To determine whether formative writing assessments that are directly tied to everyday classroom teaching and learning enhance students’ writing performance, we conducted a meta-analysis of true and quasi-experiments conducted with students in grades 1 to 8. We found that feedback to students about writing from adults, peers, self, and computers statistically enhanced writing quality, yielding average weighted effect sizes of 0.87, 0.58, 0.62, and 0.38, respectively. We did not find, however, that teachers’ monitoring of students’ writing progress or implementation of the 6 + 1 Trait Writing model meaningfully enhanced students’ writing. The findings from this meta-analysis provide support for the use of formative writing assessments that provide feedback directly to students as part of everyday teaching and learning. We argue that such assessments should be used more frequently by teachers, and that they should play a stronger role in the Next-Generation Assessment Systems being developed by Smarter Balanced and PARCC.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Formative Assessment and Writing
A Meta-Analysis
Steve Graham,
Arizona State University
Michael Hebert, and
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Karen R. Harris
Arizona State University
ARTICLE CITATION
Steve Graham, Michael Hebert, and Karen R. Harris, "Formative Assessment and Writing: A Meta-Analysis," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 4 (June 2015): 523-547.
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