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2011 | 1 | 2 | 209-225

Article title

Using tracking software for writing instruction

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Writing is a complex skill that is hard to teach. Although the written product is what is often evaluated in the context of language teaching, the process of giving thought to linguistic form is fascinating. For almost forty years, language teachers have found it more effective to help learners in the writing process than in the written product; it is there that they could find sources of writing problems. Despite all controversy evoked by post-process approaches with respect to process writing, information technology has lately offered tools that can shed new light on how writing takes place. Software that can record keyboard, mouse, and screen activities is capable of unraveling mysteries of the writing process. Technology has given teachers and learners the option of examining the writing process as it unfolds, enabling them to diagnose strategy as well as wording problems, thus empowering teachers to guide learners individually in how to think about each of their trouble spots in the context of a specific product of writing. With these advances in information technology, metacognitive awareness and strategy training begin to acquire new dimensions of meaning. Technology lays open aspects of the writing process, offering unprecedented insight into creative text production as well. This paper attempts to explain how tracking software can influence writing instruction. It briefly examines the process and post-process approaches to assess their viability, explains the concept of tracking software, proposes methodology needed for the adoption of this technology, and then discusses the pedagogical implications of these issues.

Keywords

Year

Volume

1

Issue

2

Pages

209-225

Physical description

Dates

cover
2011-08

Contributors

author
  • University of Jorda, Aman, Jordan
  • Arab Open University (HQ), Kuwait

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

ISSN
2083-5205

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-46cc5b54-b921-456f-9800-104a010bf037
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