Canadian Journal of Applied Linguistics
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Published By Consortium Erudit

1920-1818

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 120-144
Author(s):  
Phuong-Thao Duong ◽  
Maribel Montero Perez ◽  
Piet Desmet ◽  
Elke Peters

This paper reports on a quasi-experimental study that explored the differential effects of input- and output-based tasks on L2 vocabulary learning. The study adopted a pretest- posttest within-participants design, with sixty Vietnamese EFL university students. Participants in the experimental group completed four input and four output tasks in an online learning environment. The target items (ten single words and ten compounds) were counterbalanced across the tasks. The study measured vocabulary gains at four levels of sensitivity: spontaneous use of the target items, form recall, meaning recall and meaning recognition. The analyses showed that the input-based tasks resulted in higher vocabulary gains at the meaning recall level, whereas the output-based tasks resulted in better scores at the form recall level. No difference was found in the spontaneous use and meaning recognition tests.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 186-206
Author(s):  
Won Kim

Despite a wide-spread pedagogical interest and scholarly conviction in the possibilities of educational drama for creating more contextually-situated, engaging, and multi-modal L2 learning experiences (Piazzoli, 2018; Stinson & Winston, 2011), there is scarce empirical evidence concerning what is actually taking place interactionally in L2 classrooms for adults. This article presents a bottom-up microanalysis of classroom interaction in an ESL class in Canada with over 16 adult learners designed to explore the potential and actual impact of educational drama on classroom discourse and students’ L2 learning experiences. Using a discourse analytic approach (Antaki & Widdicombe, 1998; Goffman, 1981), I analyze the dynamic identity work of the class participants. The article presents empirically-grounded research findings that illustrate instances of interaction in and through which drama-based ESL pedagogy contributes to the development of dialogic and democratic classroom discourse and fosters a transformative empowering interpersonal space (Cummins, 2011).  


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. i-iv
Author(s):  
Michael Rodgers ◽  
Eva Kartchava

  


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 98-119
Author(s):  
Paul Pauwels

Deliberate vocabulary study has mostly been studied within a strictly experimental framework of learning and memorization. More ecologically valid investigations embedded in existing study contexts have been rare. This study fits into the latter paradigm, investigating how students attempted to learn 90 English words over a period of three weeks and tracking their efforts via study logs and intermediate receptive and productive tests, with final testing five weeks after the study period. The results are in line with findings from earlier research. Study logs showed students mainly relied on different kinds of repetition and retrieval. Selective attention for specific items was an important predictor for short-term learning, and sufficient spacing was the most important predictor for longer-term learning. From a pedagogical point of view, a point of attention is that students mostly practised retrieval after first repeating, making retrieval less difficult and creating an impression of knowledge.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 61-78
Author(s):  
Kathleen Whissell-Turner ◽  
Anila Fejzo

By the end of primary school, students are confronted with expository texts known for their high proportion of domain-specific academic vocabulary words. These words usually comprise Greek or Latin roots in their internal structure. Recent findings showed that knowledge of Greek and Latin roots is related to reading comprehension. However, no study has investigated such a relationship in a francophone context. Therefore, the present study sought to measure Greek and Latin roots’ relation to reading comprehension among French 6th graders. To do so, 40 participants were administrated an experimental task on Greek and Latin roots knowledge and a reading comprehension standardized subset test. Variables related to reading comprehension, such as morphological awareness, vocabulary breadth, word reading fluency, oral comprehension, and working memory were also measured. Results showed that knowledge of Greek and Latin roots significantly predicted variation of reading comprehension. This paper discusses scientific and educational implications of this finding.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-29
Author(s):  
Suzie Beaulieu ◽  
Leif Michael French ◽  
Javier Bejarano ◽  
Kristin Reinke
Keyword(s):  

Les programmes de formation linguistique à l’intention de personnes immigrantes adultes font partie intégrante des initiatives politiques et éducatives mises de l’avant par plusieurs pays pour favoriser leur intégration à la société d’accueil. Cependant, peu d’attention empirique leur a été accordée pour observer comment s’y opère le développement langagier. Pour combler cette lacune, cette étude exploratoire et descriptive documente, pour la première fois, les habiletés orales de personnes immigrantes terminant une formation linguistique financée par un gouvernement local. Nous avons examiné la compétence globale à l’oral, l’aisance perçue et la compréhensibilité en français d’immigrants adultes (N = 31) dans la ville de Québec inscrits au dernier niveau du Programme d’intégration linguistique pour les immigrants (PILI). Le niveau de compétence orale globale a été obtenu en utilisant une tâche d'imitation orale (EIT) (Tracy-Ventura et coll., 2014). Pour mesurer l’aisance perçue et la compréhensibilité des participants, nous avons conçu deux tâches monologiques qui imposaient différentes contraintes linguistiques et cognitives au niveau du traitement de l’information. Les échantillons de paroles ont été évalués par 13 juges experts francophones, en utilisant une échelle de Likert à 9 points. Les résultats montrent que les habiletés orales des finissants du PILI sont très hétérogènes, et que ce sont les personnes qui avaient étudié le français pendant plusieurs années avant d’immigrer qui ont généralement de meilleurs résultats sur les trois construits.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 79-97
Author(s):  
Gina Louise Harrison

A collection of cognitive, linguistic, and spelling measures were administered to third- grade English L1 and L2 learners. To capture formative assessments of children’s developing mental graphemic representations (MGRs), spelling errors in isolation were subjected to analysis across three metrics: (1) Phonological constrained; (2) Visual- Orthographic; and (3) Correct Letter Sequences. There were no group differences on the cognitive or spelling accuracy measures, but L1 learners achieved higher scores than L2 on linguistic measures of vocabulary and syntactic knowledge. Analyses across the spelling metrics indicated that both L1 and L2 learners drew more heavily on their knowledge of graphophonemic rules and positional constraints in pronunciation for spelling. However, the contribution of underlying cognitive and linguistic resources to spelling differed as a function of scoring system and language group. Across spelling metrics, linguistic predictors (vocabulary and syntactic knowledge) accounted for more variance in L1 than L2 learners. The results are discussed in relation to conceptualization of spelling as an integral link between oral and written language in literacy development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 30-60
Author(s):  
Louisette Emirkanian ◽  
Leslie Redmond ◽  
Adel Jebali

The objective of this study is to measure the influence of L1 verb argument structure, as well as verb meaning, on the mastery of dative clitics in French as a second language for a group of Anglophone learners. More specifically, we focus on ditransitive structures. While French and English share the V NP PP structure, English also has a double-object structure, V NP NP, for a subset of verbs. The results of our study show that L1 argument structure influences the mastery of dative clitics in French, especially for verbs that only accept the double-object structure in English. Further, the behaviour of our participants with verbs that accept the dative alternation led us to conduct a follow-up study. The findings show that verb meaning also influences performance with dative clitics, but this effect cannot be explained by L1 influence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 145-165
Author(s):  
Mohammad Falhasiri

An underexplored question, and one with potentially far-reaching implications for the practice of written corrective feedback (WCF), is whether to mark a wide range of errors (comprehensive feedback) or to focus on a few error types (focused feedback) in learners’ L2 writing. Despite limited evidence, it is argued that comprehensive WCF is unsystematic, inconsistent, confusing, and intimidating; can cognitively and affectively overwhelm L2 learners and may dilute attention to WCF. This paper aims to first respond to and call into question these and other arguments against comprehensive WCF, and then it puts forward some arguments against focused WCF. In doing so, it draws on dominant SLA theories and empirical research findings to lend support to the rebuttals and arguments. Some concrete suggestions are made to help teachers fully exploit the potentials of a comprehensive feedback approach.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 166-185
Author(s):  
Pakize Uludag ◽  
Kim McDonough ◽  
Caroline Payant

This study compared English L2 writers’ (N = 111) performance on an integrated writing task from the Canadian Academic English Language (CAEL) Assessment under three prewriting planning conditions: required self-timed planning required fixed time planning, and suggested (i.e., optional) planning. The participants’ integrated essays were scored according to the CAEL writing bands by raters at Paragon Testing Inc. The effect of planning condition on the participants' planning time, writing time, and integrated writing scores were analyzed using MANOVA. The student interviews were analyzed using thematic content analysis. The results indicated that planning time was the only variable impacted by planning condition, with students in the required self-timed planning condition taking more time to plan before beginning to write. Students’ perceptions about prewriting planning are discussed in terms of implications for the teaching and assessment of L2 integrated writing.


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