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Volume 4,Issue 3

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26 March 2026

Cognitive Processes and Emotional Experiences in Rubric-Based L2 Writing Self-Assessment: Differences Across Proficiency Levels

Xiaodong Li1*
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1 Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou 510420, Guangdong, China
EIR 2026 , 4(3), 187–192; https://doi.org/10.18063/EIR.v4i3.1787
© 2026 by the Author. Licensee Whioce Publishing, Singapore. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )
Abstract

Self-assessment is important, especially for Chinese English as a Second Language (ESL) university students. This study looked at cognitive processes and emotional experiences of Chinese university students at different L2 levels in writing self-assessment. It invited 24 Chinese university students to evaluate their L2 writing with a rubric and then asked them to recall their thoughts and feelings in doing. It is found that self-assessment is demanding work, both cognitively and emotionally. It is also found that students with high L2 proficiency followed a more recursive and coherent pattern in L2 writing self-assessment and they reported more positive emotions with low arousal. Low language level students followed self-assessment in a more straightforward way. They also had more negative experiences. These findings may be useful for teachers who are developing ways to support self-assessment in their classrooms.

Keywords
Cognitive process
Emotional experience
Self-assessment
L2 writing
Students with different language levels
Funding
This research is supported by the International Training Program for Outstanding Young Researchers in Guangdong Universities, Guangdong Provincial Department of Education.
References

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