2021
DOI: 10.1007/s11145-021-10221-x
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Source inclusion in synthesis writing: an NLP approach to understanding argumentation, sourcing, and essay quality

Abstract: Synthesis writing is widely taught across domains and serves as an important means of assessing writing ability, text comprehension, and content learning. Synthesis writing differs from other types of writing in terms of both cognitive and task demands because it requires writers to integrate information across source materials. However, little is known about how integration of source material may influence overall writing quality for synthesis tasks. This study examined approximately 900 source-based essays w… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Over the last decades, technological developments have led to a fast increase in tools that aim to help writers to develop their writing process and to produce better texts (Limpo et al, 2020). As mentioned before, the study by Crossley et al (2021) of this special issue opens up possibilities for providing students with automatic feedback on their source integration based on NLP-features.…”
Section: Toolsmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Over the last decades, technological developments have led to a fast increase in tools that aim to help writers to develop their writing process and to produce better texts (Limpo et al, 2020). As mentioned before, the study by Crossley et al (2021) of this special issue opens up possibilities for providing students with automatic feedback on their source integration based on NLP-features.…”
Section: Toolsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The issue closes with a study on the automatic assessment of synthesis texts. Crossley et al (2021) introduce the use of natural language processing techniques to assess source integration in synthesis writing. If automatic text scoring via NLP predicts human assessments of these texts, new venues for research are open.…”
Section: Automatic Assessment With Nlpmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Though generally considered a desirable rhetorical move (Deane et al, 2013), inappropriate and excessive textual borrowing does not necessarily reflect students' actual language skills, making assessment work with source-based writing more difficult (Weigle & Parker, 2012). The writing rubric we used did not address excessive source borrowing or uncited textual content (see limitations below), but this weakness is not uncommon in writing rubrics for late elementary-aged students (see S. Crossley et al, 2021).…”
Section: Linguistic and Textual Predictorsmentioning
confidence: 99%