CLHCJun 10, 2025

Product vs. Process: Exploring EFL Students' Editing of AI-Generated Text for Expository Writing

arXiv:2507.21073v12 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of understanding AI's role in EFL writing education for educators and students, though it appears incremental as it applies existing methods to a new context.

This study examined how EFL secondary students edit AI-generated text for expository writing, finding that while students made over 260 edits per dataset with distinct patterns, the number of AI-generated words positively predicted all score dimensions, whereas most editing variables showed minimal impact on composition quality.

Text generated by artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots is increasingly used in English as a foreign language (EFL) writing contexts, yet its impact on students' expository writing process and compositions remains understudied. This research examines how EFL secondary students edit AI-generated text. Exploring editing behaviors in their expository writing process and in expository compositions, and their effect on human-rated scores for content, organization, language, and overall quality. Participants were 39 Hong Kong secondary students who wrote an expository composition with AI chatbots in a workshop. A convergent design was employed to analyze their screen recordings and compositions to examine students' editing behaviors and writing qualities. Analytical methods included qualitative coding, descriptive statistics, temporal sequence analysis, human-rated scoring, and multiple linear regression analysis. We analyzed over 260 edits per dataset, and identified two editing patterns: one where students refined introductory units repeatedly before progressing, and another where they quickly shifted to extensive edits in body units (e.g., topic and supporting sentences). MLR analyses revealed that the number of AI-generated words positively predicted all score dimensions, while most editing variables showed minimal impact. These results suggest a disconnect between students' significant editing effort and improved composition quality, indicating AI supports but does not replace writing skills. The findings highlight the importance of genre-specific instruction and process-focused writing before AI integration. Educators should also develop assessments valuing both process and product to encourage critical engagement with AI text.

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