Autor: |
Sun-Hye Baek, Jin-Young Song, Jin-Hwa Lee |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
English Teaching; Summer2012, Vol. 67 Issue 2, p183-205, 23p, 1 Illustration, 6 Charts |
Abstrakt: |
This study investigated, using think-aloud protocol, what L2 learners focus on, notice and uptake in a series of English writing task and how this cognitive process is affected by their English proficiency. Nine Korean middle school students were engaged in a three-stage writing task, which consisted of the composing stage, the stage of comparing their own text with a reformulated version, and the revising stage. During the first two stages, the students were asked to think out loud in Korean. The results show that in the composing stage the high level students tended to focus on grammatical forms while the low level groups more concentrated on lexical items. When reformulations were provided, the students well noticed the differences between their original texts and the reformulated ones but a majority of their noticing remained simple noticing without a proper reason or ended up with wrong inferences. This overall shallow and incorrect process at the comparing stage resulted in relatively little changes in the revising stage. These findings suggest that not only the quantity but also the quality of noticing is important for acquisition and more guidance and help should be provided for low level learners to benefit from writing and feedback. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Supplemental Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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