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By:
 Frank A Morris
Elaine E. Tarone
   Long and Robinson (1995)-acquisition of L2
    benefits most when L2 learners focus not on
    the linguistic form or communicative
    meaning alone but on BOTH.

   The situation will occur in a variety of
    classroom activities, including when the
    learner’s conversational partner provide
    either implicit or explicit corrective feedback.
   Recast
    ◦ A listener CORRECT reformulation
    ◦ is one form of corrective feedback,
    ◦ Example: Yesterday, Ahmad go to the supermarket.
    ◦             Yesterday, Ahmad went to the
      supermarket.
    ◦ It has no explicit indication of an error.
    ◦ Ambiguous
    ◦ The interlocutor's supplying recast does not
      guarantee a learner’s attentional shift to form-
      depends on the learner.
   Long and Robinson (1998) call for studies in
    SLA that explore the causal relationship
    between Focus on Form (FonF), noticing and
    learning.

   Crucial factor: Noticing or learner awareness
    of the feedback.

   Learner needs:
    ◦ to notice and accurately identify corrective feedback
      received.
    ◦ to be able to compare form produced to the form
      provided in the recasts. (“cognitive comparison”)
      (Doughty & Williams, 1998)
   How to determine whether noticing has
    occurred?
   Long & Robinson (1998) suggest debriefing
    questionnaires.
   Stimulated recall interviews (Macay, Gass, &
    McDonough ,2000)
   Both are limited as they depend on the
    learner’s ability to reconstruct thought
    processes after they have occurred.
   If learning process is implicit, therefore this
    kind of measure is mismatched with regard to
    the process as it intended to measure.

   Swain & Lapkin (1998) suggest that the tools
    used with an analysis of the language-related
    episodes occurring naturally in the interaction
    and assumed the researcher to pinpoint
    moments of attention to form concurrently.
   How to identify the effectiveness of recasts?
    ◦ Need to establish whether learning has resulted
      from the feedback.

    ◦ Uptake (learner’s repetition of the recast) is not an
      evidence of learning. (Lyster & Ranta, 1997)

    ◦ Mackay & Philip (1998); Morris (2002a) Learning
      may take place without uptake.

    ◦ Suggested instrument to be used: longer term
      measurement of learner’s acquisition of items on
      which they have received corrective feedback, post-
      test and delayed post-test. (Long & Robinson,
      1998, p.40)
   To understand how a person notice recast we
    need to understand these factors:

   The speech style a speaker uses. Labov
    (1970)

   Speech style:
    ◦ Attention to language form
    ◦ Attention to meaning

   Important cognitive mechanism that
    influences learner’s variable attempts to be
    accurate when using L2.
   Bell (1984) Attention is not solely cognitive. It
    is a construct that bridges the cognitive and
    the social.
   What causes attention to shift?
    ◦ Speaker’s responsiveness to the social relationships
      among speakers.
    ◦ Social context influences L2 leaner’s ability to
      perceive accurately the corrective feedback
      provided.
   How do these different contexts affect
    learner’s ability to accurately perceive
    recasts?
    ◦ Nicholas et al. (2001) Classroom contexts make it
      hard to identify recasts clearly as focused on form
      as opposed to content.

    ◦ If classroom is focused on language form, learners
      seem better to identify recasts as corrective
      feedback better.

    ◦ In general, more information on the contextual
      factors that need to be identify to facilitate the
      effectiveness of recasts.
   It appears that in some of the factors there
    exist social relationships between students.

   2 major social groupings emerged.
    ◦ One with extensive usage of L2 in and outside class
    ◦ One used L2 strictly for academic purposes

   These groups reluctant to work in pairs, if so
    the proficient one will exert power and
    ignored their partner’s contributions in
    problem solving interactions.
   1. Does interpersonal conflict and negative
    social interaction take place in pair work in
    the class?




   2. Do these negative social dynamics interfere
    with the L2 of pair work participants?
   Classroom context
    ◦ Data came from larger study (Morris, 2002a),
      accelerated beginning Spanish foreign language
      course at a large Midwestern university.

    ◦ Meeting 3 days per week, with 50 minutes
      interaction each meeting.
   Participants
    ◦ 10 particiapnts.
    ◦ Survey given to gather personal information.

   Data Collection Procedures
    ◦ 6th class period
      Pretest
      Form pairs
      Posttest
    ◦ 13th class period
      Delayed posttest
    ◦ A week after
      Stimulated recall session
   Tasks for pair work
    ◦ Information gap activity, jigsaw task (20 minutes)
    ◦ Picture no. 1-15 La rutina de Esteban
    ◦ 15 Obligatory contexts, one for each picture
    ◦ To produce third person singular form of present
      tense verb
    ◦ Participants received a set of numbered pictures
      that represent Esteban’s routine, with each dyad
      member received half the pictures.
    ◦ Set facing each other in two desks fitted together
      with 12-inch screen
    ◦ The collaborative work was tape-recorded,
      transcribe and coded by the first author and an
      additional rater
   Stimulated recall session
    ◦ Introspective method.

    ◦ Learner’s comments were tape-recorded and
      transcribed.

    ◦ Comments on:
      How they accurately perceive their peer’s feedback in
       response to their non-target like productions.
      Social structure of the classroom
   Target structure
    ◦ Spanish third-person singular form of present tense
      indicative verbs.
    ◦ Uses for actions, states, processes and events
    ◦ Involves irregular, stem-changing and reflexive
      verbs-challenging for English speakers.
   Pre-, Post- and Delayed Posttests
    ◦ Semi-spontaneous
    ◦ 15 pictures-15 verbs using the target structure
    ◦ 3 different versions of each of the 15 obligatory
      context
    ◦ Random selection for pre-, post- and delayed
      posttest.
   Data Analysis Procedures
    ◦ Interactional discourse while doing the pair work
      was transcribe and coded for errors in the target
      form.

    ◦ Also coded for type of corrective feedback.
      Explicit correction
      Recasts
      Negotiation
   Research question 1
    ◦ 3 pairs
    ◦ Did show evidence, to varying degrees of
      interpersonal conflict and negative attributions of
      one another.
   Research question 2
    ◦ Provided feedback coupled with overt negative
      attributions or was immediately followed by
      interpersonal conflict does interfere with acquisition
      of recast item.
   Bell (1984) attention learners paid to speech
    form would be influence by the their social
    relationship with their interlocutors.

   Findings of this research support this.

   The current study also discover thatL2
    leaner’s ability to perceive implicit negative
    feedback provided seem to be affected by
    expectations they had based on their social
    relationships with those same peers.
   L2 learners need to understand feedback as it
    was intended. (“accurate perception”).

   Each of the recasts in this study did provide
    useful linguistic information.

   Recasts can deliver dual message-linguistic
    and social.

   If learners accurately perceive negative
    personal attitudes at the social level, their
    ability to accurately perceive at the linguistic
    level may diminish.
   Limited no. of participants.

   Examine small area of language structure.
   Social dynamics in the L2 classroom affects
    learner’s ability to perceive accurately
    linguistic information provided in recasts in
    conversational interactions with their NNS
    peers.
   Inability to identify resulted in their failure to
    acquire of these recast forms.
   Teachers and SLA researchers should not
    generalized the impact of L2 acquisition in a
    pair work.
Week 10 recasts

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Week 10 recasts

  • 1. By: Frank A Morris Elaine E. Tarone
  • 2. Long and Robinson (1995)-acquisition of L2 benefits most when L2 learners focus not on the linguistic form or communicative meaning alone but on BOTH.  The situation will occur in a variety of classroom activities, including when the learner’s conversational partner provide either implicit or explicit corrective feedback.
  • 3. Recast ◦ A listener CORRECT reformulation ◦ is one form of corrective feedback, ◦ Example: Yesterday, Ahmad go to the supermarket. ◦ Yesterday, Ahmad went to the supermarket. ◦ It has no explicit indication of an error. ◦ Ambiguous ◦ The interlocutor's supplying recast does not guarantee a learner’s attentional shift to form- depends on the learner.
  • 4. Long and Robinson (1998) call for studies in SLA that explore the causal relationship between Focus on Form (FonF), noticing and learning.  Crucial factor: Noticing or learner awareness of the feedback.  Learner needs: ◦ to notice and accurately identify corrective feedback received. ◦ to be able to compare form produced to the form provided in the recasts. (“cognitive comparison”) (Doughty & Williams, 1998)
  • 5. How to determine whether noticing has occurred?  Long & Robinson (1998) suggest debriefing questionnaires.  Stimulated recall interviews (Macay, Gass, & McDonough ,2000)  Both are limited as they depend on the learner’s ability to reconstruct thought processes after they have occurred.
  • 6. If learning process is implicit, therefore this kind of measure is mismatched with regard to the process as it intended to measure.  Swain & Lapkin (1998) suggest that the tools used with an analysis of the language-related episodes occurring naturally in the interaction and assumed the researcher to pinpoint moments of attention to form concurrently.
  • 7. How to identify the effectiveness of recasts? ◦ Need to establish whether learning has resulted from the feedback. ◦ Uptake (learner’s repetition of the recast) is not an evidence of learning. (Lyster & Ranta, 1997) ◦ Mackay & Philip (1998); Morris (2002a) Learning may take place without uptake. ◦ Suggested instrument to be used: longer term measurement of learner’s acquisition of items on which they have received corrective feedback, post- test and delayed post-test. (Long & Robinson, 1998, p.40)
  • 8. To understand how a person notice recast we need to understand these factors:  The speech style a speaker uses. Labov (1970)  Speech style: ◦ Attention to language form ◦ Attention to meaning  Important cognitive mechanism that influences learner’s variable attempts to be accurate when using L2.
  • 9. Bell (1984) Attention is not solely cognitive. It is a construct that bridges the cognitive and the social.  What causes attention to shift? ◦ Speaker’s responsiveness to the social relationships among speakers. ◦ Social context influences L2 leaner’s ability to perceive accurately the corrective feedback provided.
  • 10. How do these different contexts affect learner’s ability to accurately perceive recasts? ◦ Nicholas et al. (2001) Classroom contexts make it hard to identify recasts clearly as focused on form as opposed to content. ◦ If classroom is focused on language form, learners seem better to identify recasts as corrective feedback better. ◦ In general, more information on the contextual factors that need to be identify to facilitate the effectiveness of recasts.
  • 11. It appears that in some of the factors there exist social relationships between students.  2 major social groupings emerged. ◦ One with extensive usage of L2 in and outside class ◦ One used L2 strictly for academic purposes  These groups reluctant to work in pairs, if so the proficient one will exert power and ignored their partner’s contributions in problem solving interactions.
  • 12. 1. Does interpersonal conflict and negative social interaction take place in pair work in the class?  2. Do these negative social dynamics interfere with the L2 of pair work participants?
  • 13. Classroom context ◦ Data came from larger study (Morris, 2002a), accelerated beginning Spanish foreign language course at a large Midwestern university. ◦ Meeting 3 days per week, with 50 minutes interaction each meeting.
  • 14. Participants ◦ 10 particiapnts. ◦ Survey given to gather personal information.  Data Collection Procedures ◦ 6th class period  Pretest  Form pairs  Posttest ◦ 13th class period  Delayed posttest ◦ A week after  Stimulated recall session
  • 15. Tasks for pair work ◦ Information gap activity, jigsaw task (20 minutes) ◦ Picture no. 1-15 La rutina de Esteban ◦ 15 Obligatory contexts, one for each picture ◦ To produce third person singular form of present tense verb ◦ Participants received a set of numbered pictures that represent Esteban’s routine, with each dyad member received half the pictures. ◦ Set facing each other in two desks fitted together with 12-inch screen ◦ The collaborative work was tape-recorded, transcribe and coded by the first author and an additional rater
  • 16. Stimulated recall session ◦ Introspective method. ◦ Learner’s comments were tape-recorded and transcribed. ◦ Comments on:  How they accurately perceive their peer’s feedback in response to their non-target like productions.  Social structure of the classroom
  • 17. Target structure ◦ Spanish third-person singular form of present tense indicative verbs. ◦ Uses for actions, states, processes and events ◦ Involves irregular, stem-changing and reflexive verbs-challenging for English speakers.
  • 18. Pre-, Post- and Delayed Posttests ◦ Semi-spontaneous ◦ 15 pictures-15 verbs using the target structure ◦ 3 different versions of each of the 15 obligatory context ◦ Random selection for pre-, post- and delayed posttest.
  • 19. Data Analysis Procedures ◦ Interactional discourse while doing the pair work was transcribe and coded for errors in the target form. ◦ Also coded for type of corrective feedback.  Explicit correction  Recasts  Negotiation
  • 20. Research question 1 ◦ 3 pairs ◦ Did show evidence, to varying degrees of interpersonal conflict and negative attributions of one another.  Research question 2 ◦ Provided feedback coupled with overt negative attributions or was immediately followed by interpersonal conflict does interfere with acquisition of recast item.
  • 21. Bell (1984) attention learners paid to speech form would be influence by the their social relationship with their interlocutors.  Findings of this research support this.  The current study also discover thatL2 leaner’s ability to perceive implicit negative feedback provided seem to be affected by expectations they had based on their social relationships with those same peers.
  • 22. L2 learners need to understand feedback as it was intended. (“accurate perception”).  Each of the recasts in this study did provide useful linguistic information.  Recasts can deliver dual message-linguistic and social.  If learners accurately perceive negative personal attitudes at the social level, their ability to accurately perceive at the linguistic level may diminish.
  • 23. Limited no. of participants.  Examine small area of language structure.
  • 24. Social dynamics in the L2 classroom affects learner’s ability to perceive accurately linguistic information provided in recasts in conversational interactions with their NNS peers.  Inability to identify resulted in their failure to acquire of these recast forms.  Teachers and SLA researchers should not generalized the impact of L2 acquisition in a pair work.