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Thursday, January 31, 2019

Language Acquisition and Corrective Feedback :: Education, foreign languages

Corrective feedback has been in the focus of question in SLA during the last years and has become an important part in bookmans linguistic process acquisition. Ellis (1994) referred to feedback as the breeding given to learners which they can handling to alteration their interlanguage. He also distinguishes two different kinds of feedback, convinced(p) and negative feedback positive feedback has to do with the information that indicates that a hypothesis is incorrect. Ellis also mentioned some opposite forms of feedback such as direct or correction, indirect or the orison for conformation, on-record which supplies direct negative consequence, and off-record which supplies indirect negative feedback the negative evidence or feedback has to do with information about ungrammaticality.If corrective feedback is sufficiently great to enable learners to notice the gap between their interlanguage forms and butt language forms, the resulting cognitive comparison may trigger a desta bilization and restructuring of the target language grammar (Ellis, 1994).Chaudron (1988) has pointed out that corrective feedback incorporates different layers of meaning. Chaudron consider the treatment of erroneous belief is simply any teacher behavior following an illusion that minimally attempts to inform the learner the fact of error and finally there is the authentic correction which succeeds in modifying the learners interlanguage so that the error is eliminated from further production.In the view of Chaudroncited in El Tatawy (2002) the information learners get from corrective feedback allows them to confirm, disconfirm, and possibly modify the hypothetical, transitional rules of their developing grammars. Lightbown and Spada (1999) cited in El Tatawy (2002) define corrective feedback as Any indication to the learners that their use of the target language is incorrect. Schachter (1991) cited in El Tatawy (2001) stated that the feedback can be explicit, that is grammatica l explanation or overt error correction, or implicit. unuttered correction can be done using the following techniques tick checks, repetitions, recasts, clarification requests, silence, and even facial expressions that express confusion. (Schachter (1991) cited in El Tatawy (2001))Tedick and Gortari (1998) retell different types of corrective feedback1. Explicit correction. When the teacher provides direct corrective feedback to the learner after s/he has made any mistakeS ... the coyote, the bison and the gr...grane. (phonological error)T And the crane. We say crane.2. Recast. The teacher indirectly provides corrective feedback to the learners, but tries to develop the utterance.S You is a very good teacher. (grammatical error)T You are a good teacher. Good.3. Clarification request. The teacher uses some phrases such as apologia me?

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