NOTICING AND TEXT-BASED CHAT

This study examined the capacity of text-based online chat to promote learners’ noticing of their problematic language productions and of the interactional feedback from their interlocutors. In this study, twelve ESL learners formed six mixed-proficiency dyads. The same dyads worked on two spot-the-...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chun Lai, Yong Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Foreign Language Resource Center 2006-09-01
Series:Language Learning and Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://llt.msu.edu/vol10num3/pdf/laizhao.pdf
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Summary:This study examined the capacity of text-based online chat to promote learners’ noticing of their problematic language productions and of the interactional feedback from their interlocutors. In this study, twelve ESL learners formed six mixed-proficiency dyads. The same dyads worked on two spot-the-difference tasks, one via online chat and the other through face-to-face conversation. Stimulated recall sessions were held subsequently to identify instances of noticing. It was found that text-based online chat promotes noticing more than face-to-face conversations, especially in terms of learners’ noticing of their own linguistic mistakes.
ISSN:1094-3501