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Effects of Learners’ Proficiency Pairing on Task Engagement and Text Quality in L2 Digital Collaborative Writing

  • Zhejiang University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This experimental study investigates how pairing learners by English proficiency shapes task engagement and text quality in L2 digital collaborative writing (CW). We captured both self-perceived and observed task engagement in a digital CW task through multiple data sources: a self-report questionnaire, multimodal interaction logs, and collaborative artifacts. A cohort of thirty-six undergraduates from a top-tier Chinese university was grouped into high-, low-, and mixed-proficiency dyads. Using a synchronous writing tool with video conferencing, we collected multimodal interaction logs and artifacts, alongside a post-task questionnaire on cognitive, social, and emotional engagement. Meanwhile, observed task engagement was measured through multimodal interaction data focusing on language-related episodes (LREs), idea units, instances of responsiveness, and expressions of enjoyment. Findings revealed discrepancies between self-perceived and observed task engagement, especially in cognitive and social dimensions. High-proficiency dyads reported lower cognitive engagement yet produced more LREs than low- and mixed-proficiency dyads. Mixed-proficiency dyads reported higher social engagement but showed fewer instances of responsiveness than low-proficiency dyads. Text complexity was significantly lower for mixed-proficiency dyads than for both high- and low-proficiency dyads.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Applied Linguistics
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2026

Keywords

  • digital collaborative writing
  • language-related episodes
  • proficiency pairing
  • task engagement
  • text quality

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