Abstract
Constructed-response items offer rich evidence of writing proficiency, but the linguistic signals they contain vary with grade level. This study presents a cross-sectional analysis of 5638 English Language Arts essays from Grades 6–12 to identify which linguistic features predict proficiency and to characterize how their importance shifts across grade levels. We extracted a suite of lexical, syntactic, and semantic-cohesion features, and evaluated their predictive power using an interpretive dual-model framework combining LASSO and XGBoost algorithms. Feature importance was assessed through LASSO coefficients, XGBoost Gain scores, and SHAP values, and interpreted by isolating both consensus and divergences of the three metrics. Results show moderate, generalizable predictive signals in Grades 6–8, but no generalizable predictive power was found in the Grades 9–12 cohort. Across the middle grades, three findings achieved strong consensus. Essay length, syntactic density, and global semantic organization served as strong predictors of writing proficiency. Lexical diversity emerged as a key divergent feature, it was a top predictor for XGBoost but ignored by LASSO, suggesting its contribution depends on interactions with other features. These findings inform actionable, grade-sensitive feedback, highlighting stable, diagnostic targets for middle school while cautioning that discourse-level features are necessary to model high-school writing.