“…According to them, product-oriented feedback is any feedback given on finished drafts with the goal of making drafts better in terms of audience awareness, content, organization of rhetoric, and language, whereas process-oriented feedback refers to specific tasks that happen before, during, and after writing, such as setting goals, planning, editing, revising, and using resources. Thus, the first orientation of feedback is related to the product approach of writing, which is perceived as the outcome of what students write in one draft paper [ 57 ] and is expected to be developed on the basis of microaspects such as grammar, spelling, vocabulary, organization, mechanics, and syntax [ 58 ]. As explained by Mamad and Vígh [ 59 ], product-based feedback aims to improve students’ writing accuracy; students receive it from teachers and other sources, and it includes metalinguistic explanations, error corrections, grades, or scores, general praise, and criticism.…”