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Student-student interaction


       Student-student interaction includes all learning situations where students work in groups

to accomplish particular learning objectives and are interdependent for successful completion of

the objective. There will be a lot of pair and group work in the classroom, as well as genuine

language input from the "real world" for meaningful communication.


       Learning English is better when the students use it for what it was designed for:

communication. Peer interaction may facilitate acquisition through fostering learner production,

feedback, and noticing of form. Thus far, much of our attention has focused on understanding

classroom communication by looking at the interaction occurs between teachers and students.

However, by doing so we have ignored another important dimension of classroom interaction,

that is, the interaction that occurs between students themselves, and the impact that student-

student interaction has on the patterns of communication, classroom learning, and opportunities

for second language acquisition.


       Many studies (e.g. Barnard, 2002; Pica, 1998; Swain, Brooks & Toralli-Beller, 2002) are

done on peer cooperation learning and peer tutoring. Drawing results from these studies, many

scholars hold the position that students can obtain benefits from their peers by negotiating

meanings or receiving scaffolding information. Such interactions among students do facilitate

students‘ second language acquisition because while negotiating with or scaffold to peers,

students experience the input enhancement and output production by reformulating their

linguistic forms.


       Reciprocal scaffolding, a method first coined by Holton and Thomas, is a method that

involves a group of two or more collaboratively working together. In this situation, the group can
learn from each other's experiences and knowledge. The scaffolding is shared by each member

and changes constantly as the group work on a task (Holton and Clarke, 2006). According to

Vygotsky, students develop higher-level thinking skills when scaffolding occurs with an adult

expert or with a peer of higher capabilities (Stone, 1998). Conversely, Piaget believes that

students discard their ideas when paired with an adult or student of more expertise (Piaget,

1928). Instead, students should be paired with others who have different perspectives. Conflicts

would then take place between students allowing them to think constructively at a higher level.


       Empirical research with second language supports the contention that engaging in

language interactions facilitates second language development. Findings from a study to

determine how conversational interaction affects the acquisition of question formation indicate

that interaction can increase the pace of acquisition (Mackey, 1999).


Task-based learning


Researchers have used tasks to understand both the second language learning and teaching

processes. Task-based teaching provides learners with opportunities for learner-to-learner

interactions that encourage authentic use of language and meaningful communication. The goal

of a task is to ―exchange meaning rather than to learn the second language‖ (Ellis, 1999, p. 193).

Research suggests that learners produce longer sentences and negotiate meaning more often in

pair and group work than in teacher-fronted instruction.         Interactive tasks may be most

successful when they contain elements that


       Are new or unfamiliar to the participants;

       Require learners to exchange information with their partners or group members;

       Have a specific outcome;
Involve details;

       Center on a problem, especially an ethical one, such as deciding in a small group who

       should take the last spot in a lifeboat, a nuclear physicist or a pregnant woman;

       Involve the use of naturally occurring conversation and narrative discourse. (Ellis, 2000)


Student-student interaction strategies


Leaner-centered learning: This kind of instruction involves the giving over of some "power" in

the language learning process to the learners themselves. It also strives to allow for personal

creativity and input from the students, as well as taking into account their learning needs and

objectives. Cooperative Learning: This concept stresses the "team" like nature of the classroom

and emphasizes cooperation as opposed to competition. Students share information and help,

and achieve their learning goals as a group.


Let‘s talk is one of the 6 proposals to promote language learning in the classroom.

a. When learners talk to each other… by Micheal Long and Patricia Porter (1985)

       learners can offer each other genuine communicative practice

b. learner language and proficiency level by George Yule and Doris Macdonald (1990)

       ‗sender‘ – low-proficiency learners, interactions were longer
       ‗receiver‘ – low-proficiency learners, almost forced to play a very passive role and said
       very little

c. when pair work comes in by Naomi Storch (2002)

       When pair work functions collaboratively and learners are in an expert-novice
       relationship, they can successfully engage in the co-construction of knowledge

d. interaction and second language development by Alison Mackey (1999)

       produced more advanced question forms with native speakers
The potential advantages of group activities in language instruction (based on Jacobs 1998)


Advantage                                Comment
                                         In the teacher-fronted classroom, the teacher typically
1. The quantity of learner speech can
                                         speaks 80% of the time; in group work more students
increase.
                                         talk for more of the time.
                                         In teacher-fronted classrooms, students are cast in a
2. The variety of speech acts can responsive role, but in group work they can perform a
increase.                                wide range of roles, including those involved in the
                                         negotiation of meaning.
                                         In   teacher-fronted    lessons   teachers      shape   their
3. There can be more individualization instruction to the needs of the average student but in
of instruction.                          group work the needs of individual students can be
                                         attended to.
                                         Students feel less nervous speaking in an L2 in front of
4. Anxiety can be reduced.
                                         their peers than in front of the whole class.
                                         Students will be less competitive when working with
5. Motivation can increase.
                                         groups and are more likely to encourage each other.
                                         Students are ‗social animals‘ and thus enjoy interacting
6. Enjoyment can increase.               with others in groups; in teacher-fronted classrooms
                                         student-student interaction is often proscribed.
                                         Group activities help students to become independent
7. Independence can increase.
                                         learners.
                                         Group activities enable students to get to know each
8. Social integration can increase.
                                         other.
                                         In typical teacher-fronted classrooms students are
9. Students can learn how to work
                                         discouraged from helping each other; group work helps
together with others.
                                         students to learn collaborative skills.
                                         Learning is enhanced by group work because students
10. Learning can increase.               are willing to take risks and can scaffold each other‘s
                                         effort.
From these it seems reasonable to conclude that group work can provide the interactional

conditions which have been hypothesized to facilitate acquisition more readily than can

interaction involving teachers.




When we compare adult and children interaction (Kowal & Swain, 1994)

       Interaction gives opportunities for children to learn language from each other and to

practice what they have learned elsewhere. This process of learning affects all levels of

language; prosody and sound, vocabulary, syntax, the verb system, social markers and stylistic

features, and organized routines. The process of learning through interaction with other children

probably is similar in first language to observations in second-language contexts. Children

imitate their models, receive corrections, copy predictable routines, figure out meanings from

context, and then permute and recombine what they have learned. The opportunity to practice

new forms is particularly available in interaction, because in peer contexts children are required

to negotiate what they want, to argue for their positions, and to explain ideas.        In doing

interaction, they have the chance to acquire and practice strategic language used in social

relations where adults or more powerful partners do not control them.


       Unlike children—who are fascinated with learning and willing to engage with learning

purely because it‘s fun, new and different—adults like to learn when it makes a difference in

their lives. Adults learn languages for many intrinsic reasons (and this may be a reason why they

can be so good at learning languages, all things considered). Their self-directedness, life

experiences, independence as learners, and motivation to learn provide them with advantages in

language learning. Peer interaction has shown that adult learners are able to give each other

second language input and opportunities for interaction. It also can provide each other with
feedback, in the form of clarification requests and negotiation for meaning. Kowal and Swain

(1994) have found that adolescents are able to benefit from pair work activities in which students

work together to reconstruct dictated texts. Adult learners usually make word errors, factual

errors, syntactic errors and discourse errors in order in the student-student interaction. Then, they

give their partners such feedback as repetition, clarification requests, recast and explicit

corrections. They are using repetition as feedback, and then perceive their errors while

interacting with their partners. According to the types of errors, factual errors usually invite

clarification request and word errors usually invite repetition. Adult learners usually do self-

repair (self-correction).


Self-correction: After the students recognize what is incorrect in his/her response, s/he should be

able to correct him/herself. This is the best technique, because the student will remember it better


Peer correction: Sometimes the student cannot self-correct (although they should always be

given the opportunity). In this case teacher can prompt another student to provide the correction.

After doing this, teacher needs to return to the original student to get the self-correction.


Teacher needs to be aware of allowing two or three students in the class to become the ones who

always provide peer correction. Correction of mistakes should be a task shared by all the students

in the class. Sometimes it is a good idea just to let students speak and not worry about mistakes –

help them develop some degree of fluency.
Incidental focus on form in student-student interaction


Conducted by Morris and Taone (2003), first study reveals that incidental focus on form does

occur among students‘ interaction, especially between NS (native speaker) students and NNS

(nonnative speaker) students. However‘ the results show that NNS students sometimes do not

regard their NS peers‘ feedback as helpful input enhancement, but as criticism and even

mockery. It seems that in some cases the social dynamics of the language classroom may

dramatically alter the way cognitive processes of attention or noticing are deployed on

cooperative learning activities in which feedback occurred, and this in turn appears to affect

acquisition.


       While the findings of another research conducted by ZHAO (2005) show that incidental

FFREs occur very frequently in student-student interactions and frequency of immediate uptake

of these FFEs are very high, which may be indirectly effective for L2 learning? Thus, learners

are able to work as knowledge sources to each other in their L2 learning. Therefore, ZHAO

suggests that spoken interactions should be encouraged between students themselves.


What is FFI?

    is an umbrella term for ―any planned or incidental instructional activity that is intended to

       induce language learners to pay attention to linguistic form‖ (Ellis, 2001)

    FFI has been seen as consisting of two broad types: focus on forms and focus on form

       (Long, 1991, 1996)

Focus on forms is characterized by ―division of the language according to lexis, structures,

notions or functions, which are selected and sequenced for students to learn in a uniform and

incremental way‖ (Klapper & Rees, 2003), and by the general absence of a communicative
context. Focus on form in contrast, constitutes attention to linguistic structures within the context

of meaning-focused, communicative activities (Ellis, 2001; Long, 1991, 1996). It may involve

the negotiation of meaning, as well as the planned or incidental targeting of problematic

linguistic items, often in the form of some type of error correction. Although there is still

considerable debate regarding the most effective type(s) of FFI, there is some consensus that it is

beneficial, and even necessary, for L2 learners (Russell & Spada, 2006). Incidental and planned,

whatever shape it takes, focus on form:


       Does not interrupt the natural flow of a communicative task

       Is closely linked to students‘ needs to carry out the task

       Is not done in an isolated fashion

       Draws the student‘s attention to structures in situations where primary focus is

       meaningful communication



Planned focus on form

In light of the teacher‘s past experience and students‘ needs in carrying out a given task, the

teacher carefully plans a communicative task that includes some form-focused activities. This

type of activity is integrated into the flow of the task. Planned form-focused interventions

include:


1. Providing access to resources: Teacher can plan student access to resources such as word and

expression banks, posters, and models for speaking and writing tasks. Providing essential

language in the form of posters or word banks will help students speak sooner and more

accurately. Modeling of speaking activities and functional language will diminish the number of
errors. The teacher can model the targeted language alone or with a student or have two students

act out the language.


2. Consciousness-raising: Teacher can point out certain structural features. For instance, a

teacher uses a story as a lead up to a speaking activity in which students share their daily

routines. The teacher highlights the third person singular of the present tense in a story about a

pre-teen‘s unusual day by writing on the board a few verbs that correspond to the character‘s

actions: gets up, has, goes, travels… The students then reinvest their understanding by

exchanging their daily routines. Each student the reports his partner‘s daily routine to the other

members of the group.


Student:       Kevin gets up at 7:00.
               He has breakfast at 7:30.
               At 8:00, he takes the bus to school…


3. Monitoring the writing process: Teachers can improve writing accuracy by monitoring their

students as they perform the writing process. Students can refer to a writing checklist that

outlines the steps before, during, and after the actual writing. Also, throughout the writing

process, students should have access the resources: model, word banks, peers and the teacher.


4. Presenting brief explanations or mini-lessons Teachers can plan for very short explanations or

mini-lessons when the task requires such an intervention. If possible, these presentations should

be visual. Avoid lengthy explanations of rules and complicated exceptions.


5. Interactive grammar activities: Interactive grammar activities allow students to participate in

communicative-type activities while practicing grammatical structures. The main focus is on the

interaction (production and understanding) of meaning with an eye on the structure being
manipulated. These activities are not meant to be used in isolation; rather they should be part of

the task. They allow for personalization and student input.


Incidental focus on form


Incidental focus on form takes place during a communicative task with no prior planning.

Teachers decide to intervene when some structural problem arises and has to be attended to in

order to carry out the task at hand efficiently. This type of intervention is brief and to the point;

the natural progression of the task is not impeded. Incidental form-focused interventions include:


1. Brief impromptu explanations and mini-lessons: Sometimes a brief explanation is needed

when a particular aspect of grammar is giving many students problems or impeding their

understanding of the message. The teacher can intervene quickly to point out the problem.


2. Answering questions: Student questions on structural signal an emerging awareness and

interest on how the English language works. Answer should be short. For instance:


Student: Why two feet and not two foot?


Teacher: Foot is different; it is an exception. One foot, but two feet.


3. Corrective feedback: Corrective feedback is any indication to learners by teachers, native

speakers, or non-native speaker interlocutors that their use of the target language is incorrect

(Lighbown and Spada 1999). A teacher´s role in the language classroom is to give feedback on

errors, but different corrective feedback has different rates of language uptake.




Language learners will benefit from corrective feedback that makes them retrieve the target
language form (rather than immediately supplying the correct form). The retrieval and

subsequent production stimulates the development of connections in the learner‘s memory.


These are the various ways of supplying the students with corrective feedback:


       Explicit correction: The teacher supplies the correct form to the student and clearly

       indicates that what was said was incorrect. This is common corrective feedback in large

       groups of students where the teacher‘s time is limited. Explicit correction has a very low

       rate of uptake since the student doesn‘t have to self-correct and the mistake could be

       easily forgotten.

       Recasts: Often used for grammatical and phonological errors. The teacher implicitly

       reformulates all or part of the student‘s output. Recasts result in the lowest rate of uptake

       since they don‘t lead to any self-repair.


(Neither recasts nor explicit correction lead to any peer or self-repair because they already

provide correct forms to learners).


       Elicitation: Teacher asks for a reformulation, ‗How do you say that in Spanish?‘ or

       pausing to allow student to complete teacher‘s utterance. ‘I went on a holiday and...‘

       Metalinguistic clues: Teacher provides comments, information, or questions related to

       student output. For instance, ‗You need past tense‘

       Clarification: Teacher uses phrases such as, ‗I don‘t understand‘, or ‗What do you mean?‘


Repetition: Teacher repeats the mistake adjusting intonation to highlight the error. For instance,

‗You buyed the car?‘, ‗You goed yesterday?‘
Study            Participants        Target structure          Design                     Tests                  Results

Carroll and Swain   100 Spanish adult     Dative verbs         Five groups:              Recall production       All the treatment
(1993)              ESL learners (low                          (A) direct                tasks following each    groups performed
                    intermediate)                              metalinguistic            feedback session        better than the control
                                                               feedback. (B) explicit                            group on both recall
                                                               rejection. (C) recast.                            tasks. Group A (direct
                                                               (D) indirect                                      metalinguistic
                                                               metalinguistic                                    feedback)
                                                               feedback. (E) control,                            outperformed the
                                                               treatment consisted of                            other groups.
                                                               two feedback
                                                               sessions, each
                                                               followed by recall
                                                               (i.e. production
                                                               without feedback)



Kim and Mathes      20 Korean adult ESL   Dative verb          One group receive         Controlled production   Differences between
(2001)              learners (high                             explicit metalinguistic   tasks (as in the        performance on first
                    beginners and                              feedback; the other       treatment) without      and second production
                    intermediate)                              recasts; feedback was     feedback                tasks not significant;
                                                               presented in two                                  differences between
                                                               sessions one week                                 groups for gains in
                                                               apart each followed                               production not
                                                               by production with no                             significant. Learners
                                                               feedback                                          expressed preference
                                                                                                                 for explicit feedback.
Leeman (2003)   74 first-year            Spanish noun-         Four groups             Post and delayed post   Only groups A and C
                university learners of   adjective agreement   performing              picture description     outperformed the
                Spanish                                        communicative task      tasks                   control group on any
                                                               one-on-one with                                 post-test measure. No
                                                               researcher                                      difference between A
                                                               (A) recast group                                and C
                                                               (B) negative evidence
                                                               group (source or
                                                               problem indicated but
                                                               not corrected)
                                                               (C) enhanced salience
                                                               with no feedback
                                                               (D) control group

Lyster (2004)   148 (Grade 5) 10-11      French grammatical    Group 1 received       Four test                FFI-prompt group
                year-olds in a French    gender (articles +    form-focused              1. binary choice      was only group to
                immersion                nouns)                instruction (FFI) +          test               outperform control
                programme                                      recasts; Group 2 FFI +    2. text completion    group on all 8
                            1.                                 prompts (including           test, (oral        measures (PT1 and
                                                               explicit feedback;           production         PT2).
                                                               Group 3 FFI only.            tasks)             FFI-recast group
                                                               Control group             3. object             outperformed control
                                                                                            identification     group on 5 out of 8
                                                                                            test               measures
                                                                                         4. picture            FFI-only group
                                                                                            description test   outperformed control
                                                                                      Two post-tests (PT)      group on 4 out of 8
                                                                                      with PT2                 measures
                                                                                      administered 8 weeks     Statically significant
                                                                                      after PT1                differences between
                                                                                                               FFI-recast and FFI-
                                                                                                               prompt
Ellis, Loewen, and   34 intermediate-level   Regular past tense –ed Classroom-based             1. oral imitation tests   No effect evident for
Erlam (2006)         adult ESL students in                          exposure to either             – OIT (designed to     CF on the immediate
                     private language                               recasts or                     measure implicit       post-test but the group
                     college                                        metalingustic                  knowledge)             receiving
                                                                    feedback (without           2. untimed                metalinguistic
                                                                    correction of the              grammatically          feedback
                                                                    error)                         judgment test –        outperformed both the
                                                                                                   UGJT (to measure       recast and control
                                                                                                   explicit knowledge)    group on both the
                                                                                                3. metalinguistic         delayed OIT and
                                                                                                   knowledge test (to     UGJT.
                                                                                                   measure explicit
                                                                                                   knowledge)

Sheen (2006b)        Low-intermediate        Indefinite and definite   Classroom-based          1. dictation test         Whereas the
                     ESL learners in a       articles                  exposure to recasts      2. written narrative      metalinguistic
                     community college in                              and correction –            test                   correction resulted in
                     the USA                                           metalinguistic           3. error corrections      significant gains in
                                                                       explanation in the          test                   learning in both
                                                                       context of performing                              immediate and post-
                                                                       an oral narrative task                             tests, the recasts did
                                                                                                                          not

Ammar and Spada      64 mixed-proficiency    Third-person              Classroom-based           1. written passage       high-proficiency
(2006)               learners in three       possessive                corrective feedback          correction task       learners benefited
                     Grade 6 intensive       determiners (‗his‘ and    consisting of recast      2. oral picture          equally from recasts
                     ESL classes             ‗her‘)                    and prompts                  description task      and prompts; Low-
                                                                                                                          proficiency learners
                                                                                                                          benefited more from
                                                                                                                          prompts
A frequently cited study of corrective feedback is doughty and Varela (1998). A number

of other studies have compared the effect of different types of corrective feedback on acquisition.

Cathcart and Olsen (1976) found that the ESL learners they investigated liked to be corrected

and wanted more correction. Chenoweth et al. (1983) found that learners liked to be corrected

not during form-focused activities, but also when they were conversing with NS. This liking for

correction contrasts with the warnings of Krashen (1982) that correction is both useless for

ACQUISITION, may lead to a negative affective response. Krashen may be partly right, though,

as Cathcart and Olsen also reported that when a teacher attempted to provide the kind of

correction the learners in their studies said they liked it, it led to communication which the class

found undesirable.


       Other studies have investigated which type of corrective feedback students prefer. Kim

and Mathes (2001) and Nagata (1993) reported a clear preference for more EXPLICIT

FEEDBACK. Learners, however, are likely to differ in how much, when, and in what way they

want to be corrected in specific instructional activities; to date, the studies investigating learners‘

viewpoints about error correction have failed to explore this variation in any depth. There is also

a considerable variation among teachers regarding how frequently error treatment takes place.

Edmondson (1985) pointed out teachers sometimes correct ‗errors‘ that have not in fact been

made! In general, it is teachers (rather than students) who correct errors. Studies of repair in

naturally-occurring conversations have shown a preference for self-initiated and self-completed

repair. However, in classroom contexts, where, as we have seen, discourse rights are unevenly

invested in the teacher, other-initiated and other-completed repair are predominant. Other pattern

of repair can also occur; Kasper (1985) found that the trouble sources were identified by the
teacher but repair by learners or by other learners. In the content phase of the same lesson; self-

initiated and self-completed repair was evident, although the learners were inclined to appeal for

assistance from the teacher. However, as with corrective feedback strategies, variation in the rate

and nature of uptake has been found.


Types of uptake following corrective feedback (from Lyster and Ranta 1997)


A Repair
1 Repetition (i.e. the student repeats the teacher‘s feedback).
2 Incorporation (i.e. the student incorporates repetition of the correct form in a longer utterance).
3 Self-repair (i.e. the student corrects the error in response to teacher feedback that did not
supply the correct form).
4 Peer-repair (i.e. a student other than the student who produced the error corrects it in response
to teacher feedback).

B Needs repair
1 Acknowledgement (e.g. a student says ‗yes‘ or ‗no‘).
2 Same error (i.e. the student produces the same error again).
3 Different error (i.e. the student fails to correct the original error and in addition produces a
different error).
4 Off target (i.e. the student responds by circumventing the teacher‘s linguistic focus).
5 Hesitation (i.e. the student hesitates in response to the teacher feedback).
6 Partial repair (i.e. the student partly corrects the initial error).
Less important < focus on form > more important


Learner variables



Age                                  Children                       Adolescents                       Adults




Proficiency level                   Beginning                       Intermediate                     Advanced



                                                              Semiliterate, some formal
Educational background    Preliterate, no formal education                                    Literate, well-educated
                                                                      education


Instructional variables



Skill                           Listening, reading                    Speaking                        Writing




Need/use                             Survival                        Vocational                     Professional
The characteristics of L2 learners


Eight to twelve years old will benefit from some grammatical focus only if their age, proficiency

level, and characteristics are taken into account. The following grid is helpful for judging the

importance of grammar for a given group. Young learners are clearly identified on the left side

of the grid, showing that focus on form is less important for them that it is for adolescents and

adults. They are just starting out. Taking risks and making errors are part of their learning

process. Teachers must be tolerant and not try to correct all errors. An overly strong focus on

form will inhibit risk-taking. Children tend to view language in a holistic manner, getting the big

picture, rather than analytically like adults. Adults usually attempt to break up language into little

bits. Little explicit grammar instruction is need for children. Long grammar presentation and

explanations or complicated grammar rules are boring.


Several studies have shown that implicit corrective feedback in pair-work situations is beneficial.

Nicholas, Lightbrown, and Spada 2001 stated that recasts are more salient in pair work,

particularly if only one form is recast consistently. But recast may not always be perceived by

the learners as an attempt to correct their language form but rather as just another way of saying

the same thing. So, as a teacher… we need to make an appropriate method of teaching for

different group of age and also the task that teacher can focus on….

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Student student interaction-writeup

  • 1. Student-student interaction Student-student interaction includes all learning situations where students work in groups to accomplish particular learning objectives and are interdependent for successful completion of the objective. There will be a lot of pair and group work in the classroom, as well as genuine language input from the "real world" for meaningful communication. Learning English is better when the students use it for what it was designed for: communication. Peer interaction may facilitate acquisition through fostering learner production, feedback, and noticing of form. Thus far, much of our attention has focused on understanding classroom communication by looking at the interaction occurs between teachers and students. However, by doing so we have ignored another important dimension of classroom interaction, that is, the interaction that occurs between students themselves, and the impact that student- student interaction has on the patterns of communication, classroom learning, and opportunities for second language acquisition. Many studies (e.g. Barnard, 2002; Pica, 1998; Swain, Brooks & Toralli-Beller, 2002) are done on peer cooperation learning and peer tutoring. Drawing results from these studies, many scholars hold the position that students can obtain benefits from their peers by negotiating meanings or receiving scaffolding information. Such interactions among students do facilitate students‘ second language acquisition because while negotiating with or scaffold to peers, students experience the input enhancement and output production by reformulating their linguistic forms. Reciprocal scaffolding, a method first coined by Holton and Thomas, is a method that involves a group of two or more collaboratively working together. In this situation, the group can
  • 2. learn from each other's experiences and knowledge. The scaffolding is shared by each member and changes constantly as the group work on a task (Holton and Clarke, 2006). According to Vygotsky, students develop higher-level thinking skills when scaffolding occurs with an adult expert or with a peer of higher capabilities (Stone, 1998). Conversely, Piaget believes that students discard their ideas when paired with an adult or student of more expertise (Piaget, 1928). Instead, students should be paired with others who have different perspectives. Conflicts would then take place between students allowing them to think constructively at a higher level. Empirical research with second language supports the contention that engaging in language interactions facilitates second language development. Findings from a study to determine how conversational interaction affects the acquisition of question formation indicate that interaction can increase the pace of acquisition (Mackey, 1999). Task-based learning Researchers have used tasks to understand both the second language learning and teaching processes. Task-based teaching provides learners with opportunities for learner-to-learner interactions that encourage authentic use of language and meaningful communication. The goal of a task is to ―exchange meaning rather than to learn the second language‖ (Ellis, 1999, p. 193). Research suggests that learners produce longer sentences and negotiate meaning more often in pair and group work than in teacher-fronted instruction. Interactive tasks may be most successful when they contain elements that Are new or unfamiliar to the participants; Require learners to exchange information with their partners or group members; Have a specific outcome;
  • 3. Involve details; Center on a problem, especially an ethical one, such as deciding in a small group who should take the last spot in a lifeboat, a nuclear physicist or a pregnant woman; Involve the use of naturally occurring conversation and narrative discourse. (Ellis, 2000) Student-student interaction strategies Leaner-centered learning: This kind of instruction involves the giving over of some "power" in the language learning process to the learners themselves. It also strives to allow for personal creativity and input from the students, as well as taking into account their learning needs and objectives. Cooperative Learning: This concept stresses the "team" like nature of the classroom and emphasizes cooperation as opposed to competition. Students share information and help, and achieve their learning goals as a group. Let‘s talk is one of the 6 proposals to promote language learning in the classroom. a. When learners talk to each other… by Micheal Long and Patricia Porter (1985) learners can offer each other genuine communicative practice b. learner language and proficiency level by George Yule and Doris Macdonald (1990) ‗sender‘ – low-proficiency learners, interactions were longer ‗receiver‘ – low-proficiency learners, almost forced to play a very passive role and said very little c. when pair work comes in by Naomi Storch (2002) When pair work functions collaboratively and learners are in an expert-novice relationship, they can successfully engage in the co-construction of knowledge d. interaction and second language development by Alison Mackey (1999) produced more advanced question forms with native speakers
  • 4. The potential advantages of group activities in language instruction (based on Jacobs 1998) Advantage Comment In the teacher-fronted classroom, the teacher typically 1. The quantity of learner speech can speaks 80% of the time; in group work more students increase. talk for more of the time. In teacher-fronted classrooms, students are cast in a 2. The variety of speech acts can responsive role, but in group work they can perform a increase. wide range of roles, including those involved in the negotiation of meaning. In teacher-fronted lessons teachers shape their 3. There can be more individualization instruction to the needs of the average student but in of instruction. group work the needs of individual students can be attended to. Students feel less nervous speaking in an L2 in front of 4. Anxiety can be reduced. their peers than in front of the whole class. Students will be less competitive when working with 5. Motivation can increase. groups and are more likely to encourage each other. Students are ‗social animals‘ and thus enjoy interacting 6. Enjoyment can increase. with others in groups; in teacher-fronted classrooms student-student interaction is often proscribed. Group activities help students to become independent 7. Independence can increase. learners. Group activities enable students to get to know each 8. Social integration can increase. other. In typical teacher-fronted classrooms students are 9. Students can learn how to work discouraged from helping each other; group work helps together with others. students to learn collaborative skills. Learning is enhanced by group work because students 10. Learning can increase. are willing to take risks and can scaffold each other‘s effort.
  • 5. From these it seems reasonable to conclude that group work can provide the interactional conditions which have been hypothesized to facilitate acquisition more readily than can interaction involving teachers. When we compare adult and children interaction (Kowal & Swain, 1994) Interaction gives opportunities for children to learn language from each other and to practice what they have learned elsewhere. This process of learning affects all levels of language; prosody and sound, vocabulary, syntax, the verb system, social markers and stylistic features, and organized routines. The process of learning through interaction with other children probably is similar in first language to observations in second-language contexts. Children imitate their models, receive corrections, copy predictable routines, figure out meanings from context, and then permute and recombine what they have learned. The opportunity to practice new forms is particularly available in interaction, because in peer contexts children are required to negotiate what they want, to argue for their positions, and to explain ideas. In doing interaction, they have the chance to acquire and practice strategic language used in social relations where adults or more powerful partners do not control them. Unlike children—who are fascinated with learning and willing to engage with learning purely because it‘s fun, new and different—adults like to learn when it makes a difference in their lives. Adults learn languages for many intrinsic reasons (and this may be a reason why they can be so good at learning languages, all things considered). Their self-directedness, life experiences, independence as learners, and motivation to learn provide them with advantages in language learning. Peer interaction has shown that adult learners are able to give each other second language input and opportunities for interaction. It also can provide each other with
  • 6. feedback, in the form of clarification requests and negotiation for meaning. Kowal and Swain (1994) have found that adolescents are able to benefit from pair work activities in which students work together to reconstruct dictated texts. Adult learners usually make word errors, factual errors, syntactic errors and discourse errors in order in the student-student interaction. Then, they give their partners such feedback as repetition, clarification requests, recast and explicit corrections. They are using repetition as feedback, and then perceive their errors while interacting with their partners. According to the types of errors, factual errors usually invite clarification request and word errors usually invite repetition. Adult learners usually do self- repair (self-correction). Self-correction: After the students recognize what is incorrect in his/her response, s/he should be able to correct him/herself. This is the best technique, because the student will remember it better Peer correction: Sometimes the student cannot self-correct (although they should always be given the opportunity). In this case teacher can prompt another student to provide the correction. After doing this, teacher needs to return to the original student to get the self-correction. Teacher needs to be aware of allowing two or three students in the class to become the ones who always provide peer correction. Correction of mistakes should be a task shared by all the students in the class. Sometimes it is a good idea just to let students speak and not worry about mistakes – help them develop some degree of fluency.
  • 7. Incidental focus on form in student-student interaction Conducted by Morris and Taone (2003), first study reveals that incidental focus on form does occur among students‘ interaction, especially between NS (native speaker) students and NNS (nonnative speaker) students. However‘ the results show that NNS students sometimes do not regard their NS peers‘ feedback as helpful input enhancement, but as criticism and even mockery. It seems that in some cases the social dynamics of the language classroom may dramatically alter the way cognitive processes of attention or noticing are deployed on cooperative learning activities in which feedback occurred, and this in turn appears to affect acquisition. While the findings of another research conducted by ZHAO (2005) show that incidental FFREs occur very frequently in student-student interactions and frequency of immediate uptake of these FFEs are very high, which may be indirectly effective for L2 learning? Thus, learners are able to work as knowledge sources to each other in their L2 learning. Therefore, ZHAO suggests that spoken interactions should be encouraged between students themselves. What is FFI?  is an umbrella term for ―any planned or incidental instructional activity that is intended to induce language learners to pay attention to linguistic form‖ (Ellis, 2001)  FFI has been seen as consisting of two broad types: focus on forms and focus on form (Long, 1991, 1996) Focus on forms is characterized by ―division of the language according to lexis, structures, notions or functions, which are selected and sequenced for students to learn in a uniform and incremental way‖ (Klapper & Rees, 2003), and by the general absence of a communicative
  • 8. context. Focus on form in contrast, constitutes attention to linguistic structures within the context of meaning-focused, communicative activities (Ellis, 2001; Long, 1991, 1996). It may involve the negotiation of meaning, as well as the planned or incidental targeting of problematic linguistic items, often in the form of some type of error correction. Although there is still considerable debate regarding the most effective type(s) of FFI, there is some consensus that it is beneficial, and even necessary, for L2 learners (Russell & Spada, 2006). Incidental and planned, whatever shape it takes, focus on form: Does not interrupt the natural flow of a communicative task Is closely linked to students‘ needs to carry out the task Is not done in an isolated fashion Draws the student‘s attention to structures in situations where primary focus is meaningful communication Planned focus on form In light of the teacher‘s past experience and students‘ needs in carrying out a given task, the teacher carefully plans a communicative task that includes some form-focused activities. This type of activity is integrated into the flow of the task. Planned form-focused interventions include: 1. Providing access to resources: Teacher can plan student access to resources such as word and expression banks, posters, and models for speaking and writing tasks. Providing essential language in the form of posters or word banks will help students speak sooner and more accurately. Modeling of speaking activities and functional language will diminish the number of
  • 9. errors. The teacher can model the targeted language alone or with a student or have two students act out the language. 2. Consciousness-raising: Teacher can point out certain structural features. For instance, a teacher uses a story as a lead up to a speaking activity in which students share their daily routines. The teacher highlights the third person singular of the present tense in a story about a pre-teen‘s unusual day by writing on the board a few verbs that correspond to the character‘s actions: gets up, has, goes, travels… The students then reinvest their understanding by exchanging their daily routines. Each student the reports his partner‘s daily routine to the other members of the group. Student: Kevin gets up at 7:00. He has breakfast at 7:30. At 8:00, he takes the bus to school… 3. Monitoring the writing process: Teachers can improve writing accuracy by monitoring their students as they perform the writing process. Students can refer to a writing checklist that outlines the steps before, during, and after the actual writing. Also, throughout the writing process, students should have access the resources: model, word banks, peers and the teacher. 4. Presenting brief explanations or mini-lessons Teachers can plan for very short explanations or mini-lessons when the task requires such an intervention. If possible, these presentations should be visual. Avoid lengthy explanations of rules and complicated exceptions. 5. Interactive grammar activities: Interactive grammar activities allow students to participate in communicative-type activities while practicing grammatical structures. The main focus is on the interaction (production and understanding) of meaning with an eye on the structure being
  • 10. manipulated. These activities are not meant to be used in isolation; rather they should be part of the task. They allow for personalization and student input. Incidental focus on form Incidental focus on form takes place during a communicative task with no prior planning. Teachers decide to intervene when some structural problem arises and has to be attended to in order to carry out the task at hand efficiently. This type of intervention is brief and to the point; the natural progression of the task is not impeded. Incidental form-focused interventions include: 1. Brief impromptu explanations and mini-lessons: Sometimes a brief explanation is needed when a particular aspect of grammar is giving many students problems or impeding their understanding of the message. The teacher can intervene quickly to point out the problem. 2. Answering questions: Student questions on structural signal an emerging awareness and interest on how the English language works. Answer should be short. For instance: Student: Why two feet and not two foot? Teacher: Foot is different; it is an exception. One foot, but two feet. 3. Corrective feedback: Corrective feedback is any indication to learners by teachers, native speakers, or non-native speaker interlocutors that their use of the target language is incorrect (Lighbown and Spada 1999). A teacher´s role in the language classroom is to give feedback on errors, but different corrective feedback has different rates of language uptake. Language learners will benefit from corrective feedback that makes them retrieve the target
  • 11. language form (rather than immediately supplying the correct form). The retrieval and subsequent production stimulates the development of connections in the learner‘s memory. These are the various ways of supplying the students with corrective feedback: Explicit correction: The teacher supplies the correct form to the student and clearly indicates that what was said was incorrect. This is common corrective feedback in large groups of students where the teacher‘s time is limited. Explicit correction has a very low rate of uptake since the student doesn‘t have to self-correct and the mistake could be easily forgotten. Recasts: Often used for grammatical and phonological errors. The teacher implicitly reformulates all or part of the student‘s output. Recasts result in the lowest rate of uptake since they don‘t lead to any self-repair. (Neither recasts nor explicit correction lead to any peer or self-repair because they already provide correct forms to learners). Elicitation: Teacher asks for a reformulation, ‗How do you say that in Spanish?‘ or pausing to allow student to complete teacher‘s utterance. ‘I went on a holiday and...‘ Metalinguistic clues: Teacher provides comments, information, or questions related to student output. For instance, ‗You need past tense‘ Clarification: Teacher uses phrases such as, ‗I don‘t understand‘, or ‗What do you mean?‘ Repetition: Teacher repeats the mistake adjusting intonation to highlight the error. For instance, ‗You buyed the car?‘, ‗You goed yesterday?‘
  • 12. Study Participants Target structure Design Tests Results Carroll and Swain 100 Spanish adult Dative verbs Five groups: Recall production All the treatment (1993) ESL learners (low (A) direct tasks following each groups performed intermediate) metalinguistic feedback session better than the control feedback. (B) explicit group on both recall rejection. (C) recast. tasks. Group A (direct (D) indirect metalinguistic metalinguistic feedback) feedback. (E) control, outperformed the treatment consisted of other groups. two feedback sessions, each followed by recall (i.e. production without feedback) Kim and Mathes 20 Korean adult ESL Dative verb One group receive Controlled production Differences between (2001) learners (high explicit metalinguistic tasks (as in the performance on first beginners and feedback; the other treatment) without and second production intermediate) recasts; feedback was feedback tasks not significant; presented in two differences between sessions one week groups for gains in apart each followed production not by production with no significant. Learners feedback expressed preference for explicit feedback.
  • 13. Leeman (2003) 74 first-year Spanish noun- Four groups Post and delayed post Only groups A and C university learners of adjective agreement performing picture description outperformed the Spanish communicative task tasks control group on any one-on-one with post-test measure. No researcher difference between A (A) recast group and C (B) negative evidence group (source or problem indicated but not corrected) (C) enhanced salience with no feedback (D) control group Lyster (2004) 148 (Grade 5) 10-11 French grammatical Group 1 received Four test FFI-prompt group year-olds in a French gender (articles + form-focused 1. binary choice was only group to immersion nouns) instruction (FFI) + test outperform control programme recasts; Group 2 FFI + 2. text completion group on all 8 1. prompts (including test, (oral measures (PT1 and explicit feedback; production PT2). Group 3 FFI only. tasks) FFI-recast group Control group 3. object outperformed control identification group on 5 out of 8 test measures 4. picture FFI-only group description test outperformed control Two post-tests (PT) group on 4 out of 8 with PT2 measures administered 8 weeks Statically significant after PT1 differences between FFI-recast and FFI- prompt
  • 14. Ellis, Loewen, and 34 intermediate-level Regular past tense –ed Classroom-based 1. oral imitation tests No effect evident for Erlam (2006) adult ESL students in exposure to either – OIT (designed to CF on the immediate private language recasts or measure implicit post-test but the group college metalingustic knowledge) receiving feedback (without 2. untimed metalinguistic correction of the grammatically feedback error) judgment test – outperformed both the UGJT (to measure recast and control explicit knowledge) group on both the 3. metalinguistic delayed OIT and knowledge test (to UGJT. measure explicit knowledge) Sheen (2006b) Low-intermediate Indefinite and definite Classroom-based 1. dictation test Whereas the ESL learners in a articles exposure to recasts 2. written narrative metalinguistic community college in and correction – test correction resulted in the USA metalinguistic 3. error corrections significant gains in explanation in the test learning in both context of performing immediate and post- an oral narrative task tests, the recasts did not Ammar and Spada 64 mixed-proficiency Third-person Classroom-based 1. written passage high-proficiency (2006) learners in three possessive corrective feedback correction task learners benefited Grade 6 intensive determiners (‗his‘ and consisting of recast 2. oral picture equally from recasts ESL classes ‗her‘) and prompts description task and prompts; Low- proficiency learners benefited more from prompts
  • 15. A frequently cited study of corrective feedback is doughty and Varela (1998). A number of other studies have compared the effect of different types of corrective feedback on acquisition. Cathcart and Olsen (1976) found that the ESL learners they investigated liked to be corrected and wanted more correction. Chenoweth et al. (1983) found that learners liked to be corrected not during form-focused activities, but also when they were conversing with NS. This liking for correction contrasts with the warnings of Krashen (1982) that correction is both useless for ACQUISITION, may lead to a negative affective response. Krashen may be partly right, though, as Cathcart and Olsen also reported that when a teacher attempted to provide the kind of correction the learners in their studies said they liked it, it led to communication which the class found undesirable. Other studies have investigated which type of corrective feedback students prefer. Kim and Mathes (2001) and Nagata (1993) reported a clear preference for more EXPLICIT FEEDBACK. Learners, however, are likely to differ in how much, when, and in what way they want to be corrected in specific instructional activities; to date, the studies investigating learners‘ viewpoints about error correction have failed to explore this variation in any depth. There is also a considerable variation among teachers regarding how frequently error treatment takes place. Edmondson (1985) pointed out teachers sometimes correct ‗errors‘ that have not in fact been made! In general, it is teachers (rather than students) who correct errors. Studies of repair in naturally-occurring conversations have shown a preference for self-initiated and self-completed repair. However, in classroom contexts, where, as we have seen, discourse rights are unevenly invested in the teacher, other-initiated and other-completed repair are predominant. Other pattern of repair can also occur; Kasper (1985) found that the trouble sources were identified by the
  • 16. teacher but repair by learners or by other learners. In the content phase of the same lesson; self- initiated and self-completed repair was evident, although the learners were inclined to appeal for assistance from the teacher. However, as with corrective feedback strategies, variation in the rate and nature of uptake has been found. Types of uptake following corrective feedback (from Lyster and Ranta 1997) A Repair 1 Repetition (i.e. the student repeats the teacher‘s feedback). 2 Incorporation (i.e. the student incorporates repetition of the correct form in a longer utterance). 3 Self-repair (i.e. the student corrects the error in response to teacher feedback that did not supply the correct form). 4 Peer-repair (i.e. a student other than the student who produced the error corrects it in response to teacher feedback). B Needs repair 1 Acknowledgement (e.g. a student says ‗yes‘ or ‗no‘). 2 Same error (i.e. the student produces the same error again). 3 Different error (i.e. the student fails to correct the original error and in addition produces a different error). 4 Off target (i.e. the student responds by circumventing the teacher‘s linguistic focus). 5 Hesitation (i.e. the student hesitates in response to the teacher feedback). 6 Partial repair (i.e. the student partly corrects the initial error).
  • 17. Less important < focus on form > more important Learner variables Age Children Adolescents Adults Proficiency level Beginning Intermediate Advanced Semiliterate, some formal Educational background Preliterate, no formal education Literate, well-educated education Instructional variables Skill Listening, reading Speaking Writing Need/use Survival Vocational Professional
  • 18. The characteristics of L2 learners Eight to twelve years old will benefit from some grammatical focus only if their age, proficiency level, and characteristics are taken into account. The following grid is helpful for judging the importance of grammar for a given group. Young learners are clearly identified on the left side of the grid, showing that focus on form is less important for them that it is for adolescents and adults. They are just starting out. Taking risks and making errors are part of their learning process. Teachers must be tolerant and not try to correct all errors. An overly strong focus on form will inhibit risk-taking. Children tend to view language in a holistic manner, getting the big picture, rather than analytically like adults. Adults usually attempt to break up language into little bits. Little explicit grammar instruction is need for children. Long grammar presentation and explanations or complicated grammar rules are boring. Several studies have shown that implicit corrective feedback in pair-work situations is beneficial. Nicholas, Lightbrown, and Spada 2001 stated that recasts are more salient in pair work, particularly if only one form is recast consistently. But recast may not always be perceived by the learners as an attempt to correct their language form but rather as just another way of saying the same thing. So, as a teacher… we need to make an appropriate method of teaching for different group of age and also the task that teacher can focus on….