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Peer Editing:. The Art of Helping Your Students Help Themselves. Why Peer Edit?. Why Peer Edit?. Positive impact on editor’s writing. Why Peer Edit?. Positive impact on editor’s writing Positive impact on writer’s writing. Why Peer Edit?. Positive impact on editor’s writing
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Peer Editing: The Art of Helping Your Students Help Themselves
Why Peer Edit? • Positive impact on editor’s writing
Why Peer Edit? • Positive impact on editor’s writing • Positive impact on writer’s writing
Why Peer Edit? • Positive impact on editor’s writing • Positive impact on writer’s writing • Positive impact on instructor
Classic Peer Editing • Author reads text to group • Group comments orally or in writing
Silent Editing • Students use editing guide to edit peer essays • Students give written comments to author
Booklet Editing • Teacher collects “finished” essays and makes a booklet • Each student receives a copy of booklet • Students peer edit each essay • Students disassemble booklet and return essays to their authors
“Slice and Dice” • Instructor makes and distributes copies of each student’s essay • Students check papers at home • Next day, students form groups to discuss papers • Concurrently, instructor and writer have a conference in hall to discuss instructor comments
“Slice and Dice” • Teacher and author listen to the different groups’ observations • Author takes notes on comments and receives student’s annotated copies • Author revises text
Colored Pencils/Highlighters • Students are divided into groups • Each student is given a different colored pencil or highlighter to concentrate on some aspect of the paper • Student marks areas of concern • A key to the meaning of the different colors is given to the students • Marked essays are returned to author for revision
Post Teacher Check • Instructor marks problem areas in essay • Students meet in small groups to identify problems and discuss solutions
Computer Editing • Students work in pairs • They edit each other’s papers using a word processing program • This can also be done by e-mail
Modeling Peer Editing • Give students a model text - can be a student or teacher generated sample • Walk the students through the process • Make a transparency of a volunteer student’s paper and correct together
Peer editing in L2 Classroom and Applications to L1 Instruction
Must design peer editing process to further target language developmental goals
ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines - Writing (See handout)
Name of Writer______________________ Title of Project________________________ Peer Editor__________________________ Date______________________________ Use this list to check over your paper before your conference. Mark the column for each item with a after you have checked the paper carefully.
Peer Group Response form Writer’s Name ___________________ Thesis Statement: (a.k.a. main idea, controlling statement) (Write in a complete sentence.) What I like in this essay: What questions I have about this essay: (Discuss here areas that are confusing, that do not seem related, or that need further explanation.) The suggestions I have for the writer of this essay: Signature of Listener _____________________________ (Be as specific as possible, and write as clearly as you can. Use the back of this paper if you need more room. Give to writer after discussing the comments in your group.)
PEER EDITING EVALUATION Score each of your editors from 0 to 4, 4 being highest Name of editor: Your name : Quantity Quality Additional comments you would like to make about the editor: David Landis, U of Wisconsin
Rubric for Grading a Peer Editing Task Absent Barely Fair Good Great 0 1 2 3 4 The Editor: ______________________________________________________________ Supplies detailed comments to help the author ______________________________________________________________ Provides at least one positive comment ______________________________________________________________ Thoroughly checks mechanical elements
Problem • Students feel that they should rely on the authority of the teacher, therefore they think their input is not valuable
Solution • Talk to students about the value of practice. Instructors learned to edit by editing. • Assure students that they will also receive instructor feedback
Problem • Some students may not offer adequate feedback to peers
Solution • Have multiple students review each composition so that there is a greater chance that each student will receive valuable feedback. • Grade peer editing process and be sure that students realize that their performance in this process will be evaluated
Problem • Students tend to mistrust peer comments
Solution • Assure students that it is relatively rare that a peer will propose a change to something that is right, making it wrong • Let students know that they are ultimately responsible for the text • Be available to consult with students who question peer comments
Problem • L2 students may try to not use target language while engaging in peer editing activities
Solution • Use silent editing technique • If possible, create groups of students where they must use target language as a lingua franca
Conclusion “These reviews offer students reactions from real readers who provide multiple, often mutually reinforcing, perspectives. Such reviews help student writers develop audience awareness.” Robin C. Scarcella Rebecca Oxford