either mid-range writers or professional ones. Most of the participants enjoyed writing and believed it to be one of the easiest, most crucial skills in higher education. Furthermore, a connection was found between the writing prompt and the students’ writing quality. If the topic addressed the students’ interest, they become motivated to work on their writing tasks. They also perceived writing assessment as a determining, and substantial factor in developing their writing quality. Moreover, writing quality was found to be higher than their perceptions as writers. The students’ writing quality shaped their perceptions of academic writing and writing assessment. The study also involved messages from students to writing instructors. The implications of the current study addressed different educational stakeholders, such as students, teachers, textbook designers, teacher educators and university administrators. Students are required to manage their time to produce the best possible written work. Teachers are recommended to provide students with clear instructions on how to conduct different feedback types, such as peer-feedback and self-assessment. Textbook designers are required to design interesting writing prompts, which address students’ preferences. Teacher educators are responsible for delivering professional development (PD) events to train teachers on how to incorporate writing assessment activities with writing instruction. University administrators are required to reward teachers who successfully deliver writing assessment activities for university students.
format Thesis
id oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-2715
institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:51.500Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher AUC Knowledge Fountain
publisherStr AUC Knowledge Fountain
record_format dspace
source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-2715 University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment Hegazi, Hanan Alaa Instructors and students are the pillars of higher education. There is substantial interest in teachers’ beliefs, preferences, and perceptions in language assessment research, with an emphasis on writing assessment. Additionally, there is a growing body of research investigating students’ perceptions of assessment. However, research that examines how students perceive writing assessment is limited. Therefore, this study investigates two aspects: (a) students’ perceptions of their writing ability and (b) their perceptions of writing assessment in an English-medium private university in Cairo. This study adopts a mixed-methods approach for data collection, which involved distributing student questionnaires, conducting semi-structured interviews, and collecting writing samples from the participants. The participants were selected through convenience sampling, in which L2 participants were randomly selected from two English programs at the American University in Cairo. A sample of participants (n=73) responded to the questionnaire. The questionnaires were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Six semi-structured interviews were conducted to gain a deeper understanding of students’ perceptions of writing quality and writing assessment. The interviews were textually analyzed through coding using content analysis by two coders. These interviews were conducted based on the participants’ interest. The writing samples were analyzed quantitatively; they were first scored by two raters using a holistic rubric for grading the participants’ overall L2 writing quality, and the average score of both raters was calculated. These samples were then analyzed utilizing the descriptors included in the holistic rubric. The results of this study indicated that students perceived themselves to be either mid-range writers or professional ones. Most of the participants enjoyed writing and believed it to be one of the easiest, most crucial skills in higher education. Furthermore, a connection was found between the writing prompt and the students’ writing quality. If the topic addressed the students’ interest, they become motivated to work on their writing tasks. They also perceived writing assessment as a determining, and substantial factor in developing their writing quality. Moreover, writing quality was found to be higher than their perceptions as writers. The students’ writing quality shaped their perceptions of academic writing and writing assessment. The study also involved messages from students to writing instructors. The implications of the current study addressed different educational stakeholders, such as students, teachers, textbook designers, teacher educators and university administrators. Students are required to manage their time to produce the best possible written work. Teachers are recommended to provide students with clear instructions on how to conduct different feedback types, such as peer-feedback and self-assessment. Textbook designers are required to design interesting writing prompts, which address students’ preferences. Teacher educators are responsible for delivering professional development (PD) events to train teachers on how to incorporate writing assessment activities with writing instruction. University administrators are required to reward teachers who successfully deliver writing assessment activities for university students. 2021-09-20T07:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1684 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2715/viewcontent/hanan_alaa_hegazi_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain second language writing academic writing writing quality assessment writing assessment students’ perceptions students’ perceptions of writing students’ perceptions of writing assessment undergraduate students writing teachers Applied Linguistics First and Second Language Acquisition Linguistics
spellingShingle second language writing
academic writing
writing quality
assessment
writing assessment
students’ perceptions
students’ perceptions of writing
students’ perceptions of writing assessment
undergraduate students
writing teachers
Applied Linguistics
First and Second Language Acquisition
Linguistics
Hegazi, Hanan Alaa
University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title_full University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title_fullStr University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title_full_unstemmed University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title_short University Students' Perceptions of Writing Assessment
title_sort university students perceptions of writing assessment
topic second language writing
academic writing
writing quality
assessment
writing assessment
students’ perceptions
students’ perceptions of writing
students’ perceptions of writing assessment
undergraduate students
writing teachers
Applied Linguistics
First and Second Language Acquisition
Linguistics
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1684
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2715/viewcontent/hanan_alaa_hegazi_thesis.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT hegazihananalaa universitystudentsperceptionsofwritingassessment