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<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0123-4641</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Colombian Applied Linguistics Journal]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Colomb. Appl. Linguist. J.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0123-4641</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Facultad de Ciencias y Educación de la Universidad Distrital, Bogotá Colombia]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0123-46412015000100007</article-id>
<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.14483/udistrital.jour.calj.2015.1.a07</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Application of the PEE Model to essay composition in an IELTS preparation class]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[Aplicación del Modelo PEE a la composición de ensayos en una clase de preparación para el Examen IELTS]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Velasco Tovar]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Ender Orlando]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidad de La Sabana  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Bogotá ]]></addr-line>
<country>Colombia</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>06</month>
<year>2015</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>06</month>
<year>2015</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>17</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<fpage>98</fpage>
<lpage>113</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0123-46412015000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0123-46412015000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0123-46412015000100007&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[Based on two case studies, this study investigates the application of the Point, Explanation, Example (PEE) model to essay composition in a multi-lingual IELTS preparation class. This model was incorporated into an eight-week programme of instruction to ESL adults in London, England. Students preparing for the IELTS exam were asked to write pre- and post-instruction essays on a given topic within 40 minutes. Employing the IELTS band descriptors (IELTS, 2013) and analyses of coherence and cohesion in line with Systemic Functional Linguistic concepts (Halliday & Matthiessen, 2004; McCarthy, 1991), samples of students' writing were analysed. Data from students' pre- and post-instruction interviews was also gathered and analysed. The findings of this study suggest that the PEE model is to some extent effective in improving the essay composition performance of IELTS students, in particular in the area of cohesion and coherence. Students find the PEE model useful in regard to the clarity and structure that the model seems to add to their essays.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[Basándose en dos casos, este estudio investiga la aplicación del modelo Point, Explanation, Example (PEE) a la composición de ensayos en una clase de preparación para el examen IELTS. Este modelo fue incorporado a un programa de ocho semanas de instrucción de ESL para adultos en Londres, Inglaterra. Estudiantes que se estaban preparando para el examen IELTS escribieron ensayos antes y después de la intervención pedagógica en un tiempo límite de 40 minutos. Basado en los estándares descriptores de bandas IELTS (IELTS, 2013) y análisis de coherencia y cohesión en línea con conceptos de Systemic Functional Linguistic (Halliday & Matthiessen, 2004; McCarthy, 1991), muestras de los escritos fueron analizadas. Datos de entrevistas realizadas antes y después de la intervención pedagógica también fueron recolectados y analizados. Los resultados de este estudio indican que el modelo PEE es de cierta forma eficaz en el mejoramiento de la capacidad de composición de ensayos de los estudiantes IELTS, en particular en el área de coherencia y cohesión. Los estudiantes parecen encontrar el modelo útil con relación a la claridad y estructura que el modelo aparenta dar a sus ensayos.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[cohesion and coherence]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[essay writing]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[IELTS]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[PEE model]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[coherencia y cohesión]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[escritura de ensayos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[IELTS]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[modelo PEE]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font size="2" face="Verdana">       <p>DOI: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.14483/udistrital.jour.calj.2015.1.a07" target="_blank">http://dx.doi.org/10.14483/udistrital.jour.calj.2015.1.a07</a> </p>      <p align="right"><b>RESEARCH ARTICLE </b> </p>       <p align="center"><font size="4" face="Verdana"><b>Application of the PEE Model to essay composition in an IELTS  preparation class </b></font></p>      <p align="center"><font size="4" face="Verdana"><b>Aplicaci&oacute;n del Modelo PEE a la composici&oacute;n de ensayos  en una clase de preparaci&oacute;n para el Examen IELTS</b></font></p>       <p><b>Ender Orlando Velasco Tovar</b><b><sup>1 </sup></b>     <br> <sup>1</sup> Universidad de La Sabana, Bogot&aacute;, Colombia. <a href="mailto:velasco_ender@yahoo.co.uk">velasco_ender@yahoo.co.uk</a> </p>     <p><b>Citation / Para citar este art&iacute;culo: </b>Velasco, E. O. (2015). Application of the PEE Model  to essay composition in an IELTS preparation class. <i>Colomb. Appl. Linguist.  J.</i>, 17(1), pp. </p> <hr>     <p><b>Received: </b>22-Aug-2014 / Accepted:  25-Nov-2014 </p>      <p><b>Abstract </b> </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Based on  two case studies, this study investigates the application of the Point,  Explanation, Example (PEE) model to essay composition in a multi-lingual IELTS  preparation class. This model was incorporated into an eight-week programme of  instruction to ESL adults in London, England. Students preparing for the IELTS  exam were asked to write pre- and post-instruction essays on a given topic  within 40 minutes. Employing the IELTS band descriptors (IELTS,  2013) and  analyses of coherence and cohesion in line with Systemic Functional Linguistic  concepts (Halliday  &amp; Matthiessen, 2004; McCarthy, 1991), samples of students&#39; writing  were analysed. Data from students&#39; pre- and post-instruction interviews was  also gathered and analysed. The findings of this study suggest that the PEE  model is to some extent effective in improving the essay composition  performance of IELTS students, in particular in the area of cohesion and  coherence. Students find the PEE model useful in regard to the clarity and  structure that the model seems to add to their essays. </p>     <p><i><b>Keywords</b></i>: cohesion  and coherence, essay writing, IELTS, PEE model </p> <hr>     <p><b>Resumen </b> </p>     <p>Bas&aacute;ndose en dos casos, este estudio investiga la  aplicaci&oacute;n del modelo Point, Explanation, Example (PEE) a la composici&oacute;n de  ensayos en una clase de preparaci&oacute;n para el examen IELTS. Este modelo fue  incorporado a un programa de ocho semanas de instrucci&oacute;n de ESL para adultos en  Londres, Inglaterra. Estudiantes que se estaban preparando para el examen IELTS  escribieron ensayos antes y despu&eacute;s de la intervenci&oacute;n pedag&oacute;gica en un tiempo  l&iacute;mite de 40 minutos. Basado en los est&aacute;ndares descriptores de bandas IELTS (IELTS, 2013)  y an&aacute;lisis de coherencia y cohesi&oacute;n en l&iacute;nea con conceptos de Systemic  Functional Linguistic (Halliday &amp; Matthiessen, 2004; McCarthy, 1991), muestras de los escritos fueron analizadas. Datos de  entrevistas realizadas antes y despu&eacute;s de la intervenci&oacute;n pedag&oacute;gica tambi&eacute;n  fueron recolectados y analizados. Los resultados de este estudio indican que el  modelo PEE es de cierta forma eficaz en el mejoramiento de la capacidad de  composici&oacute;n de ensayos de los estudiantes IELTS, en particular en el &aacute;rea de  coherencia y cohesi&oacute;n. Los estudiantes parecen encontrar el modelo &uacute;til con  relaci&oacute;n a la claridad y estructura que el modelo aparenta dar a sus ensayos. </p>     <p><i><b>Palabras clave</b></i>:  coherencia y cohesi&oacute;n, escritura de ensayos, IELTS, modelo PEE </p> <hr> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><b>Introduction </b> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana"> <ol>&#91;M&#93;y overall assessment  of the academic standard of &#91;this&#93; essay is &#39;weak&#39;, meriting a score in the low  40&#39;s on our marking scale. My reason for this is essentially because of the  disorganized manner of presentation of the content. The information is  presented in a &#39;jumbled-up&#39; fashion. I felt a need to do a scissors-and-paste  job on the essay, re-ordering its content so as to introduce a logical flow to  the argument, something which is sorely lacking in its present form. (Wall,  Nickson, Jordan, Allwright &amp; Houghton, 1988, p.119)     </ol>     <p>The above quote is a subject  tutor&#39;s reaction when asked to comment on an essay produced by an ESL student  enrolled in a course at a UK university. Hence, being able to write academic  essays that meet certain standards is undoubtedly of significant importance for  ESL students who are hoping to undertake higher education (HE) studies in  English-speaking countries. </p>     <p>In order to be accepted into  HE programmes, ESL students usually have to demonstrate their English  proficiency through examinations such as the IELTS or TOEFL. The focus of this  study will be on the essay part of the task 2 of the Academic IELTS exam. </p>     <p>Issues regarding ESL  students&#39; writing abilities are widely known. It is sometimes assumed that by  having met the language requirement for an HE course through IELTS or other  means, ESL students may be equipped with the necessary study skills and writing  proficiency required to undertake academic programmes. Unfortunately, this does  not seem to be the case, and harsh critiques have been made regarding ESL  students&#39; inability to write at the tertiary level (Horner &amp; Min-Zhan, 1999; Keck, 2006; Olivas &amp; Li, 2006; Woodrow, 2006; Yu, 2009). </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>In an attempt to alleviate  some of the essay-writing issues ESL students encounter even before entering  tertiary education, this study aimed to investigate the application of the  Point, Explanation, Example (PEE) model to essay composition in a multi-lingual  IELTS preparation class. This model was incorporated into an eight-week  programme of instruction to ESL adults in London, England. The data collection  instruments included analyses of students&#39; essays before and after the  instruction and pre/post instruction interviews. </p> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><b>Literature  review </b> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana">     <p>It has long been recognised  that ESL students struggle with essay writing in L2 for a few reasons: the  marked differences between the registers of written and spoken English (Biber, 1988); the high cultural,  linguistic and pragmatic demands essays pose on EFL students (Gleason, 1999; Golder &amp; Coirier, 1996); the language-specific tag  attached to argumentative writing (Neff-van &amp; Dafouz-Milne, 2008); and the negative washback  resulting from writing under exam conditions (Messick, 1996). It could then be assumed  that IELTS students are likely to be affected by similar issues when writing  essays as part of their exams. </p>     <p><i><b>Task 2 of the Academic IELTS Test </b></i> </p>     <p>A number of studies have  investigated the task 2 of the Academic IELTS writing module (Archibald, 2002; Brown, 1998; Coomber, 1998; Elder &amp; O&#39;Loughlin,  2003; Green &amp; Weir, 2002, 2003; Moore &amp; Morton, 1999). However, they have mainly  focused on approaches to preparation, impact of preparation programmes on  candidates&#39; performance, and score gains in relation to time spans, as opposed  to the type instruction imparted to the learners to facilitate the  teaching-learning of IELTS-related essay composition. This may suggest that  other types of studies, perhaps of a more qualitative nature, could provide  insights into how the process of essay writing can be facilitated to IELTS  students, particularly if students are expected to employ more complex  argumentation models at university e.g. Ramsay, Maier and Price&#39;s (2010)  Assertion, Evidence, Reasoning (AER) model. </p>     <p><i><b>Cohesion and coherence </b></i> </p>     <p>Halliday and Hasan (1976) have coined the term  &quot;texture&quot; (p.2) to define the properties of a text. These properties are in  turn defined by the concepts of cohesion and coherence. The former concept  entails how the components in a text are bound together to form a whole unit,  while the latter has to do with how a text is related to its  social and cultural context (Eggins, 2004). There are four types of cohesion&#150;  through references, lexis, conjunctions, and ellipsis (see Halliday &amp; Matthiessen,  2004, pp.  532-578 for a detailed explanation). Another element of cohesion is thematic  patterns (McCarthy,  1991), or  the way themes are organised in a text to orientate readers. </p>     <p>Cohesion and coherence are  used in IELTS as the criterion to determine whether or not information, ideas,  and language are properly linked and organised in the essay message, and  whether or not the message in an essay is clear and flows naturally (UCLES, 2007). </p>     <p><i><b>The PEE Model </b></i> </p>     <p>The PEE model is defined as  neither a theory nor an approach to writing essays, but instead as &quot;a model  guideline &#91;&hellip;&#93; of how to structure a paragraph with a topic sentence and to  develop that sentence through the appropriate use of explanations and examples&quot;  (Cole,  2013, para.  7). The figure below illustrates how this model may be applied. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><a name="(fig1)"></a><img src="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07fig1.jpg"></p>     <p>While the PEE model seems a  straight forward concept, there appear to be some discrepancies regarding its  definition. For example, while Cole (2013) refers to the first E in PEE as &quot;Example,&quot;  other authors refer to it as &quot;Evidence&quot; (BBC, 2013). Equally, while the former  author calls PEE a &quot;model,&quot; the latter calls it a &quot;technique,&quot; and others also  call it a &quot;chain&quot; (TES, 2008). </p>     <p>It appears as though  &#39;evidence&#39; (following BBC and TES&acute;s definition) is most commonly associated  with quotations to back up main ideas of literary essays carried out by English  native-speaker students at the Key Stage 3 level in the UK. This can be clearly  seen in simplistic explanations about the technique regularly found in material  used to prepare English native-speaker students for their English GCSE exams,  either as formal preparation (CGP, 2012, p.16), or as exam tips (BBC, 2013; TES, 2008). Yet, many IELTS course  books and preparation materials oft en seem to fail to provide the same kind of  simplistic explanations (e.g. Harrison &amp; Whitehead, 2006; Jakeman &amp; McDowell,  2004; May, 2004), although other resources  provide explanations regarding coherence in writing and ways of introducing  topics and main ideas, and ways to develop an argument (e.g. Black &amp; Capel, 2006; Jakeman &amp; McDowell,  1999). Thus,  it could be inferred that if English native-speaker students are trained from  an early age to use the PEE model as part of their essay-writing skills, IELTS  students should also receive the same kind of training, particularly if they  are expected to write essays at university in the future. </p>     <p><i><b>The PEE Model in ESL writing teaching theory </b></i> </p>     <p>The PEE model could be framed  within the &quot;Paragraph Pattern Approach&quot; (Raimes, cited in Matsuda &amp; Silva, 2010, p. 239), an approach more  concerned with organisation of writing above the sentence level and how topic  and secondary sentences are put together in order to form paragraphs and  ultimately whole texts. </p>     <p>The PEE model fits well  within the process approach to teaching ESL writing, as opposed to the model or  genre ones (see Bathia, 1993; Hyland, 2000, 2003, 2006; Sidaway, 2006; Swales, 1990, 2004 for work on genre). </p>     <p>While process writing is concerned with activities  such as drafting, editing, teacher&#39;s or peers&#39; feedback, encouragement of  expression of individuality, use of previous schemata, and writing fluency over  accuracy (Flower &amp; Hayes, 1977; Scrivener,  2011; Ur, 2012; White  &amp; Arndt, 1991), product writing is concerned with the  rhetoric, content, organisation and linguistic features of written texts in  order to replicate conventions and generate parallel texts (Steele,  1992; White, 1980).</p>     <p>There are contradictory views regarding which ESL writing teaching  approach works best. Some studies and accounts have found process writing  effective in improving students&#39; writing abilities (Bello,  1997; Jarvis,  2002), whereas other studies have found genre  writing more useful (Cheng, 2008; Dudley-Evans, 1994; Kongpetch, 2006). Other language professionals have found a combination of  approaches the better option (Davies, 1988; Gabrielatos, 2000a, 2000b, 2000c). </p>     <p>A question could be posed about the effectiveness of  the nature of knowledge acquired by students through these approaches when  writing under exam conditions. There could be issues with the practicalities of  re-drafting or using a model when sitting high-stakes proficiency tests. Thus,  it is here where the PEE model could potentially serve as a practical tool to  help IELTS students compose an essay that is cohesive and coherent in a  relatively constrained period of time. </p> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><b>Methodology </b> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana">     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i><b>Research design </b></i> </p>     <p>It is hypothesised that the  PEE model could benefit IELTS students&#39; overall essay-composition performance.  To test this hypothesis, teaching material based on the PEE model was designed  and delivered over a period of eight weeks to a group of adult multilingual ESL  students preparing for the IELTS exam in London, England. </p>     <p>The aim of this study was to  investigate the application of the PEE model to essay composition following a  case study approach (Denscombe, 2010; Freebody, 2006; Yin, 1994), with the view that this  choice would enable the teacher-researcher to &quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; carry out an investigation  where other &#91;strategies&#93; &#150; such as experiments &#150; &#91;were&#93; either not practicable  or not ethically justifiable &#91;&hellip;&#93;.&quot; (Bill, 2010, p. 11). That is, I felt that if  control and experimental groups had been used within the same population, it  would have been unprincipled from a teacher&#39;s point of view to deprive certain  students of instruction that could have potentially been beneficial for the  development of the participants&#39; essay writing skills. </p>     <p>The study addressed three  questions: Is the PEE model effective in improving students&#39; IELTS  essay-composition performance? If yes above, what area in particular does the  PEE model help students with? What are the IELTS students&#39; views on the  usefulness of the PEE model after the instruction? </p>     <p><i><b>Research population </b></i> </p>     <p>The IELTS preparation class  employed in this study was held in a language centre in London, England. It was  made up of twelve adult multilingual female ESL students between the ages of 21  and 32. All the students were first-time IELTS takers and the length and type  of ESL instruction received prior to joining the study varied greatly. The  sample for this study consisted of two adult females. The first student  (hereafter referred to as JR) was originally from Latvia. She spoke Russian and  Latvian as L1. The second student (hereafter referred to as AL) was originally  from Germany. She spoke German as L1 and Polish and Russian as L2. </p>     <p><i><b>Data collection instruments </b></i> </p>     <p>Essays and interviews were  employed to collect data. Handwritten essays from the sampled students were  collected at two stages&#151;before and after the instruction. Students were given  40 minutes to write their essays on both occasions. </p>     <p>Although there are mixed  views about using the same assessment instrument in a study before and after  the instruction (Kozloff, 2014; Yuan-Shan &amp; Shao-Wen,  2011),  employing the same instrument was deemed appropriate because this would be an  effective way of exploring potential changes e.g. lexical relations. </p>     <p>Semi-structured interviews  were also implemented before and after the instruction. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i><b>Data analysis and interpretation </b></i> </p>     <p>The framework for analysing  the essays was based on the IELTS band descriptors for coherence and cohesion  and task response (IELTS, 2013). Comments on essays were also supported  by analyses of coherence and cohesion in line with Halliday and Matthiessen  (2004) and McCarthy&#39;s (1991) concepts to pinpoint specific  examples of progression or regression regarding references, conjunctive  relations, lexical chains, and thematic patterns. </p>     <p>Interviews were implemented  and recorded. Students&#39; interviews were then transcribed and analysed employing  a relational analysis of proximity of concepts (Wilkinson &amp; Birmingham,  2003, pp. 76-87).  The proximity of relationships between concepts was based on matters such as  strength (i.e. weak or strong relationship) and connotation (i.e. positive or  negative association). </p>     <p><i><b>Data collection stages </b></i> </p>     <p>In week one, the  pre-instruction IELTS-related essay was implemented. Students wrote an essay on  the topic of &#39;views on engaging children in paid work,&#39; with a minimum of 250  words, in 40 minutes, without any aids. The pre-instruction interviews were  also planned and implemented. </p>     <p>In week two, initial essays  were prepared and analysed for cohesion and coherence to assess students&#39;  composition skills before the instruction. The initial interviews were  transcribed verbatim, coded, and analysed. The analysis of data was the basis  to inform the content included in the subsequent instruction. A crucial aspect  here was to carry out the interviews after the students had written their  initial essays, to avoid giving them clues as to what a well-written essay  should entail. </p>     <p>In weeks three through seven,  three workshops incorporating the PEE model were designed and implemented.  These workshops were mainly based on the PEE model, but also included elements  of thematic patterns, how to introduce ideas in essays (Jakeman &amp; McDowell,  1999), essay  question types in IELTS, and general essay planning strategies. These workshops  were incorporated into the IELTS preparation course and were not delivered as  separate sessions. </p>     <p>In week eight, students  rewrote the pre-instruction essay under the same conditions as in week one,  without looking at the original piece of writing. Essays from the two case  studies were prepared and analysed. In the same week, the post-instruction  interviews were planned and implemented. These were also transcribed, coded,  and analysed. </p>     <p><b>Findings </b> </p>     <p><i><b>Case study 1 </b></i> </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><font size="2" face="Verdana">The findings of this case  study appeared to suggest that the PEE model was seemingly effective in  improving JR&#39;s IELTS-essay composition performance, in particular in the area  of cohesion and coherence. This was identified in both her essay analyses and  interviews. For example, JR&#39;s initial essay in week one <a href="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07apen1.jpg" target="_blank">(appendix A)</a> showed  that although she had used paragraphs correctly, a clear central theme had not  been presented adequately in each paragraph. The themes introduced in  paragraphs seemed random and unrelated to one another, which made the  information look rather incoherent and with a lack of overall progression, e.g.  &quot;Beside of that to get married for money is illegal, you can be fined or  punished &#150; getting to the prison.&quot; (lines 10-12), something that JR also seemed  to recognise in her post-instruction interview </p>   <font size="2" face="Verdana">  </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana"><ol>&quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; here in the initial  essay it&#39;s just something that I don&#39;t know what I&#39;m trying to say, I don&#39;t  understand myself.&quot;     </ol>     <p>There was a tendency to  include irrelevant details in JR&#39;s initial essay and the use of further  clarifications and/or concrete examples to support themes was non-existent.  This was deemed as a weakness in terms of cohesion and coherence in her essay  analysis, which she also put forward in her post-instruction interview </p> <ol>&quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; in the first one,  when I was writing I didn&#39;t explain the meaning, so I did a mess through the  whole essay &#91;&hellip;&#93; because I haven&#39;t used any words and it wasn&#39;t... the first  one... it wasn&#39;t... uhm... perfect, I mean (untranscribable) no any cohesion  and coherence &#91;&hellip;&#93;&quot;     </ol>     <p>Regarding lexical cohesion, 12% of words entered into  lexical relations in JR&#39;s initial essay, as shown in table one below.</p>     <p>By contrast, JR&#39;s final essay  in week eight <a href="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07apen1b.jpg" target="_blank">(appendix B)</a> showed that her attempt to apply the PEE model in  various sections of her text, i.e. in the second, third, and fourth paragraphs  (lines 7-15, 16- 21 and 22-29 respectively) seemed to give her overall argument  better organisation, progression, and clarity e.g. &#91;POINT&#93; &quot;&hellip;understand the  value of money&hellip;&quot; (lines 7-8), &#91;EXPLANATION&#93; &quot;&hellip; have an idea how hard parents  are working to get money&quot; (lines 11-12), &#91;EXAMPLE&#93; &quot;&hellip; instead of asking for an  Iphone or Ipad &#91;&hellip;&#93; ask for a cheaper electronic device.&quot; (lines 12-15). This  seeming improvement in the cohesion and coherence of her final essay was  something JR also agreed with in her post-instruction interview </p> <ol>&quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; in the second I used  the PEE model to create my new essay. &#91;&hellip;&#93; I read it again and everything is  clear for me. &#91;&hellip;&#93; Uhm&hellip; argument, I really...uhm... I put a point, I explain it  and did put in examples.&quot;      <br>&quot;Interviewer: Right. So  out of the four... sort of &#91;IELTS&#93; descriptors, which one do you feel the PEE model  has helped you the most with?      <br>JR: Coherence and  cohesion.&quot;     </ol>     <p>Regarding lexical cohesion,  18% of words formed lexical strings in JR&#39;s final essay, as shown in table two  below. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>The findings of this case  study suggested that JR found the PEE model particularly useful in regard to  the clarity that can be added to an IELTS-related essay, as articulated in her  post-instruction interview </p> <ol>&quot;Yes, I do feel that it  is useful &#91;&hellip;&#93; because it is, well... you need to write your essay clearly and  that makes the essay look clearly. I mean, you always need to uhm... explain  what you meaning, you cannot leave just... you cannot say &#39;A&#39; without saying  the &#39;B&#39; after&quot;     </ol>     <p><i><b>Case study 2 </b></i> </p>     <p>Once again, the findings of  this case study appeared to suggest that the PEE model was to some extent  effective in improving AL&#39;s IELTS-essay composition performance in terms of  cohesion and coherence. This was also identified in both the essay analyses and  interviews. For instance, AL&#39;s initial essay in week one  <a href="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07apen1c.jpg" target="_blank">(appendix C)</a> showed  that although she had presented relevant ideas and her argument was explicit,  the information and ideas had not been arranged coherently and there was no  clear organisation, progression, linking, or flow in the response due to the  fact that she had written a single clustered paragraph. Her whole essay seemed  rather hectic, difficult to read, and it was difficult to determine where the  breaks between main ideas were as shown in this excerpt: </p> <ol>&#91;&hellip;&#93; Children should go to  school. If they can learn something by doing another activity for some time after school &#150; why not?  But never should the work be a replacement for school or take too many hours a  day. Also it should not be a one-sided routine work, because this would lack  the children the possibility to try out many different activities as they should  in order to develop well. There is nothing to say against showing children  different types of work in order to prepare them for their later life. But this  should happen according to their age, and it will not necessarily be a good  thing, if the child is not prepared enough to understand the aim of the  activity. A child has no chance to understand &#91;&hellip;&#93; (lines 19-31)    </ol>     <p align="center"><a name="(tab1)"></a><img src="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07tab1.jpg"></p>      <p align="center"><a name="(tab2)"></a><img src="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07tab2.jpg"></p>       <p>This was something that AL  also seemed to recognise in her post-instruction interview: </p> <ol>&#91;&hellip;&#93; in the first essay I  just wrote from the beginning to the end more or less in one paragraph &#91;&hellip;&#93; I  didn&#39;t structure the main body of the text that well, uhm... I didn&#39;t...erm...  structure my thoughts that well into different arguments. It was more  like...erm... just writing in the way I was thinking.     </ol>     <p>Regarding lexical cohesion,  14% of words entered into lexical relations in AL&#39;s initial essay, as shown in  <a href="#(tab3)">Table 3</a> below. </p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><a name="(tab3)"></a><img src="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07tab3.jpg"></p>      <p>On the other hand, AL&#39;s final  essay in week eight <a href="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07apen1d.jpg" target="_blank">(appendix D)</a> showed that her effort to apply the PEE model  in various sections of her text, i.e. in the second, fourth, and fifth  paragraphs (lines 6-15, 22-29 and 30-36 respectively) seemed to result in a  clearer, more structured and more logically organised response e.g. &#91;POINTS&#93; &quot;&hellip;  gain professional skills &#91;&hellip;&#93; learn about how the job market works and how  difficult it can be to earn money&quot; (lines 8-11), &#91;EXAMPLE&#93; &quot;&hellip; a child helps his  or her parents in the shop&hellip;&quot; (lines 13-15). This seeming improvement in the  cohesion and coherence of her final essay was something AL also agreed with in  her post-instruction interview: </p> <ol>Interviewer: &quot;OK, and do  you see that model, the PEE model, applied in any of your two essays, either  the initial or final essay?      <br>AL: &quot;Yes, I applied it; I  tried my best to apply it in the second one, in the final essay.&quot;      <br>Interviewer: &quot;OK. Now,  during the teaching sessions of the past few weeks we have looked at the IELTS  criteria for marking essays which includes task completion, cohesion and  coherence, lexical resource, and grammatical range and accuracy. Do you think that  the PEE model has helped you improve in any of these areas?     <br> AL: &quot;Yes. Certainly with  cohesion and coherence.&quot;      <br>Interviewer: &quot;Cohesion  and coherence (echoing answer). Could you elaborate on that a bit more? I mean,  what... in which way has the model helped you?&quot;      <br>AL: &quot;Well... structure my  argument and make the text more readable (mispronounced), easier to read.&quot;     </ol>     <p>She seemed to elaborate on  improvements of cohesion and coherence related to the structure of her final  essay: </p> <ol>&quot;You can see already from  the layout that it&#39;s better structured. I have other paragraphs with empty  lines in between, as you recommended me, and yes... I thought much more about  the structure and about the paragraphs &#91;&hellip;&#93;&quot; </p>   </font><font size="2" face="Verdana">&quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; in the second one I  thought more about structure, and... so in the second one everything is more  simple, I think. So I really had only these three or four arguments and not  much more, whereas in the first  essay I tried to give as much information as possible.&quot;     </ol></font><font size="2" face="Verdana">     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Regarding lexical cohesion,  15% of words formed lexical strings in AL&#39;s final essay, as shown in <a href="#(tab4)">Table 4</a>  below. </p>      <p align="center"><a name="(tab4)"></a><img src="img/revistas/calj/v17n1/v17n1a07tab4.jpg"></p>      <p>The findings of this case  study also suggested that AL found the PEE model particularly useful in regard  to the clarity that can be added to an IELTS-related essay, as articulated in  her post-instruction interview </p> <ol>Interviewer: &quot;OK. And  now, comparing the two essays, do you see any differences in the way you  developed your ideas in both essays?&quot;     <br>AL: &quot;Yes, of course. As I  said, I thought about the structure of the single argument much more. I really  tried to have just one reason or argument in one paragraph...     <br> Interviewer: &quot;... that&#39;s  in the final essay...&quot;      <br>  AL: &quot;Yes, in the final.  So that&#39;s a big difference. My thoughts in the final one were much clearer.&quot;     </ol>     <p>The findings here also  suggested that although AL found the PEE model useful in regard to the  structure that can be given to an IELTS-related essay, she considered the model  a further writing tool or choice rather than a necessity&quot; </p> <ol>AL: &quot;The PEE model? Yes,  it is definitely very useful... erm... especially...erm... as a preparation for  the IELTS exam, I think. It helped me to think more about how I write, how I  structure an argument, and it made me try to find out more about it and to read  more about it, and of course it doesn&#39;t cover everything possible but it&#39;s a  very good start, I think.&quot;      <br>&quot;&#91;&hellip;&#93; my final is much  better than the initial essay and I have a different approach now to  writing...erm... I know that these three things PEE- Point, Explanation,  Example - I don&#39;t have to apply them, it&#39;s just a possibility to help me but it  works really well.&quot;     </ol>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i><b>Common occurrences in both case studies </b></i> </p>     <p>In their initial interviews,  both students articulated explicit awareness of some elements as part of  well-written essays (e.g. generic structure). However, this knowledge had not  seemed to materialise in their initial essays. </p>     <p>In their initial interviews,  both students assessed planning as an important stage in the essay writing  process, but both failed to make a written plan for their initial essays. On  the other hand, after having worked on planning strategies during the  instruction, both students made written plans for their final essays. This  seemed to improve the organisation of their ideas. </p>     <p>In both cases, the structure  appeared to improve in the final essays, it showed similarities, i.e. the body  of the essay sandwiched between an introductory and a concluding paragraph.  Although both students had received instruction on ways to organise writing  through thematic patterns, only JR employed a split thematic pattern in her  final essay. </p>     <p>The lexical relations in both  final essays appeared to be longer and more frequent, suggesting a stronger  focus on themes and a more adequate selection of lexis. </p> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><i><b>Discussion </b></i> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana"> </font>    <p><font size="2" face="Verdana">These findings suggest that Cole&#39;s (2013) PEE model is seemingly  effective in improving the cohesion and coherence of students&#39; essays, but such improvements may be unlikely  to occur solely as a result of the application of such a model, and further  work on other elements like essay planning strategies, essay structure, and  lexical relations may be needed to truly see advances in cohesion and  coherence. </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana">    <p>These findings also suggest  that there are inconsistencies between the theoretical knowledge students have  and what they actually put into practice when performing under pressure. This  could simply be a reflection of Messick&#39;s (1996) recognition that students get  affected by negative washback resulting from writing under exam conditions. </p>     <p>These findings seem to echo  the belief that writing in general is a never-ending process, and writing  essays, as Golder  and Coirier (1996) and Gleason  (1999) argue,  does pose high cultural, linguistic, and pragmatic demands onto EFL students.  Findings also seem to add to the ideas previously put forward by Davies (1988), in which in order to master  intricate genres such as essays, students need to be given practice in  subtleties occurring at both top-down and bottom-up levels of writing. </p>     <p>One implication of the PEE  model for ESL teaching is that although the model seems to have a more positive  than negative effect on the essay-writing performance of IELTS students, such a  model should not be portrayed as a replacement of other writing approaches. On  the contrary, it should serve as a complementary tool embedded in a wider  teaching ideology. </p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>The findings of this research  should be treated with caution due to the very nature of the study. These  findings are indeed particular to the context in which this study was carried  out and should not be considered as common occurrences that apply to all IELTS  contexts. </p>     <p>A number of recommendations  could be considered in future studies. First, in line with Archibald&#39;s (2002) research, higher quality  assessment material could help to avoid potential issues with reliability of  data. Second, the roles of teacher and researcher could be assigned to  different people to help the objectivity of the study, i.e. marking could be  carried out by external trained IELTS assessors. Third, the instruction  relating to the PEE model could be imparted in sessions separate from the  regular instruction to give essay-writing training a greater focus. Last, in  order to provide further evidence of application and impact of what has been  learned through instruction (recommended by Boston University, 2013; Heriot-  Watt University, 2014), students could write a third essay sometime after the  instruction to assess their ability to produce a coherent-cohesive essay  through the application of the PEE model. </p>     <p>New directions for future  research could look at: the application of the PEE model using a quantitative  approach with IELTS preparation groups from different institutions; or the  extent to which the model is effective with learners at specific bands within  the IELTS scale&#151;to expand on Green and Weir&#39;s (2002) findings that students within  the lower spectrum of the IELTS bands tend to progress more than those within  higher ones; or the application of the PEE model to oral argumentation in  debates in general or within the IELTS speaking module. </p> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><b>Conclusion </b> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana">     <p>Based on two case studies, this study investigated the  application of the PEE model to essay composition in a multi-lingual IELTS  preparation class. The findings of this study suggest that the PEE model is to  some extent effective in improving the essay composition performance of IELTS  students, in particular in the area of cohesion and coherence, as identified in  both the essay analyses and interviews. Students find the PEE model useful in  regard to the clarity and structure that the model seems to add to their  essays. However, the PEE model only appears to be a relatively small but  seemingly positive contribution to the bottom-up essay writing practice IELTS  students ought to be given, at least until they understand and master more  complex essay-writing argumentation skills required at tertiary level such as Ramsay,  Maier, and Price&#39;s (2010) AER model.</p> </font>     <p><font size="3" face="Verdana"><b>References </b> </font></p> <font size="2" face="Verdana">     <!-- ref --><p>Archibald, A. (2002). Managing L2 writing  proficiencies: Areas of change in students&#39; writing over time. <i>International  Journal of English Studies</i>, <i>1</i>(2), 153- 174.    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000119&pid=S0123-4641201500010000700001&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --> </p>     <!-- ref --><p>Bathia, V. (1993). <i>Analysing genre:  Language use in professional settings</i>. Harlow, UK: Longman.    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000121&pid=S0123-4641201500010000700002&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --> </p>     ]]></body>
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