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Peer reviewedWieczorek, Joseph A. – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1991
The applied linguist, who most commonly uses interlanguage analysis for nonstandard language forms, and the language teacher, who relies heavily on error analysis, each need to learn the usefulness and viability of the other method in his own professional context. Examples focus on the written preterit form in Spanish. (44 references) (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Classroom Techniques, Error Analysis (Language), Error Correction
Peer reviewedMcCormick, Sandra – Reading Research Quarterly, 1992
Determines the incidence, distribution, and relationships of various error types when disabled readers responded to inference questions based on narrative and expository selections. Finds greater proportions of errors in three of the seven categories: integration of text and prior information, ability to write intended responses, and recall of…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Grade 5, Intermediate Grades, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedCichocki, W.; And Others – Language Learning, 1993
An error analysis based on phonetic transcription of French utterances by native speakers of Cantonese yielded a scale of difficulty for word-initial and word-final consonants. The Markedness Differential Hypothesis explained some errors. Evidence also pointed to interaction of language acquisition with markedness reversals. (35 references) (CNP)
Descriptors: Cantonese, Chinese, Consonants, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedKepner, Christine Goring – Modern Language Journal, 1991
Comparison of the effects of error- versus message-oriented written feedback on second-language students' essays found that error corrections and rule reminders did not significantly improve students' written accuracy or enhance the ideational quality of their writing, whereas message-related comments promoted writing proficiency. (63 references)…
Descriptors: College Students, Error Analysis (Language), Essays, Feedback
Peer reviewedKim, Anna C. – Research and Teaching in Developmental Education, 1998
Describes a case study of a second-language student's writing process and development over the course of two years. Provides both a qualitative and quantitative perspective to second-language writing development. Presents a rationale for analyzing errors and syntactic maturity to better understand strategies employed by students when writing in a…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Case Studies, Error Analysis (Language), Higher Education
Park, Kyung-Ja; Nakano, Michiko – Journal of Japan-Korea Association of Applied Linguistics, 1998
This investigation encompassed a full-scale experiment for both Japanese and Korean university students and looked at the following: the role of grammaticality-judgment tasks (GJT) in second-language acquisition; the learners' behaviors when they were asked to do GJT; and the reasons why the learners made the wrong grammatical judgments.…
Descriptors: College Students, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Foreign Countries
Nickel, Gerhard – IRAL, 1998
Examines the nature of interlanguage as it affects second-language learning and teaching, focusing on the language transfer phenomenon, fossilization, how error analysis and error correction can be improved through understanding of interlanguage, native speaker norms, international varieties of English, and the contribution of interlanguage to…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Interlanguage
Peer reviewedDavies, Ian R.; Corbett, Greville G.; McGurk, Harry; MacDermid, Catriona – Journal of Child Language, 1998
Investigated Russian children's color-term acquisition, testing one theory of color universals using acquisition order as a basicness measure and determining whether two terms for blue were genuinely basic. Testing on color-term listing, production, and comprehension indicated that color-term acquisition order agreed with the theory. The two blue…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Color, Comprehension
Lennon, Paul – IRAL, 1996
Focuses on the errors made in lexical verb choice in speech by a small group of advanced learners of English. Findings indicate that while these learners may have a broad outline of verb meaning, their knowledge is hazy concerning contextual and collocational restrictions. Advanced learners may require detailed classroom vocabulary work on simple…
Descriptors: Advanced Courses, College Students, Databases, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedRifkin, Benjamin – Modern Language Journal, 1995
This study sought to establish a hierarchy of error gravity for different types of common errors in American learners' spoken Russian by surveying 75 native and nonnative speakers of Russian, including teachers and nonteachers. Grammatical accuracy was considered one of the most important issues in learners' spoken Russian by all the respondents.…
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Grammar, Language Attitudes, Language Teachers
Peer reviewedNagata, Noriko – CALICO Journal, 1995
Presents an intelligent computer-assisted language instruction (CALI) system called "Nihongo-CALI" (Japanese Computer Assisted Language Instruction), which employs natural language processing to provide immediate, grammatically sophisticated feedback to students in an interactive environment. The study compares the efficacy of this type…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, College Students, Computer Assisted Instruction, Error Analysis (Language)
Peer reviewedLargy, Pierre; Fayol, Michel – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1996
Focuses on understanding the mechanisms that underlie the production of homophone confusions in writing. The article overviews five experiments demonstrating that the homophone effect can be experimentally induced in French adults. Findings are interpreted in the framework of an activation model. (45 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Control Groups, Error Analysis (Language), French, Language Processing
Peer reviewedWong, Mei Yin; Underwood, Geoffrey – Journal of Research in Reading, 1996
Investigates whether 11-year-old children in Singapore, from English Dominant or English Non-Dominant backgrounds, read better orally when words were presented in list or text. Finds that readers with less exposure to English relied more on contextual information than more experienced readers, and that reading miscues varied according to whether…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Comparative Analysis, Error Analysis (Language), Family Environment
Peer reviewedCook, V. J. – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1997
Compares spelling of adult second-language English users with native children and adult first-language users, using data from 1993 NFER survey of L1 children, from a UK university English-as-a-Foreign Language test for overseas students and work by overseas students in England. Comparison showed similar error rates and distribution of errors…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedTalamas, Adrienne; Kroll, Judith F.; Dufour, Robert – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1999
Examined why adults learning second languages make frequent errors in lexical form. More and less fluent bilinguals in English and Spanish performed a translation recognition task in which they had to decide whether the second of two words was the correct translation of the first. Less fluent participants experienced more interference for…
Descriptors: Adults, Bilingualism, Cognitive Processes, English


