Published

The Implementation of Teacher Feedback to Improve Students Writing Skills in Junior High School

Authors

1

Siti Lina Nurlina

Institut prima Bangsa

Abstract

This study investigates the implementation of teacher feedback to improve junior high school students' writing skills, focusing on common writing errors and the effectiveness of different types of feedback. English is a significant challenge for many Indonesian students, especially in grammar and syntax. Research using the Taxonomy of Surface Strategies (Dulay, Burt, & Krashen, 1982), established four main types of writing errors: omission, addition, misformation, and misordering. The study further examined teacher feedback by using Hattie and Timperley's (2007) model, which divides feedback into task, process, self-regulatory, and personal types. Data were collected through classroom observations, interviews, and analysis of students' written documents. The main results of the study show that omission errors are the most common among students, followed by addition errors, information errors, and sequencing errors. Feedback from teachers, especially those focusing on task type and process, proved to be very effective in helping students correct errors and improve their writing skills. The study also found that feedback that encourages students' self-regulation can improve their ability to self-correct errors, while personalized feedback helps increase students' motivation. The implications of this study suggest that comprehensive feedback strategies, which include error correction as well as writing process support, are essential to be implemented in English language learning in junior high schools in Indonesia, in order to sustainably improve students' writing skills.

Publication Info

Volume / Issue
Vol. 1, No. 1
Year
2025
Pages
34-44
Submitted
08 June 2025
Published
01 March 2025

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Publication History

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Published

01 Mar 2025

Submitted

08 Jun 2025

Accepted

09 Jun 2025

Sent to Production

09 Jun 2025