Pursuing fair writing assessment: Halo effects in primary school foreign language writing in grade six

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByRuth Trüb, Julian Lohmann, Jens Möller, Stefan D. Keller
Original languageEnglish
Published inAssessing Writing, 68, Article 101036
Pages18
Editor (Publisher)Elsevier Ltd
ISSN1075-2935, 1873-5916
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.asw.2026.101036 (Open Access)
Publication statusPublished – 04.2026

Assessing the writing competence of pupils learning English as a foreign language (EFL) at primary school is associated with specific challenges because of learners’ limited language resources. This study investigates the extent to which characteristics of their texts trigger so-called halo effects. Halo effects are an assessment bias where the quality of one feature unintentionally influences the evaluation of other aspects. The study examines halo effects across nine aspects of text quality (communicative effect, level of detail, coherence, cohesion, complexity of syntax and grammar, correctness of syntax and grammar, vocabulary, orthography and punctuation), based on a random sample of narrative texts from a sixth-grade corpus. 200 pre-service teachers assessed four randomly assigned texts. Halo effects were calculated by comparison to expert ratings using multi-level regression analyses. Results show that orthography and vocabulary were the two main triggers of halo effects. Punctuation also triggered some halo effects, but to a smaller extent. The assessment of communicative effect, complexity and correctness of syntax and grammar was not determined by the corresponding text quality but dominated by other criteria. Results highlight the importance of being aware of halo effects when assessing young EFL learners’ texts and emphasise the need for suitable training measures.