Journal Article10.1017/S0272263106060268
ONE SIZE FITS ALL?: Recasts, Prompts, and L2 Learning
Ahlem Ammar,Nina Spada +1 more
TL;DR: This article investigated the potential benefits of two corrective feedback techniques (recasts and prompts) for learners of different proficiency levels in three intact grade 6 intensive English as a second language classes in the Montreal area.
read more
Abstract: This quasi-experimental study investigated the potential benefits of two corrective feedback techniques (recasts and prompts) for learners of different proficiency levels. Sixty-four students in three intact grade 6 intensive English as a second language classes in the Montreal area were assigned to the two experimental conditions—one received corrective feedback in the form of recasts and the other in the form of prompts—and a control group. The instructional intervention, which was spread over a period of 4 weeks, targeted third-person possessive determiners his and her, a difficult aspect of English grammar for these Francophone learners of English. Participants' knowledge of the target structure was tested immediately before the experimental intervention, once immediately after it ended, and again 4 weeks later through written and oral tasks. All three groups benefited from the instructional intervention, with both experimental groups benefiting the most. Results also indicated that, overall, prompts were more effective than recasts and that the effectiveness of recasts depended on the learners' proficiency. In particular, high-proficiency learners benefited equally from both prompts and recasts, whereas low-proficiency learners benefited significantly more from prompts than recasts.This study is based on the first author's Ph.D. research (Ammar, 2003). We gratefully acknowledge the cooperation of the participating teachers and students. We thank Patsy Lightbown, Roy Lyster, Pavel Trofimovich, and the anonymous SSLA reviewers for their valuable input and feedback on earlier versions of this paper.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
•Dissertation
The effectiveness of enhanced and unenhanced recasts on secondary school students' past tense usage in Hong Kong
Ching Ching Lai
- 01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: The authors explored the immediate and overtime effectiveness of implicit and explicit recasts over no feedback on Hong Kong learners' use of past tense in their spoken narratives elicited from cartoon strips, and the comparative effectiveness of the two recasts was also probed.
5
Recast or Prompt: Which One Does the Trick?☆
TL;DR: The results showed that though both recast and prompt enhance the grammatical development of the learners, learners in prompt group achieved more than those in both recasting and control groups.
5
Effects of Negative and Positive Evidence on Adult Word Learning
TL;DR: The authors compared negative and positive evidence in adult word learning, predicting that adults would learn more forms following negative evidence and that participants learned more verbs than nouns following negative or positive evidence.
5
Effects of conditions on L2 development: Moving beyond accuracy
Cristina Sanz,Sarah Grey +1 more
- 15 Sep 2015
TL;DR: This chapter highlights recent research which has used accuracy data in combination with online measures of processing in order to better characterize the effects of conditions on L2 learning and development.
5
References
•Book
Second Language Acquisition and Second Language Learning
Stephen Krashen
- 01 Jan 1981
TL;DR: The Monitor Theory of adult second language acquisition as mentioned in this paper has been widely used in the field of language acquisition and has been applied to a wide range of domains, e.g., first and second language learning.
5.7K
The role of consciousness in second language learning
TL;DR: Schmidt as mentioned in this paper presented on the role of consciousness in second language learning at the 1988 Second Language Research Forum (SLRF) held in at the University of Hawai'i, USA.
The role of the linguistic environment in second language acquisition
Michael H. Long
- 01 Jan 1996
TL;DR: A wire-type cutting machine comprising a continuously moving wire which is guided over rollers supported by a set of rigid arms in the form of a parallelogram.
3.9K
Effectiveness of L2 Instruction: A Research Synthesis and Quantitative Meta‐analysis
John M. Norris,Lourdes Ortega +1 more
TL;DR: This paper employed systematic procedures for research synthesis and meta-analysis to summarize findings from experimental and quasi-experimental investigations into the effectiveness of L2 instruction published between 1980 and 1998, concluding that explicit types of instruction are more effective than implicit types, and that focus on form and focus on forms interventions result in equivalent and large effects.
2.3K