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Supporting Writing Development

Working with multilingual students often includes helping them develop as academic writers in the university setting. To get a clearer sense of the distinct nature of multilingual writers and the texts they compose, check out George Mason University’s Valuing Written Accents. Additionally, it may be helpful to review our page on linguistic flexibility, as the concepts here are helpful for encouraging multilingual students’ development as writers.

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Scroll farther down. We’ve collected a few strategies for enhancing your writing instruction, regardless of your discipline.

Tips for Effective Writing Assignments and Assessment

There are many ways to alter the types of writing assignments we provide students in order to help them produce the type of texts we want them to compose. Here are a few suggestions to consider when crafting or revising your writing assignments:

  • Break assignments into more manageable chunks. Create checklists that students can follow. Build in checkpoints for assignments (by X date, have ______) to ensure students are working on their writing over time.
  • Simplify. Try simplifying and streamlining your writing assignment sheet. This often helps students process what their focus should be and helps them engage with a challenging project earlier in the process.
  • Provide structures, patterns, and templates. Dedicate some time in class to going over these examples. Instead of lecturing, allow students to analyze these examples in small groups. Oftentimes, students will retain an understanding of expectations if they’ve deduced them themselves collaboratively.
  • Give options within an assignment. Allow students to select the prompt or focus of their writing within parameters that you set.
  • Allow for asynchronous responses. Giving students additional time to complete their work often helps them produce better writing in a less stressful context. Canvas or Google Docs/Drive can be helpful for this.
  • Scaffold writing assignments. Learn more about scaffolding in this Inside Higher Ed article “Make a Better Writing Assignment by Design.”
  • Explain how the writing assignment will serve to evaluate their learning. Connect the assignment with specific learning goals in the syllabus to help students understand the knowledge or thinking that needs to be demonstrated. This may help to increase intrinsic motivation by helping students to determine the worth of the work they are doing in the course.

Creating Rubrics that Prioritize Student Learning

Rubrics are an indispensable tool when it comes to evaluating student writing. They make the grading process more productive and consistent. Additionally, rubrics can help students to understand both what their strengths are and what they need to work on. This invaluable tool allows students to keep track of your expectations as they write through the semester.

Want to learn more about rubrics? Listen to this podcast, Still Not Sold on Rubrics?, by Teaching in Higher Ed. Consider these tips to create multilingual-friendly rubrics that support student learning:

  • Prioritize the learning outcomes. In a rubric, the overall learning goals for the course and assignment should be top priority. Structure, mechanics, and grammar, while important, are often not the top learning outcome of a given course. This should be reflected in the rubric.
  • Review a sample rubric. Read through a few rubrics by composition faculty that are multilingual student friendly.
  • Consider evaluating grammar based on how effectively meaning is conveyed. It is possible to phrase the grammar portion of a rubric in a way that accounts for linguistic variation. For example, a proficient category that describes grammar as the following: “There are occasional errors, but they do not impede the meaning of the writing. The sentences are well-phrased and offer some variety.” This is more multilingual-friendly than a category that establishes completely error-free writing as the benchmark for proficiency. Learn more about why this is important on our page about the value of linguistic diversity.
  • Go over the rubric in class well before they have begun to write. Ask students to analyze the rubric for learning outcomes and goals. Additionally, ask students if the language is confusing to them. Since the rubric is primarily a tool used to help their learning process, it’s important that the phrasing and terminology are clear to students. Use this as an opportunity to demonstrate thoughtful revision by making some of the suggested clarifications.
  • Have students rank previous student texts. A class discussion helps students collectively understand and internalize criteria for evaluation.
  • Use Canvas to simplify building your rubric. Make rubrics viewable to students before and during their writing process to consult.
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