Title of article :
Evidence in support of written corrective feedback
Author/Authors :
John Bitchener، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
17
From page :
102
To page :
118
Abstract :
The extent to which ESL learners benefit from written corrective feedback has been debated at length since Truscott (1996) mounted a case for its abolition. Ten years later, the debate continues, not only because little attention has been given to testing its efficacy over time but also because studies that have investigated the issue have not always been well designed and have produced conflicting results (Ferris, 2004, 2006). This article presents the results of a 2-month study of the efficacy of written corrective feedback to 75 low intermediate international ESL students in Auckland, New Zealand. Assigned to 4 groups (direct corrective feedback, written and oral meta-linguistic explanation; direct corrective feedback and written meta-linguistic explanation; direct corrective feedback only; the control group received no corrective feedback), the students produced three pieces of writing (pre-test, immediate post-test, and delayed post-test) that described what was happening in a given picture. Two functional uses of the English article system (referential indefinite “a” and referential definite “the”) were targeted in the feedback. The study found that the accuracy of students who received written corrective feedback in the immediate post-test outperformed those in the control group and that this level of performance was retained 2 months later.
Keywords :
Error correction , Accuracy improvement , Treating linguistic errors , Written corrective feedback
Journal title :
JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
JOURNAL OF SECOND LANGUAGE WRITING
Record number :
713978
Link To Document :
بازگشت