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Peer reviewedDagneaux, Estelle; Denness, Sharon; Granger, Sylviane – System, 1998
Introduces the technique of computer-aided error analysis, a new approach to analyzing learner errors in second-language learning. Data used to demonstrate the technique consist of a 150,000-word corpus of English written by intermediate and advanced-level French-speaking learners. The study concludes that error analysis is worthwhile,…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Computer Assisted Instruction, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedMason, Lucia; Santi, Marina – Environmental Education Research, 1998
Investigates fifth-grade students' conceptual changes toward the greenhouse effect and global warming due to sociocognitive interaction developed in small and large group discussion in an authentic classroom context during an environmental education unit. Classroom discussions led the children to integrate new scientific knowledge into their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education
Peer reviewedSwain, Merrill – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1996
Focuses on research addressing how to integrate content and language teaching, with specific reference to studies conducted in French immersion classrooms. Findings indicate that teachers should structure activities to incorporate a focus on form into content teaching through teacher-led instruction and collaborative tasks with peers. (21…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Error Correction, Foreign Countries, French
Peer reviewedBarksdale-Ladd, Mary Alice; King, James R. – Reading Psychology, 2000
Shows teachers who self-reported they were developing constructivist approaches to classroom instruction had contradictory beliefs about dealing with reading and writing errors, and about addressing errors with more- and less-able readers and writers. Shows the teachers were convinced that students' inaccurate constructions of knowledge should be…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Constructivism (Learning), Elementary Secondary Education, Error Correction
Lo, Jia-Jiunn; Wanga, Hui-Mei; Yehb, Shiou-Wen – Computers and Education, 2004
Although Computer-Assisted Language Learning (CALL) provides EFL (English as a Foreign Language) students a dynamic environment for English learning, many courses in current markets still emphasize the presentation of domain knowledge but neglect how the students truly interact with the lessons. This article describes the development of…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Hypermedia, Remedial Instruction, English (Second Language)
Lee, Icy – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2004
Error correction research has focused mostly on whether teachers should correct errors in student writing and how they should go about it. Much less has been done to ascertain L2 writing teachers' perceptions and practices as well as students' beliefs and attitudes regarding error feedback. The present investigation seeks to explore the existing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Surveys, Student Surveys, Writing Teachers
Kolic-Vehovec, Svjetlana – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2002
The effect of the self-monitoring training on reading accuracy and fluency of second-grade poor readers was examined. The participants were assigned in one experimental and three control groups. The experimental group was reinforced with token-economy for self-correction and fluent reading. One control group practiced reading without feedback, the…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Reading Comprehension, Reading Fluency
Greatorex, Jackie; Bell, John – Research in Education, 2004
For many years there has been concern about whether sex bias exists in various assessments. A literature review reveals little if any sex bias in UK national assessments at GCSE. Oxford, Cambridge and RSA examiners, for three case study subjects, completed the Bem Sex Role Inventory, a self-report inventory that measures the extent to which…
Descriptors: Sex Role, Examiners, Sex Fairness, Gender Bias
Saeed, Aziz Thabit – Indian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2007
This paper investigates the application of some of the most frequently used writing error correction techniques to see the extent to which this application takes learners' cognitive and affective characteristics into account. After showing how unlearned application of these styles could be discouraging and/or damaging to students, the paper…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Error Correction, Cognitive Style, Affective Behavior
Plonsky, Luke; Mills, Susana V. – Applied Language Learning, 2006
This study was designed to measure and bridge the mismatch in perceptions of error correction (EC) between a teacher and his students. The participants were 32 students in two intact, beginner-level Spanish classes at a mid-size university in the Southwest of the US. The treatment consisted of two learner training (LT) sessions (see Reiss, 1981)…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Spanish
Rajagopalan, Kanavillil – Applied Linguistics, 2006
The objective of this response article is to think through some of what I see as the far-reaching implications of a recent paper by Eric Hauser (2005) entitled "Coding 'corrective recasts': the maintenance of meaning and more fundamental problems". Hauser makes a compelling, empirically-backed case for his contention that, contrary to widespread…
Descriptors: Language Research, Second Language Learning, Language Usage, English (Second Language)
Loewen, Shawn; Erlam, Rosemary – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2006
Zo eplicates in a synchronous learning environment a study that looked at the effectiveness of providing two types of corrective feedback to students in the classroom. Elementary learners of L2 English (N = 31) completed two communicative tasks, during which time they received either recasts (implicit feedback) or metalinguistic information…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Feedback, Instructional Effectiveness
Narayan, Paresh Kumar; Smyth, Russell – Education Economics, 2006
This paper employs cointegration and error-correction modelling to test the causal relationship between real income, real investment and tertiary education using data for the People's Republic of China over the period 1952-1999. To proxy tertiary education we use higher education enrolments and higher education graduates in alternative empirical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Income, Investment
Ammar, Ahlem; Spada, Nina – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2006
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…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Feedback (Response), Prompting, Language Proficiency
Benson, Valerie A. – 1995
This paper describes one teacher's use of a videotaped mystery series to stimulate students' entries in dialogue journals. Students are shown an episode of the mystery in class and are then asked to write a personal response to it. The aim of the journals is to enhance student confidence and writing skills. Results of an analysis of the journal…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, Dialog Journals, English (Second Language)

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