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.
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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.
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Citations
The effect of written corrective feedback on the accuracy of output task and learning of target form
Mohammad Reza Hasannejad,Mohammad Reza Mollahosainy +1 more
- 01 May 2010
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of teachers' feedback in improving the accuracy of linguistic form in output tasks and in acquiring target form was explored, and it was found that the learners who had the opportunities for receiving feedback performed significantly better than those in non- feedback condition on the production and recognition post- tests.
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Impact of Recasts and Prompts on the Learning of English Third Person Singular Marker by Persian Learners of English
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of recast and prompts on the learning of English third person singular marker by Iranian pre-intermediate L2 learners was examined. And the results revealed that prompts as a CF strategy led to more gains than recast that provided the learners with the correct form (recast) than No-CF.
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The Effect of Explicit and Implicit Corrective Feedback on the Narrative Writing of Advanced Iranian EFL Learners
Jafar Afshinfar,Awat Shokouhifar +1 more
- 01 Sep 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the effect of explicit and implicit corrective feedback on the narrative writing of advanced Iranian EFL learners, and the results highlighted the superiority of giving explicit corrective feedback over the implicit one in written tasks.
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