Book Chapter10.1017/CBO9780511667275.006
Interaction as practice
Alison MacKey
- 01 Mar 2007
- pp 85-110
69
TL;DR: This paper integrated several of the constructs and processes discussed independently in other chapters in this volume, most notably input (Leow), feedback (Leeman), and output (Muranoi).
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Abstract: Introduction Research on interaction in second language acquisition points to the importance of a range of interactional processes in the second language learning process. These processes include negotiation for meaning, the provision of feedback, and the production of modified output, as well as cognitive (learner-internal) factors such as attention, noticing, and memory for language. Research on interaction is often applied in second language classrooms through corrective feedback practices and the use of communicative tasks, and it brings together a number of related processes. Accordingly, this chapter integrates several of the constructs and processes discussed independently in other chapters in this volume, most notably input (Leow), feedback (Leeman), and output (Muranoi). The development of the interaction hypothesis One of the innovations in second language (L2) work over the last 25 years has been the development of research into the cognitive mechanisms that underlie second language acquisition. Research into L2 interaction can be traced to several lines originating in the 1970s. For example, Krashen's (1978) formulation of the input hypothesis suggested that adult second language learning was driven primarily by exposure to sufficient amounts of comprehensible input – that is, input that learners can understand. These ideas represented a shift in thinking from earlier claims about language learning, such as those made by Lado (1957) whose contrastive analysis hypothesis emphasized descriptions of what learners might find more or less difficult to learn.
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Citations
The Effect of Focused Written Corrective Feedback and Language Aptitude on ESL Learners´ Acquisition of Articles.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effect of two types of written corrective feedback (CF) and the extent to which language analytic ability mediates the effects of CF on the acquisition of articles by adult intermediate ESL learners of various LI backgrounds.
915
The case against the case against recasts
Jaemyung Goo,Alison Mackey +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that making a case against recasts is neither convincing nor useful for advancing the field and that more triangulated approaches to research on all types of corrective feedback, employing varied and rigorous methodological designs, are necessary to further the understanding of the role of corrective Feedback in L2 learning.
250
The influence of exposure, parents, and linguistic distance on young European learners' foreign language comprehension
Eva Lindgren,Carmen Muñoz +1 more
TL;DR: The project Early Language Learning in Europe (ELLiE) as discussed by the authors has studied the longitudinal effects of an early foreign language start in seven European contexts and presented a sub-study of early language learning in Europe.
237
Exploring the Relationship between Modified Output and Working Memory Capacity.
TL;DR: This article examined the relationship between learners' production of modified output and their working memory (WM) capacity and found that greater processing capacity was related to greater production of modifying output during interaction.
218
Uptake, Modified Output, and Learner Perceptions of Recasts: Learner Responses as Language Awareness
TL;DR: The authors investigated the cognitive processes underlying learner responses to the recast of their errors and found that learners correctly repaired their errors, they were significantly more likely to report not only recognizing corrective recasts but also noticing the interlanguage-L2 mismatch.
197
References
Individual Differences and the Fundamental Similarity of Implicit and Explicit Adult Second Language Learning
TL;DR: This article examined evidence for the claims of Krashen (1981, 1985) and Reber (1989, 1993; Reber, Walkenfield & Hernstadt, 1991) that unconscious learning under Implicit and Incidental conditions is insensitive to measures of individual differences in cognitive abilities.
283
The Psycholinguistics of the Output Hypothesis
TL;DR: The authors argue that output plays an important role in second language acquisition, in particular because it generates highly specific input the cognitive system needs to build up a coherent set of knowledge, and that output also plays a direct role in enhancing fluency by turning declarative knowledge into procedural knowledge.
Exploring the Benefits of Task Repetition and Recycling for Classroom Language Learning.
Tony Lynch,Joan Maclean +1 more
TL;DR: This article reported the preliminary results of an ongoing study of the benefits of building repetition into a communicative task in an English for Specific Purposes course and found that learners benefited from the opportunity to recycle communicative content as they repeated complex tasks.
256
Testing the output hypothesis: Effects of output on noticing and second language acquisition
TL;DR: This paper investigated the effect of output on the ability of L2 learners to recognize some of their linguistic problems and bring to their attention that there is something they need to discover about their L2.
228
Effects of Negotiation on Language Learners' Output
TL;DR: The authors investigated the effects of various types of negotiation on learners' output and found that the extent to which and the ways in which participants interactionally modified their output during negotiations were determined by the type of negative feedback they received.
221