Abstract
Feedback is essential for student learning and engagement is key for its efficacy. Yet research on student engagement with feedback predominantly attributes it to learner factors, overlooking teacher influence. This case study explored how one writing teacher’s behaviours shaped a motivated undergraduate’s engagement with various types of feedback in a writing course over one semester. Data sources included interviews, class observations, and text analysis. Findings revealed the pivotal role of teacher feedback behaviours in shaping student engagement, often through complex interactions with learner factors and teacher non-feedback behaviours. While some feedback behaviours enhanced student engagement, most had negligible or detrimental effects, highlighting the contextual nature of “best practices”. Certain teacher behaviours also exerted lasting impacts on student engagement. Additionally, some teacher non-feedback behaviours, both teaching and non-teaching, also contributed to shaping student engagement. These findings have implications for both research and teacher education.
Funding source: Double First Class University Plan Fund of Lanzhou University
Award Identifier / Grant number: 561119204
Appendix A: Student engagement coding scheme.
| Dimension | Definition | Coding examples |
|---|---|---|
| Emotional engagement | Attitudes and perceptions manifested in feelings like enthusiasm, satisfaction, nonchalance, and anxiety | I’ve been looking forward to this chance for so long but it’s over so quickly, without any useful feedback. I felt bad. [code: negatively shifted emotional engagement] |
| Behavioural engagement | Observable student participation, such as action, effort, persistence, and concentration | So I took photos (of the PPT). Just like this one (pointing to a photo in her mobile phone), I tried to figure out its structure. [code: extensive behavioural engagement] |
| Cognitive engagement | Students’ cognitive processing of knowledge and ideas, typified by strategy search, care, and willingness to participate | I tried to figure out its structure. It’s about how technology influenced educational practices. (code: deep cognitive engagement) |
| Agentic engagement | Students’ constructive contribution (e.g., offering input, asking questions, and communicating thoughts and interests) to their own learning opportunities | I never asked her to explain those (the written feedback) I couldn’t understand. [code: lack of agentic engagement] |
Appendix B: Teacher feedback behavior categorization FL = feedback literate, FI = feedback illiterate.
| Feedback | Teacher feedback behaviour | Categories | Criteria | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FL | FI | |||
| Teacher written feedback | Requiring multiple drafts based on teacher written feedback | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1055: “encouraging revision in multiple-draft classrooms” | |
| Providing feedback on both global and language issues | √ | Hyland (2003), p. 184: “Admonishments to teachers to avoid attention to form and focus on meaning therefore seem misplaced … Although teachers should not be excessively focused on eradicating errors, they should also be careful to avoid emphasizing ideas to the neglect of form.” | ||
| Given limited amount of written feedback | √ | Lee (2019): avoid overwhelming students by giving too much WCF | ||
| Justifying the limited written feedback | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Attending to personal and affective dimension” | ||
| Giving fuzzy written feedback with casual codes | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Providing actionable commentary that is concrete and text-specific” | ||
| Explaining the codes very late | √ | Winstone and Boud (2022), p. 660: “feedback information can come too late to be of use” | ||
| Withholding marks | √ | Winstone and Boud (2022), p. 657: “the grade or mark (a summative evaluation) might obscure students’ attention to the formative purpose of feedback information” | ||
| Long turnovers | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1056: “feedback occurs throughout the teaching-learning-assessment cycle in a timely … fashion” | ||
| Writing conference | Inviting students to have writing conferences during recess time | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1056 – “written feedback followed by conferencing to clarify issues” | |
| Asking the student to initiate the discussion. | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1056: “feedback literate teachers engage students actively in the feedback process” | ||
| When she was lost what to ask, letting her go quickly after brief comments. | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1056: “feedback literate teachers engage students actively in the feedback process” p. 1056 | ||
| Setting aside a session for writing conference | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1056: “written feedback followed by conferencing to clarify issues” | ||
| Improvising on students’ shared problems | √ | Lee (2021): p. 1051 “Feedback literate teachers give feedback according to the needs of the context” | ||
| Exemplar | Mobilizing resources beyond the textbook | √ | Boud and Dawson (2023), pp. 161–162: “Use available resources well” | |
| Focusing on ideas, organization & transition | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: prioritizing “higher-order goals of communication without having to address every single issue” | ||
| Emphasizing words students need but beyond their ability | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Feedback literate teachers provide learner-focused feedback, meeting students in their ZPD to maximize their learning.” | ||
| Contrasting exemplar strengths with students’ weakness | √ | Carless et al. (2018). p. 109: “During the comparison of their own work with that of the exemplars, students see different ways of approaching the task.” | ||
| Not involving the students | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Feedback literate teachers do not dominate the feedback process but share responsibility with students” | ||
| AWE feedback | Urging students to use computer-generated feedback in lieu of teacher feedback | √ | Li et al. (2015), p. 10: “they [students] can use AWE feedback to correct basic grammar errors, but need instructor’s help on larger issues such as organization and rhetorical strategies ” | |
| Asking students about experience with computer-generated feedback | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Attending to personal and affective dimension” | ||
| Not responding to students’ negative experiences with computer-generated feedback | √ | Lee (2021), p. 1054: “Attending to personal and affective dimension” | ||
| Requiring students to use computer-generated feedback without getting involved | √ | Li et al. (2015), p. 14: “students need full support to process the AWE feedback” | ||
References
Assor, Avi, Haya Kaplan, Yaniv Kanat-Maymon & Guy Roth. 2005. Directly controlling teacher behaviors as predictors of poor motivation and engagement in girls and boys: The role of anger and anxiety. Learning and Instruction 15. 397–413. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2005.07.008.Search in Google Scholar
Assor, Avi, Haya Kaplan & Guy Roth. 2002. Choice is good, but relevance is excellent: Autonomy-enhancing and suppressing teacher behaviours predicting students’ engagement in schoolwork. British Journal of Educational Psychology 72. 261–278. https://doi.org/10.1348/000709902158883.Search in Google Scholar
Boud, David & Philip Dawson. 2023. What feedback literate teachers do: An empirically-derived competency framework. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 48. 158–171. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2021.1910928.Search in Google Scholar
Buskist, William, Jason Sikorski, Tanya Buckley & Bryan K. Saville. 2002. Elements of master teaching. In Stephen F. Davis & William Buskist (eds.), The teaching of psychology: Essays in honor of Wilbert J. McKeachie and Charles L. Brewer, 30–39. Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Earlbaum Associates.Search in Google Scholar
Carless, David, Kennedy Kam Ho Chan, Jessica To, Margaret Lo & Elizabeth Barret. 2018. Developing students’ capacities for evaluative judgement through analysing exemplars. In David Boud, Rola Ajjawi, Philip Dawson & Joanna Tai (eds.), Developing evaluative judgement in higher education: Assessment for knowing and producing quality work, 108–116. Abingdon, Oxon & New York: Routledge.10.4324/9781315109251-12Search in Google Scholar
Carless, David & Naomi Winstone. 2023. Teacher feedback literacy and its interplay with student feedback literacy. Teaching in Higher Education 28. 150–163. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2020.1782372.Search in Google Scholar
Casanave, Christine Pearson. 2003. Looking ahead to more sociopolitically-oriented case study research in L2 writing scholarship. Journal of Second Language Writing 12. 85–102. https://doi.org/10.1016/s1060-3743(03)00002-x.Search in Google Scholar
Cheong, Choo Mui, Na Luo, Xinhua Zhu, Qi Lu & Wei Wei. 2022. Self-assessment complements peer assessment for undergraduate students in an academic writing task. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 48. 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2022.2069225.Search in Google Scholar
Dewaele, Jean-Marc & Chengchen Li. 2021. Teacher enthusiasm and students’ social-behavioral learning engagement: The mediating role of student enjoyment and boredom in Chinese EFL classes. Language Teaching Research 25. 922–945. https://doi.org/10.1177/13621688211014538.Search in Google Scholar
Dewaele, Jean-Marc, Kazuya Saito & Florentina Halimi. 2022. How teacher behaviour shapes foreign language learners’ enjoyment, anxiety and attitudes/motivation: A mixed modelling longitudinal investigation. Language Teaching Research. 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1177/13621688221089601.Search in Google Scholar
Donker, Monika H., Lian van Vemde, David J. Hessen, Tamara van Gog & Tim Mainhard. 2021. Observational, student, and teacher perspectives on interpersonal teacher behavior: Shared and unique associations with teacher and student emotions. Learning and Instruction 73. 101414. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2020.101414.Search in Google Scholar
Ellis, Rod. 2010. EPILOGUE: A framework for investigating oral and written corrective feedback. Studies in Second Language Acquisition 32. 335–349. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0272263109990544.Search in Google Scholar
Finn, Jeremy D. & Kayla S. Zimmer. 2012. Student engagement: What is it? Why does it matter? In Sandra L. Christenson, Amy L. Reschly & Cathy Wylie (eds.), Handbook of research on student engagement, 97–122. New York: Springer.10.1007/978-1-4614-2018-7_5Search in Google Scholar
Fredricks, Jennifer A., Phyllis C. Blumenfeld & Alison H. Paris. 2004. School engagement: Potential of the concept, state of the evidence. Review of Educational Research 74. 59–109. https://doi.org/10.3102/00346543074001059.Search in Google Scholar
Han, Ye. 2019. Written corrective feedback from an ecological perspective: The interaction between the context and individual learners. System 80. 288–303. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.system.2018.12.009.Search in Google Scholar
Han, Ye & Fiona Hyland. 2015. Exploring learner engagement with written corrective feedback in a Chinese tertiary EFL classroom. Journal of Second Language Writing 30. 31–44. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2015.08.002.Search in Google Scholar
Han, Ye & Fiona Hyland. 2016. Oral corrective feedback on L2 writing from a sociocultural perspective: A case study on two writing conferences in a Chinese university. Writing & Pedagogy 8. 433–459. https://doi.org/10.1558/wap.27165.Search in Google Scholar
Han, Ye & Yueting Xu. 2021. Student feedback literacy and engagement with feedback: A case study of Chinese undergraduate students. Teaching in Higher Education 26. 181–196. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2019.1648410.Search in Google Scholar
Heron, Marion, Emma Medland, Naomi Winstone & Edd Pitt. 2023. Developing the relational in teacher feedback literacy: Exploring feedback talk. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 48. 172–185. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2021.1932735.Search in Google Scholar
Hsiao, Jo-Chi, Ssu-Kuang Chen, Wei Chen & Sunny S. J. Lin. 2022. Developing a plugged-in class observation protocol in high-school blended STEM classes: Student engagement, teacher behaviors and student-teacher interaction patterns. Computers & Education 178. 104403. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2021.104403.Search in Google Scholar
Hyland, Fiona. 2000. ESL writers and feedback: Giving more autonomy to students. Language Teaching Research 4. 33–35. https://doi.org/10.1191/136216800674812889.Search in Google Scholar
Hyland, Ken. 2003. Second language writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511667251Search in Google Scholar
Kuril, Samvet, Vishal Gupta & Vijaya Sherry Chand. 2021. Relationship between negative teacher behaviors and student engagement: Evidence from India. International Journal of Educational Research 109. 101858. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijer.2021.101858.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy. 2004. Error correction in L2 secondary writing classrooms: The case of Hong Kong. Journal of Second Language Writing 13. 285–312. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2004.08.001.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy. 2008. Student reactions to teacher feedback in two Hong Kong secondary classrooms. Journal of Second Language Writing 17. 144–164. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2007.12.001.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy. 2010. Writing teacher education and teacher learning: Testimonies of four EFL teachers. Journal of Second Language Writing 19. 143–157. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2010.05.001.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy. 2019. Teacher written corrective feedback: Less is more. Language Teaching 52. 524–536. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0261444819000247.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy. 2021. The development of feedback literacy for writing teachers. TESOL Quarterly 55. 1048–1059. https://doi.org/10.1002/tesq.3012.Search in Google Scholar
Lee, Icy, Na Luo & Pauline Mak. 2021. Teachers’ attempts at focused written corrective feedback. Journal of Second Language Writing 54. 100809. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2021.100809.Search in Google Scholar
Li, Jinrong, Stephanie Link & Volker Hegelheimer. 2015. Rethinking the role of automated writing evaluation (AWE) feedback in ESL writing instruction. Journal of Second Language Writing 27. 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2014.10.004.Search in Google Scholar
Patall, Erika A., Keenan A. Pituch, Rebecca R. Steingut, Ariana C. Vasquez, Nicole Yates & Alana A. U. Kennedy. 2019. Agency and high school science students’ motivation, engagement, and classroom support experiences. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology 62. 77–92. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appdev.2019.01.004.Search in Google Scholar
Price, Margaret, Karen Handley & Jill Millar. 2011. Feedback: Focusing attention on engagement. Studies in Higher Education 36. 879–896. https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2010.483513.Search in Google Scholar
Reeve, Johnmarshall. 2013. How students create motivationally supportive learning environments for themselves: The concept of agentic engagement. Journal of Educational Psychology 105. 579–595. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0032690.Search in Google Scholar
Reeve, Johnmarshall & Ching-Mei Tseng. 2011. Agency as a fourth aspect of students’ engagement during learning activities. Contemporary Educational Psychology 36. 257–267. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cedpsych.2011.05.002.Search in Google Scholar
Reschly, Amy L. & Sandra L. Christenson. 2012. Jingle, jangle, and conceptual haziness: Evolution and future directions of the engagement construct. In Sandra L. Christenson, Amy L. Reschly & Cathy Wylie (eds.), Handbook of research on student engagement, 3–20. New York: Springer.10.1007/978-1-4614-2018-7_1Search in Google Scholar
Skinner, Ellen A. & Michael J. Belmont. 1993. Motivation in the classroom: Reciprocal effects of teacher behaviour and student engagement across the school year. Journal of Educational Psychology 85. 571–581. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-0663.85.4.571.Search in Google Scholar
Skinner, Ellen A. & Jennifer R. Pitzer. 2012. Developmental dynamics of student engagement, coping, and everyday resilience. In Sandra L. Christenson, Amy L. Reschly & Cathy Wylie (eds.), Handbook of research on student engagement, 21–44. New York: Springer.10.1007/978-1-4614-2018-7_2Search in Google Scholar
Uden, van Jolien M., Henk Ritzen & Jules M. Pieters. 2014. Engaging students: The role of teacher beliefs and interpersonal teacher behavior in fostering student engagement in vocational education. Teaching and Teacher Education 37. 21–32. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2013.08.005.Search in Google Scholar
Winstone, Naomi E. & David Boud. 2022. The need to disentangle assessment and feedback in higher education. Studies in Higher Education 47. 656–667. https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2020.1779687.Search in Google Scholar
Wullschleger, Andrea, Ariana Garrote, Susanne Schnepel, Lea Jaquiéry & Elizabeth Moser Opitz. 2020. Effects of teacher feedback behavior on social acceptance in inclusive elementary classrooms: Exploring social referencing processes in a natural setting. Contemporary Educational Psychology 60. 101841. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cedpsych.2020.101841.Search in Google Scholar
Xu, Yueting & David Carless. 2017. ‘Only true friends could be cruelly honest’: Cognitive scaffolding and social-affective support in teacher feedback literacy. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 42. 1082–1094. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2016.1226759.Search in Google Scholar
You, Xiaoye. 2004. “The choice made from no choice”: English writing instruction in a Chinese university. Journal of Second Language Writing 13. 97–110. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jslw.2003.11.001.Search in Google Scholar
Zhang, Zhe (Victor) & Ken Hyland. 2022. Fostering student engagement with feedback: An integrated approach. Assessing Writing 51. 100586. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asw.2021.100586.Search in Google Scholar
Zheng, Yao & Shulin Yu. 2018. Student engagement with teacher written corrective feedback in EFL writing: A case study of Chinese lower-proficiency students. Assessing Writing 37. 13–24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.asw.2018.03.001.Search in Google Scholar
Zheng, Yao, Shulin Yu, Bo Wang & Yiran Zhang. 2020. Exploring student engagement with supervisor feedback on master’s thesis: Insights from a case study. Innovations in Education and Teaching International 57. 186–197. https://doi.org/10.1080/14703297.2019.1617181.Search in Google Scholar
© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Unpacking the positioning of being “disengaged” and “disrespectful” in class through nexus analysis: an international student’s navigation of institutional and interactional university norms
- Assessing English language learners’ collocation knowledge: a systematic review of receptive and productive measurements
- The role of awareness in implicit and explicit knowledge
- Intensity of CLIL exposure and L2 motivation in primary school: evidence from Spanish EFL learners in non-CLIL, low-CLIL and high-CLIL programmes
- Promoting young EFL learners’ oral production through storytelling: coursebook adaptation in the Vietnamese classroom
- Applying embodied meaning of spatial prepositions and the Principled Polysemy model to teaching English as a second language: the case of to and on
- The impact of guessing and retrieval strategies for learning phrasal verbs
- Unraveling the differential effects of task rehearsal and task repetition on L2 task performance: the mediating role of task modality
- Examining L2 studentsʼ development of global cohesion and its relationship with their argumentative essay quality
- The construct of integrated group discussion (IGD) among undergraduate students: to what extent does group discussion performance reflect performance on IGD tasks?
- Discipline-specific attitudinal differences of EMI students towards translanguaging
- Relationship between second language vocabulary knowledge and vocabulary learning strategy use: a meta-analysis of correlational studies
- Evaluative language in undergraduate academic writing: expressions of attitude as sources of text effectiveness in English as a Foreign Language
- Investigating optimal spacing schedules for incidental acquisition of L2 collocations
- The association between socioeconomic status and Chinese secondary students’ English achievement: mediation of self-efficacy and moderation of gender
- Integrated instruction of Appraisal Theory and rhetorical moves in literature reviews: an exploratory study
- Scaffolding in genre-based L2 writing classes: Vietnamese EFL teachers’ beliefs and practices
- Exploring the professional role identities of English for academic purposes practitioners: a qualitative study
- The combined effects of task repetition and post-task teacher-corrected transcribing on complexity, accuracy and fluency of L2 oral performance
- Teacher behaviour and student engagement with L2 writing feedback: a case study
- The effect of an intervention focused on academic language on CAF measures in the multilingual writing of secondary students
- Which approach best promoted low-proficiency learners’ listening performance: metacognitive, bottom-up or a combination of both?
- Enhancing young EFL learners’ written skills: the role of repeated pre-task planning
- The mediating roles of resilience and motivation in the relationship between students’ English learning burnout and engagement: a conservation-of-resources perspective
- Student and teacher beliefs about oral corrective feedback in junior secondary English classrooms
- The effects of context, story-type, and language proficiency on EFL word learning and retention from reading
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Unpacking the positioning of being “disengaged” and “disrespectful” in class through nexus analysis: an international student’s navigation of institutional and interactional university norms
- Assessing English language learners’ collocation knowledge: a systematic review of receptive and productive measurements
- The role of awareness in implicit and explicit knowledge
- Intensity of CLIL exposure and L2 motivation in primary school: evidence from Spanish EFL learners in non-CLIL, low-CLIL and high-CLIL programmes
- Promoting young EFL learners’ oral production through storytelling: coursebook adaptation in the Vietnamese classroom
- Applying embodied meaning of spatial prepositions and the Principled Polysemy model to teaching English as a second language: the case of to and on
- The impact of guessing and retrieval strategies for learning phrasal verbs
- Unraveling the differential effects of task rehearsal and task repetition on L2 task performance: the mediating role of task modality
- Examining L2 studentsʼ development of global cohesion and its relationship with their argumentative essay quality
- The construct of integrated group discussion (IGD) among undergraduate students: to what extent does group discussion performance reflect performance on IGD tasks?
- Discipline-specific attitudinal differences of EMI students towards translanguaging
- Relationship between second language vocabulary knowledge and vocabulary learning strategy use: a meta-analysis of correlational studies
- Evaluative language in undergraduate academic writing: expressions of attitude as sources of text effectiveness in English as a Foreign Language
- Investigating optimal spacing schedules for incidental acquisition of L2 collocations
- The association between socioeconomic status and Chinese secondary students’ English achievement: mediation of self-efficacy and moderation of gender
- Integrated instruction of Appraisal Theory and rhetorical moves in literature reviews: an exploratory study
- Scaffolding in genre-based L2 writing classes: Vietnamese EFL teachers’ beliefs and practices
- Exploring the professional role identities of English for academic purposes practitioners: a qualitative study
- The combined effects of task repetition and post-task teacher-corrected transcribing on complexity, accuracy and fluency of L2 oral performance
- Teacher behaviour and student engagement with L2 writing feedback: a case study
- The effect of an intervention focused on academic language on CAF measures in the multilingual writing of secondary students
- Which approach best promoted low-proficiency learners’ listening performance: metacognitive, bottom-up or a combination of both?
- Enhancing young EFL learners’ written skills: the role of repeated pre-task planning
- The mediating roles of resilience and motivation in the relationship between students’ English learning burnout and engagement: a conservation-of-resources perspective
- Student and teacher beliefs about oral corrective feedback in junior secondary English classrooms
- The effects of context, story-type, and language proficiency on EFL word learning and retention from reading