Abstract :
The present study investigated EFL teachers’ beliefs about oral corrective feedback (CF), their CFprovision practices across elementary and intermediate levels, and their beliefspractices correspondence. To this end, the researchers conducted a semistructured interview with the teachers and went on an overall fortyhour observation of their classrooms across both levels. The findings revealed that there was a significant difference in the teachers’ employment of CF strategies across the two levels with more frequent presence of explicit correction, elicitation, metalinguistic clues, clarification request, and repetition at elementary level. Moreover, it was demonstrated that the teachers did not differentiate in their focus on morphosyntactic, phonological, and lexical errors at both levels. The results further highlighted some areas of beliefpractice mismatch in teachers’ sensitivity to students’ errors, their employment of different CF strategies, use of explicit and implicit CF, application of immediate and delayed CF, correction of global and local errors, focus on different linguistic targets, and reliance on self, peer, and teacher correction. The paper concludes with some pedagogical implications.
Keywords :
CF strategies , elementary , intermediate , linguistic targets , beliefpractice correspondence