Thesis Chapter II



CHAPTER II
REVIEW OF LITERATURE

A.      Theoretical Framework
  In conducting a research, theories are needed to explain some related concepts or terms apply in the research concern. Some concepts and terms are used in this study and they are needed to be theoretically explained to avoid misunderstanding. The terms which are used, have to be clarified in order to have the same perspective of implementation in the field. The theoretical explanation and elaboration on the concepts and terms used will be presented in the followings.

1.         Students’ Achievement
       The word ‘achievement’ derives from a verb ‘achieve’ which means: (1) gain or reach something by effort, (2) get something done. (Oxford Pocket Learners’ Dictionary, 2008:95). Hornby (2000:11) defines “achievement” as (1) a thing that somebody has done successfully, especially using his own effort and skill (2) the act or process of achieveing something. Therefore, students’ achievement is a thing done successfully by students with their efforts and skills.
       Bloom (1956) identified three domains of educational activities, that are cognitive, affective and psychomotor. The cognitive domain involves knowledge and the development of intellectual skills. This includes the recall or recognition of specific facts, procedural patterns, and concepts that serve in
 the development of intellectual abilities and skills. The affective domain includes the manner in which we deal with things emotionally, such as feelings, values, appreciation, enthusiasms, motivations, and attitudes. Psychomotor is the skill to do something, ready to do it based on physic and emotion, self-control and become a habit. Achievement covers cognitive, affective, and psychomotorist. (http://www.nwlink.com)
       Writing as one of the four language skills taught in school also holds the important role in learning English in which students are supposed to be able to write a text and achieve good mark on it. Student achievement is viewed as examining in terms of whether they mastered or attained course learning objectives. Teacher gets the achievement of the students based on cognition, affection and psychomotor. In this study, writing concerns with the affective aspect. The achievement on writing is based on the affective skill of the students, using their responds to create or write something decent.

2.         Writing
  The terms of writing have several meanings. Many experts have proposed the definition and explanation of writing. Widdowson (1978:62) states that writing is the act of making up correct sentences and transmiting them through the visual medium as mark on papaer. It is also a product of a person’s search for meaning.
Hyland (2002:1) states that writing has been a central topic in applied linguistics. It is central to our personal experience and social identities, and we are often evaluated by our control of it. Brown (2001) in  http://en.wikipedia.org describes that writing is a process of putting ideas down on a paper to transform thoughts into words, to sharpen main ideas, and to give them structures and coherent organization. So, writing is a process of transforming ideas or thoughts which is contextually acceptable.
Writing is one of important skills to be learnt in the language classroom for the academic and occupational purposes. The students need to be able to write effectively to complete their assignments or exams that require them to write short answers or longer essays as a way of assessing what they have learnt. These activities should be preceded, accompanied and follow by the action of writing. Since writing represents a mean to learn and reinforce skills, students must know and realize that the ability to write is crucial in their process of language learning, and that they will be more effective writers once. They comprehend that writing is a process, and as a process it has stages that can be identified and elements that can be learned. Thus, the instructor’s role is to provide the learners with techniques, materials, activities, and tasks necessary to understand those stages of the writing process and opportunities to engage actively in this process.
a.         Writing Process
   According to Harmer (2004:4), there are four elements in writing process, they are:
1)             Planning
It is the first step in writing in which the writers plan what they are going to write. In this process, the writer have to think about three main issues, they are purpose, audience, and content structure. In the first place the writers have to consider the purpose of their writing since this will influence the type of text they wish to produce, the language they will use, and the information they choose to include. Secondly, the audience the writer are writing for, since this will not only influence the shape of the writing (how it is laid out, how the paragraphs are structured, etc), but also the choice of language whether it is formal or informal language. Thirdly, content structure of the piece, that is how best sequence the facts, ideas, or arguments which the writers decided to include.
2)             Drafting
It is the way of the writer puts down his or her ideas into words. Drafting is often done on the assumption that a text will be amended later. As the writing process proceeds into editing, a number of drafts may be produced on the way to the final version.
3)             Editing (Reflecting and Revising)
It involves correcting the mistakes in the writting. Reflecting and revising are often helped by other readers (editors) who comment and make suggestion. It will help the author to make appropriate revisions.
4)             Final version
In this final process, the writers have edited their draft, making the changes they consider to be necessary, they produce their final version. This may look considerably different from the original plan and the first draft, because things have been changed in the editing process. The final version is ready to send the written text to its intended reader.

b.             Types of Writing
Brown (2004:220) explains types of writing. There are four categories of written performance that capture the range of written production are typically identified as follows.
1)             Imitative
 Imitative means to produce written language, the learner must attain skills in the fundamental basic tasks of writing letters, words, punctuation, and very brief sentences. It is a level at which learners are trying to master the mechanics of writing. At this stage, form is the primary if not exclusive focus, while context and meaning are secondary concern.
2)             Intensive
Beyond the fundamentals of imitative writing are skills in producing appropriate vocabulary within a context, collocations, idioms and correct grammatical features up to the length of a sentence. Meaning and context are some of importance in determining correctness and appropriateness, but most assessment tasks are more concerned with a focus on form.

3)             Responsive
Here, assessment tasks require learners to perform at a limited discourse level, connecting sentences into a paragraph and creating a logically connected sequence of two or three paragraphs. Form focused attention is mostly at the discourse level with a strong emphasis on context and meaning.
4)             Extensive
      It implies successful management of all the process and strategies of writing for all purposes. Writers focus on achieving a purpose, organizing and developing ideas logically, engaging in the process of multiple drafts to achieve a final product.
Since writing is a process of transferring ideas or thoughts which are transformed into written form which is contextually acceptable, difficulties are often faced by students. Teacher’s roles both to develop their own ideas and to facilitate them in conducting the steps of writing process are intended to ease students act in writing some writing performance such the types of writing explained above. Because the sample is senior high school students so it is hoped that they can write a text in the extensive category.








3.        Genres of Writing
The word genre comes from the French (and originally Latin) word for 'kind' or 'class'. The term is widely used in rhetoric, literary theory, media theory, and more recently linguistics, to refer to a distinctive type of text. (http://en.wikipedia.org)
Hyland (2002:17) states genres thus provide us with resources for getting things done in all areas of life. Teaching genres involves increasing learners’ awareness of the conventions of writing help them produce texts that seem well-formed and appropriate to readers. Texts are similar or different because of the sociocultural purposes they are intended to serve and the ways they are structured to achieve these. Genre theories assume that the organization of a text can be described in relation to others, and to the choices and constraints acting on the writer in a particular social context.
As students prepare to write, they need to think about the purpose of their writing. Setting the purpose for writing is important because purpose influences students’ decision to make about form. According to Educational Unit-Oriented Curriculum English Subject syllabus of senior high school, it is stated some genres of writing to be mastered by students, they are descriptive, narrative, recount, procedure, report, news item, exposition, spoof, explanation, discussion and review. According to Gerot and Wignel (1994:192), the use of the genres are:
a.         Spoof is to retell an event with humorous twist
b.        Recount is to retell events for the purpose of informing and entertaining
c.         Report is to describe the way things are, with reference to a range of natural, man- made, and social phenomenon in our environment.
d.        Analytical exposition is to persuade the reader or listener that something is the case.
e.         News item is to inform readers, listener or viewers about events of the day which are considered newsworthy or important.
f.         Anecdote is to share with others an account for unusual or amusing  incident.
g.        Narrative is to amuse, entertain and to deal with actual or vicarious experience in different ways, it deals with problematic events which lead to a crisis of turning points of some kinds, which in turn find a resolution.
h.        Procedure is to describe how something is accomplished through a sequence of action steps.
i.          Description is to describe a particular person, place or things.
j.          Hortatory exposition is to persuade the reader or listener that something should or should not be the case.
k.        Explanation is to explain the process involved in the formation or working of natural or socio cultural phenomena
l.          Discussion is to present two points of view about issue.
m.      Review is to critique an art of work or event for public audience.
Every genre has a number of characteristics and it has the specific purpose which makes it different from other genres. In this study, it is only focused on recount text.
4.        Recount Text
       Hyland (2002:99) states that Recounts ‘tell what happened’. The purpose of a recount text is to document a series of events and evaluate their significance in some way and to tell a sequence of events so that it entertains. So, recount text is a text that retells past events, usually in the order in which they happened. The function of a recount text is to inform or entertain the listeners or readers.
a.             Generic Structure of Recount Text
A recount text  has a generic structure, having three components (Gerot and Wignell, 1944:194):
1)    Orientation
     Orientation provides the setting and introduces participants.
2)    Events
     Events tell what happened, in what sequence.
3)    Re-orientation
     Re-orientation is the closure of events. It is optional.
b.             Language Features of Recount Text
1)    Focusing on specific participants
2)    Using action verb
3)    Circumstances of time and places
4)    Using past tense
5)    Focusing on temporal sequence
6)    Using adjectives
An example of a recount text is presented below:
Title
Trip to Yogyakarta
Orientation
The best trip that I’ve ever taken was when I was at second grade in Senior High School. I went to Yogyakarta with all my school friends. My school held the trip. We went there by tourism bus. We spent three days there and went to tourism objects around Yogyakarta.
Events
First, we went to a tourism village, a small village near Yogyakarta; where we were divided into small groups consist of two to four persons to stay in the villagers’ home. We learnt many traditional art and culture such as how to make batik, how to play gamelan (karawatin), and how to cook traditional food. The next day, we went uptown and check-in in a hotel that had reserved before. In the hotel, five to six persons occupied a room. My best friends and I were in the same room and at night, we spent it by talking and sharing about anything. In Yogyakarta we went to many places. We went to Borobudur, shop in Malioboro, see the sunset from the rubble of an old temple that placed on the top of a hill (I forget the name of the temple), watch the Rama Sinta play in Prambanan (which is really a fascinating performance and play) and the most favorite part was that we got to eat at seafood restaurant that located above the pond where we could eat a big delicious fresh lobster.
Re-orientation
I have to say it was a great holiday. So many great new experiences I got, and it enables me to know one of many Indonesian tribe cultures better. And also makes me get closer to my friends and know them better.
Language Features:
a)         Focusing on specific participants (in bold)
b)        Using action verbs (in italics)
c)         Circumstances of time and place (underlined)
d)        Using past tense (in bold and italics)
e)         Focusing on temporal sequence (in italics and underlined)
f)         Using adjective (in bold, italics and underlined)

5.         Peer Review Technique
Brown (2001:14) states that technique is a variety of exercises, activities or devices used in language classroom for realizing lesson objective. There are many techniques that can be applied in teaching English writing, one of them is Peer Review technique. Peer review technique refers to the many ways in which students can share their creative work with peers for constructive feedback and then use this feedback to revise and improve their work. Peer review, in the academic sense, refers to the process of having classmates read each other's works to make edits and suggestions with the helps from a teacher. (http://www.ehow.com). In this case, teacher encourages students to give comments or suggestions and corrections to their friend’s work.
Chiu et al (2007) in their journal state in the process of reviewing and rewriting composition drafts, feedback is an essential element of process-oriented writing instruction. By means of the feedback teachers or peers provide, revision is facilitated, leading to the evolution of new ideas, the clarification of meanings and the enhancement of proficient writing. Students can learn how to improve drafts appropriately and enhance the overall quality of their writing. Feedback given by fellow student readers is called peer review. In peer review, students generate productive feedback to help each other revise their writing. Furthermore, peer review facilitates the writing process by assisting students to identify the strengths and weaknesses of their writing, to monitor the writing process and to develop reader awareness. Some students may also be able to learn to evaluate writing critically. In addition, it helps the writers to reshape and develop their ideas from alternative viewpoints presented through discussion with peers, a social behaviour of interaction and negotiation which may serve to scaffold cognitive construction.
(http://independentlearning.org).
According to Hyland (2002:135), peer conferencing can benefit both writers and readers by expanding students’ sense of audience for their papers beyond the teacher, developing a greater concern for appropriate genre conventions and reader expectations. In this class, reviews are conducted using the respond. Respond is a revision which allows students to read peer drafts and then steers them through an evaluative process.
Reid (1993:156) states that writing is usually easier, better, and more successful when talking, revising, and editing together in the groups that are part of the writing process. In this study, revising and editing done in pairs.
a.             The procedure of Peer review Technique
There are 5 steps in applying peer review technique in classroom, as follows:
1)        Students are assigned a writing task to be reviewed for next meeting
2)        Students are divided in pairs
3)        Students exchange their paper with pair and read it silently
4)        Responding the paper in writing by giving comments and revision on pair’s writing by filling up peer review feedback sheet during peer review session
5)        Delving further by asking questions of their pair reviewer
6)        Re-writing the final draft based on the revisions and comments given by pair as needed.
b.             The Advantages of Peer Review Technique
The advantages of peer review technique are:
1)      Students have opportunities to share their opinions and reflect their thoughts on their friend’s work
2)      Students may be motivated to write more carefully and clearly when they know their work is going to be read and evaluated by their friend
3)      Having students peer review each other’s work and then make corrections based on valuable inputs benefits the writer as well as the reviewer. This can help to greatly strengthen their writing and encourage students to think critically.
By using peer review technique, students’ curiosity for searching solutions to the problem will be sparked, engaging the students in active learning that will help develop their understanding and appreciation of diverse point of views. It also requires students to use complex reasoning and critical thinking skills. It creats more active and meaningful teaching learning process.

B.       Conceptual Framework
Writing is a process of transferring thoughts or ideas into words for a purpose. As one of language skills that students are intended to master, it was found that writing is difficult. It is because the students  have to organize their thoughts or ideas and then write them in appropriate ways to produce qualified writing. Moreover, writing is also influenced by some elements such as vocabulary, grammar, organization, punctuation, and spelling. In teaching English, there are some genres in writing. One of them is recount text. Recount text is a kind of text that retells some events in the past for certain purposes; to inform or to entertain the listeners or readers.
For the writing process, revision is as important as drafting. Peer review technique is an essential part of the writing process. It is utilized between the drafting and revision stages, considering the process of writing involves four elements: planning, drafting, editing, and final version.  By peer review technique, students work in pairs to give comment or suggestion, revisions and discuss the feedback given by peer before the writing (final draft) handed in to the teacher. The peer review feedback sheet is also given to the students to make them easily give comments, suggestion and revisions to their pair’s work.
Peer Review technique is a technique that also makes teaching learning process become active. Therefore, this technique is regarded as an appropriate way to improve the students’ achievement in writing recount texts. By working in pairs, the students will be motivated to learn by themselves, share their idea, and practice their critical thinkings.
By applying peer review technique, the students will much more attention to correct errors for their own writing that can improve the quality of their writing. Therefore, it is needed to apply peer review technique to improve the students’ achievement in writing recount text.

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