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Quick and Effective Writing Feedback in the Language Classroom

You spend time giving detailed feedback on student writing… correcting errors, adding comments, marking everything you can. But when the next assignment comes in, the same issues are still there.

The problem? Too much feedback can overwhelm students… and teachers. When everything is corrected, nothing stands out. Students don’t know what to focus on, and the feedback doesn’t lead to meaningful improvement.


Do you Correct Everything?

Most of us were trained to give comprehensive feedback. So we:

And what happens?

Students:

I have handed back a writing assignment completely covered in red ink and a student looked at it and said:

“Can you just tell me what I actually need to fix?”

That moment stuck with me because they weren’t being lazy they were being honest.


Focused Error Correction  & FOcused Correction Areas

These two  effective approaches will completely change how you provide feedback on writing:

Both are built on a similar idea:

Students’ writing improves when we focus on a few key areas instead of everything at once.


Focused Error Correction – Conti

The idea behind Focused Error Correction is simple and effective:

Don’t correct everything. Correct only a small number of targeted error types.

Typically:

Why This Works

When students focus on fewer things:

Instead of scattered feedback, they get intentional practice.

What This Looks Like in Practice

Let’s say your current unit focuses on adjective agreement and articles. You decide that these are the only elements you’re focusing on this week.

So when you grade:

Now your feedback is clear, consistent and actionable.

Classroom Tip: Build an Editing Routine

Before students submit writing, give them a simple checklist:

Now they’re doing part of the correction work themselves.


Focus Correction Areas (FCA’s) – Collins

The Collins Writing approach takes this one step further. You define 2–3 specific criteria for each writing assignment and only those are graded. These are your FCAs.

Example FCA’s for a Spanish Writing Task

Students write about their weekend.

Your FCAs might be:

  1. Use of past tense verbs
  2. Agreement between nouns and adjectives
  3. Use of transition words (y, pero, después)

That’s it.

Why FCA’s Are So Effective

Students know:

And teachers grade faster, give clearer feedback and avoid burnout

Classroom Tip: Make FCA’s Visible

Have students:

Now revision becomes intentional, not guesswork.


What You’ll Notice

When you shift to this approach:

✔ Students actually use your feedback
✔ Writing improves in targeted areas
✔ You spend less time grading
✔ Students feel more successful

And maybe most importantly…you won’t feel like you’re doing all the work.


Try This This Week

If you want to start small, here’s a simple plan:

Step 1: Pick ONE focus area (yes—just one)

Step 2: Tell students: “This is what I’m looking for in your writing.”

Step 3: Only correct that one thing

Step 4: Have students revise just that area

That’s it.


Go Further

If you want a practical, repeatable way to make participation work for all students, my Quick Win PD Course: Quick and Effective Writing Feedback walks you through exactly how to do it.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

You’ll also get:

This is part of the Quick Win PD Series, designed to give you strategies you can use immediately—without adding to your workload.

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

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