introduction, method, results, and discussion (Peh
and Ng, 2008).
Unfortunately, there is not much research on
academic writing, especially scientific papers
written undergraduate students. Most research has
focused on scientific papers written by graduate
students (Al Badi, 2015; Seyabi and Tuzlukova,
2014; Al Fadda, 2012). The lack of similar research
at the undergraduate level is likely due to the novelty
of the trend of writing scientific papers among
undergraduate students, especially in Indonesia.
On the other hand, there have been many studies
of writing interventions conducted by previous
researchers, and many have demonstrated the
success of these writing intervention programs.
Archer (2008) investigated the influence of the
Writing Center Interventions on students’ academic
writing and found that the intervention provided by
the writing center improved students' writing quality.
Meanwhile, Nasir et al. (2013) provide interventions
in an action research project to improve the creative
writing skills of primary school students, and these
interventions prove to be beneficial to students.
Writing Intervention on a large scale has also
been applied in some countries; for example, in the
United States there was the “Tiered Writing
Intervention Models” program to help improve
writing skills of high school students coming from
low-achieving schools (Shaver et al., 2015) and
“Self-Regulated Strategy Development” as a Tier 2
intervention for low-grade primary graders with low
achievement (Flanders, 2014). In the Netherlands,
writing intervention has also been proven to help
improve the ability of primary school children in
writing (Koster et al, 2015). Bangert-Drowns et al.
(2004) also proved the success of writing-to-learn
interventions in improving student academic
achievement. The same results are also shown by
research of Rogers and Graham (2008). At the
university level, Switzer and Perdue (2011) reported
the results of a study of the implementation of an
intervention model called "Dissertation 101" to
improve information seeking, evaluation, and
synthesis skills of postgraduate students majoring in
education by collaborating between academic
librarians, lecturers writing center, and the graduate
students themselves. Perin and Hare (2010) reported
a Reading-Writing Intervention program for students
preparing to attend university courses at a
community college. A program called Content
Comprehension Strategy Intervention (CSSI) has
been proved to be effective as an intervention
program to improve the academic community's
academic reading and writing skills.
Given the success of various academic writing
intervention programs at various levels of schools
and countries, the researcher is optimistic that
similar programs will succeed in improving
academic writing skills and the quality of scientific
papers produced by the non-thesis track students
participating in this study.
2 METHODS
This qualitative research was conducted in the study
program of English Literature in a state university in
Bandung, Indonesia. It involved two lecturers of a
non-thesis course and 15 students attending the
course.
Data were in the form of assessment results of
scientific papers before and after the Academic
Writing Intervention. Before applying the Academic
Writing Intervention, modelling and brainstorming
were carried out to help students write a scientific
paper. After the papers were collected, Academic
Writing Intervention Program was applied for eight
meetings. The papers produced before and after the
intervention program were compared to see whether
there was improvement in their writing. To support
the primary data, interviews with lecturers and
selected students were carried out. Questionnaires
were also distributed to students to find out whether
students felt the benefit of the intervention in their
academic writing skills. In addition, to ensure
reliability and validity, the instruments of rubric
assessment and questionnaire were validated by two
experts in the field of scientific paper assessment.
3 FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION
In this study, the Academic Writing Intervention
program is in the form of a workshop that
incorporates various elements of intervention:
Brainstorming, drafting, peer feedback, and editing
(Zúñiga and Macias, 2006), assisted by feedback and
assessment from lecturers of course subjects. The
Academic Writing Intervention emphasizes
collaborative writing that has been proven to help
improve academic writing skills, especially for EFL
students (Kwon, 2014), and continuous supervision
from lecturers, both in groups and individually. The
integration of several writing techniques in the
program is based on the argument that it is important
to integrate several elements of the intervention to
find out which works best for students, as quoted
from the recommendations given by research report