Applying Direct Peer Feedback to Foster Vocational School Students’
English Writing Performance
Sujito Sujito
1
, Emilia Yunita
2
, Trisno Tunggal Rahayu Wilujeng
2
, Rina Widjajanti
3
and Wildan Muttaqin
1
1
IAIN Surakarta, Jl Pandawa 9, Surakarta, Indonesia
2
Universitas Kanjuruhan Malang, Jl. Supriadi 48 Malang, Indonesia
3
MAN 3, Jl. Bandung 7, Malang,Indonesia
sujito.team@gmail.com
Keywords: Direct peer feedback, writing performance, vocational students.
Abstract: By expecting to give theoretical and practical contribution to English as Vocational Purposes (EVP) as part
of English as Special Purposes (ESP) in vocational high schools, this study is conducted with an aim at
determining whether there is significant difference between vocational students’ writing performance treated
using direct peer feedback, teacher feedback and no specific feedback. This study uses a quasi-experimental
design in which three assigned groups as experimental and control groups are given direct peer feedback
contrasted to teacher feedback and non feedback application. Inter-rater scoring rubric using Jacob’s ESL
Writing Assessment considering Language Use, Mechanic and Rhetoric as aspects is used to score students’
writing performance. Research findings shows that there is significant difference between students’ writing
performance taught using direct peer feedback compared from students’ writing performance using teacher
feedback and conventional with no special feedback instruction. It is also found that direct peer feedback is
even more effective than teacher feedback.
1 INTRODUCTION
The demands for writing in academic areas is
increasing because the impact of globalization. One
of that demands is in vocational schools. Vocational
schools in Indonesia are growing rapidly. The rapid
growth of vocational schools is not only due to the
enormous support from the government, but also
because of the industrial need for the graduates of
vocational schools in the present time. One of the
skills a vocational school graduate must have is good
writing skills. In vocational schools English is given
as English as Vocational Purposes (EVP) as part of
English as Specific Purposes (ESP) (Widodo, 2016;
Hua and Beverton, 2013). One of the English
language materials given is writing lessons. Because
of the importance of writing lessons for vocational
school students, it is significantly urgent to find an
effective teaching innovative writing for them. The
character of the vocational school students is always
learning and working in teams or groups. For that
need, it is urgent to study about writing teaching
techniques that fit with this character. One of the
teaching techniques of writing that suits that character
is peer feedback (Woo, Chu and Li, 2013).
Writing is very complicated skill to learn. It
involves a complex cognitive activity in which the
writer should be able to organize some specialized
skills at the same time, such as content, format,
sentence structure, vocabulary, punctuation, spelling,
and letter formation. Those are the challenge for
teachers to get the success of increasing the students’
writing ability. Process of teaching writing consists of
four basic stages: they are planning, drafting,
revising, and editing (Richard and Renandya, 2002).
The fourth stage revision is not a simply activity of
checking language errors, it has a big effect for
appearing the better writing product.
In revision process, there is feedback that leads
students to revise their writing product. Feedback is
necessary because it can inform the students of their
weaknesses and tell the teachers about the
effectiveness of their teaching. Feedback is defined
information on performance which affects
subsequent performance by influencing students’
attention to particular matters so that those matters
undergo a change in the subsequent performance
Sujito, S., Yunita, E., Wilujeng, T., Widjajanti, R. and Muttaqin, W.
Applying Direct Peer Feedback to Foster Vocational School Students’ English Writing Performance.
In Proceedings of the Annual Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities (ANCOSH 2018) - Revitalization of Local Wisdom in Global and Competitive Era, pages 335-339
ISBN: 978-989-758-343-8
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
335
(Haoucha, 2012). Generally, there are three types of
feedback: self-monitored feedback, peer feedback
and teacher-student feedback. Traditionally, teachers
are the only one who provides feedback to students’
writing. Then, peer feedback was introduced as a new
strategy to developed students’ writing performance
and it became an important role in writing classroom.
Ellis (2008) proposes six strategies for providing
feedback on writing performance, they are: direct
feedback, indirect feedback, meta-linguistic
feedback, focus and unfocused feedback, electronic
feedback, and reformulation feedback. This study
focuses on investigating the first category that is
direct feedback. Birk (2007) found that using peer
feedback the students began to recognize problems in
their peers’ writing and began to recognize the same
problems in their own. Later, Yu (2013) finds peer
feedback helpful for their students to be aware of the
common errors in their writing, learnt from their
peer’s writing, raised the audience’s awareness,
enhanced their own writing quality, stirred self-
reflections, and promoted interest and motivation in
L2 writing.
From the above rationales there is still a gap
between the facts of the importance of teaching
writing in vocational school, the advantage using
direct peer feedback technique (Nelson and Schunn,
2009) and the need to combine the two. Therefore,
this study aiming to identify whether there is any
significant difference of vocational high school
students’ writing performance treated using direct
peer feedback and students’ writing performance
treated using conventional method is really in need to
bridge the gap.
2 METHOD
2.1 Participants
Four vocational high schools located in Malang
district, East Java Province, participated in this study.
Thirty five students randomly selected from every
three vocational high schools completed in 10
effective meetings preceded by pre-test, followed
with the instructional program as treatment and ended
with the post-test. A group given peer feedback was
as experimental group. As control groups, two groups
consisting of 35 students of every group were given
teacher feedback and no special feedback technique
in instruction. These three groups did not differ
significantly from the dropouts with respect to age or
all pre-test measures, p values > 0.10.
2.2 Procedure and Assessment
Following the completion of the pre-test, the students
were assigned randomly to the instruction group.
Students in were taught in groups of 10 meetings.
There were 2 lessons per week for a total of 5 weeks.
Each lesson lasted for 90 min. The instruction used
for this study as treatment was mainly process writing
to promote the participants’ peer feed-back giving. It
was process writing approach with some steps in
which the step of peer feedback was intensified. For
the two control groups, one group was given with
teacher feedback, whereas another was given with
conventional instruction with no special feedback.
The students in experimental group were not only
as writers but also as feedback providers through their
peer’s writing product. The researcher gave the
students peer editing worksheet. It was also suggested
by Gebhard (1996) that teachers should provide
students guidelines or a short list of questions for
giving feedback. Peer editing worksheet would lead
them to evaluate the peer’s writing product.
This research also employed written test in the
form of writing prompt as one of the instruments to
obtain the data of the students’ achievement in
developing argumentative composition. The subjects
were asked to write an argumentative composition
using topic that has been determined. This test was
administered for 100 minutes to the subjects. Within
that time duration, the subjects are expected to finish
writing an argumentative composition containing
around 500 words. To score the students’
compositions, a ready-made scoring guide called ESL
Composition Profile. Inter-rater reliability were used
in this study instead of intra-rater reliability since the
last one is usually applied by a classroom teachers
who asses their own students for grading purpose.
Therefore, to the reliability scores, this study
employed two raters.
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The following is testing the effect of peer feed-back,
teacher feed-back and no special feed-back on
subjects’ writing achievement. The purpose of the
analysis in this section is to determine whether there
is any effect of applying three different feed-back
applications on subjects’ writing achievement across
study specifications.
Table 1 gives a description that the F-ratio for
teaching technique is 6.437 with the degrees of
freedom 2. The P-value is .002. This research uses
significance level .05 (α = .05). It can be interpreted
ANCOSH 2018 - Annual Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities
336
that there is significant different mean score of the
students’ writing achievement after being taught
using teacher feed-back peer feed-back and no special
feed-back technique. Therefore, it can be concluded
that there is significant different effect of applying
three different kinds of feed-back techniques on the
vocational students’ achievement in making
composition.
Table 1: Tests of between-subjects effects.
Source
Type III Sum
of S
q
uares Df
Mean
S
q
uare F Si
g
.
Corrected Model
6799.396(a) 8 849.925 11.346 .000
Intercept
1278166.44 1
1278166
.404
17062.
092
.000
Feed-back techs
964.391 2 482.195 6.437 .002
Voc. Study Specs
543.163 2 271.581 3.625 .028
Feed backs * Study
Specs
5291.843 4
1322.96
1
17.660 .000
Error
19552.200 261 74.913
Total
1304518.000 270
Corrected Total
26351.596 269
a R Squared = .258 (Adjusted R Squared = .235).
From the result of analysis of estimated marginal
means, as shown in Table 2, the rank of the three
groups is known. The highest mean score of writing
achievement is achieved by the group of students
given peer feed-back. The second position is
achieved by the group of students taught using
teacher feed-back, whereas, the lowest position is
achieved by the students given non feed-back writing.
Table 2: Estimated marginal means.
Teaching
Writing
Orientation Mean
Std.
Erro
r
95% Confidence
Interval
Lower
Boun
d
Upper
Boun
d
1=Teacher
Feed Back
Writin
g
66.700 .912 64.904 68.496
2=Peer Feed-
Back Writing
71.283 .912 69.487 73.080
3=No Specific
Feed Back
Writing
68.428 .912 66.631 70.224
The result of this study is relevant with the result
found by Hashemnezhad (2012). He revealed that
feedback in the form of direct feedback was more
beneficial than indirect feedback especially for
proficient learners. Direct feedback can give
spontaneous response. The suggestion given with
feedback can be spontaneously responded by the
students that result in revision of the error quickly.
Besides, direct feedback has possibility to be
confirmed. Sometimes the feedback given is not
always understood easily. It needs confirmation.
Direct feed eliminates the gap between the time
needed to make confirmation and the response to
make revision. Therefore, direct peer feedback has
really can give many advantages and can be claimed
as the effective method in teaching writing.
Moreover, the researcher also found four
advantages during implemented direct peer feedback
as a method in teaching and learning writing. They
are building learning community in the classroom,
negotiation possibility, building higher accountability
and finding different perspectives. As Hairston
(1999) proposed, peer feedback can build a leaning
community in the classroom. When the students
exchanged and shared their ideas with their peers by
negotiating about the feedback given, the students
could learn from each other and they could build a
higher level of accountability to submit a well-written
product to the teacher. Additionally, Spear (1988)
finds that while interaction helps students to share
ideas, communicate meaningfully, and obtain
different perspectives on their writing, there are a
number of factors that are potential inhibitors of
successful peer discussion.
As shown in Table 2, the writing performance of
the students given peer feedback is better than the
writing performance of the students without peer
feedback. Even, it is still better than the writing
performance of the students given teacher feedback.
The finding of this study confirms what Chen (2010)
and Sashok (2008) propose that direct peer feedback
Applying Direct Peer Feedback to Foster Vocational School Students’ English Writing Performance
337
helped the students become more critical in analyzing
and evaluating their peer’s writing product. It is in
line with Topping (2007) and Williams (2005)
stating that peer feedback not only helped students
improving their writing skills, but it also enhanced
their critical thinking and reading and at the same
time motivated them to write.
Another advantage of direct peer feedback in
writing is about the comfort and easiness of the
students in engaging mutual criticism and reciprocal
information. They indicated that it was easier to talk
with friends than teacher. To the friends they could
say whatever they wanted. Although it seems about
the psychological reason, but it really affect their
writing performance. The data as described in Table
2 empirically shows that direct peer feedback had a
positive effect in social aspect hence increase the
students’ writing performance.
Another reason about why direct peer feed gives
advantages to students hence increases significantly
their writing performance is concerning with
awareness of their error, learning from their peer and
self-reflection. Those three reasons affect not only to
psychological but also empirical experience to the
students. As proposed by Yu (2013) peer feedback is
helpful for their students to be aware of the common
errors in their writing, learnt from their peer’s writing,
raised the audience’s awareness, enhanced their own
writing quality, stirred self-reflections, and promoted
interest and motivation in L2 writing. What has been
proposed by Yu is empirically proved in this research.
When the students evaluated their peer’s writing
product, they automatically read all the paragraphs.
By reading their peer’s writing product, they got new
knowledge to improve their writing product such as
different writing style, points of views, vocabulary,
etc. The improvement was clearly showed in every
assignment. The first assignment (pre-test) until the
last assignment (post-test) showed that the students
writing style increased. They used variants
vocabulary to describe the topic well, and the
grammatical error was reduced. It was confirmed by
Rollinson (2005) that by reading the writing task of
their classmate, it can stimulate students to put more
effort to write and it encourages them to write more
and learn to improve their stories. Direct peer
feedback reduced the teacher’s workload in providing
feedback. It meant that the teacher could avoid time
consuming due to the students provided feedback on
what their peers writing product. By using direct peer
feedback as a method in teaching writing, it helped
the researcher as a teacher to correct all the students’
writing product quickly without spending more time
and energy. Therefore, direct peer feedback was not
only effective but also efficient as a method in
teaching writing.
In this study, the major feedback providers were
the students, and the researcher as a teacher still had
a big role in teaching learning process. Considering
teacher’s workload reduced, the teacher has enough
time to evaluate the students’ writing product and
take the conclusion of why the students make
mistakes. Then, the researcher discussed with the
students in the next meeting about their mistakes in
order to avoid the mistakes happened again. As
William cited by Nuraeni (2013) mentioned that
feedback without explanation or discussion from or
between teacher and students would not bring
significant positive effect toward students’ writing. In
this study, it was proved that the students did not
repeat the same mistakes. It could be seen of their
post-test score which increased. In this study the
researcher as a teacher not only explained about
descriptive text but also became a facilitator. Being
facilitator meant the researcher gave motivation to the
students to be good writers, reminded them to avoid
the same mistake, and gave appreciation when they
could improve their writing performance. Even
though, it was a simple activity but it could influence
their motivation to be a good writer (Barkaoui, 2007).
In summary, direct peer feedback was the
effective method used in teaching and learning
writing. This method not only increased the students’
writing score but also gave some advantages for the
students themselves in learning writing and also the
teacher in teaching writing.
4 CONCLUSIONS
From the pedagogical point of view, these findings
are good news for the students and teachers. By
providing direct peer feedback as a method in
teaching and learning writing, the students’ writing
score who are treated using direct peer feedback
better than students’ writing score who are not treated
using conventional method. Additionally, direct peer
feedback also bring the advantages for the students
and the teacher; it made students active in the
classroom, helped the students more critical in
analyzing and evaluating their peer’s writing product,
made the students got new knowledge to improve
their writing quality product, reduced teacher’s
workload in providing feedback.
ANCOSH 2018 - Annual Conference on Social Sciences and Humanities
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