The Effect of Making Thinking Visible Approach on The Critical Writing And Anxiety Levels of Preparatory School Students
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Abstract
This study investigates the impact of English instruction enriched with Making Thinking
Visible approach—implemented through Visible Thinking Routines on English as a Foreign
Language preparatory school students’ critical writing skills and their foreign language
anxiety levels. This research was designed as a quasi-experimental pre-test-post-test study
with experimental and control groups, and two English as a foreign language preparatory
classes were included in the study. The experimental group received English as a Foreign
Language instruction enriched with Making Thinking Visible approach, while the control
group followed a traditional curriculum. Data were collected using the High School Writing
Skills Task and Rubric, the Critical Writing Skills Task and Rubric, and the Foreign
Language Classroom Anxiety Scale. Statistical analyses, including a 2x2 mixed-design
ANOVA, revealed that students in the experimental group exhibited significantly greater
improvements in critical writing skills compared to their counterparts in the control group.
Moreover, the experimental group experienced a statistically significant reduction in foreign
language anxiety, whereas the control group did not demonstrate a statistically significant
change. The findings suggest that making thinking visible supports both cognitive
development and the reduction of language-related anxiety, offering a promising
instructional strategy for improving critical writing outcomes in English as a Foreign
Language context. The study contributes to the literature on metacognitive pedagogies and
provides actionable implications for curriculum design in preparatory English programs.