The effect of focused and unfocused indirect written corrective feedback on EFL learners' accuracy in new pieces of writing
Document Type
Article
Source of Publication
System
Publication Date
10-1-2015
Abstract
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. The study examined the effectiveness of focused as opposed to unfocused written corrective feedback (WCF) on the accuracy of weak verbs and the total accuracy of all structures in new pieces of writing. Undertaken in a Taiwanese college context, the design of the study was quasi-experimental, comprising a pre-test, treatment, immediate post-test and delayed post-test. Three writing tasks were used for the tests and two different types of WCF represented the treatment: focused indirect WCF and unfocused indirect WCF. A control group received no WCF. The findings for the analysis of weak verb accuracy and total accuracy were remarkably similar. In both cases, parametric tests demonstrated the focused and unfocused indirect WCF groups not only outperformed the control groups in the immediate post-test but also in the delayed post-test. It is suggested that learners in both the focused indirect WCF group and the unfocused indirect WCF group were unable to notice the target structure or notice it with metalinguistic understanding following a single episode of WCF; instead, the indirect WCF likely served as a signal for the learners to push their output in their overall accuracy when writing new pieces of writing in the post-tests.
DOI Link
ISSN
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Volume
53
First Page
24
Last Page
34
Disciplines
Education
Keywords
Accuracy, Focused feedback, Indirect feedback, SLA, Unfocused feedback, Written corrective feedback
Scopus ID
Recommended Citation
Frear, David and Chiu, Yi Hui, "The effect of focused and unfocused indirect written corrective feedback on EFL learners' accuracy in new pieces of writing" (2015). All Works. 3407.
https://zuscholars.zu.ac.ae/works/3407
Indexed in Scopus
yes
Open Access
no