Author/Authors :
Shirkhani، Servat نويسنده , , Tajeddin، Zia نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Various studies have confirmed the influential role of corrective feedback (CF) in the
development of different linguistic skills and components. However, little, if any,
research has been conducted on comparing types of linguistic errors treated by teachers
through CF. To bridge this gap, this study sought to investigate the linguistic errors
addressed and the types of CF provided by teachers. To this end, the classes of 40
teachers teaching at the intermediate level were audio-recorded for two successive
sessions. The detailed analysis of around 128 hours of classroom interactions showed
that explicit correction was the most frequent CF type, accounting for 48.5 percent of all
CF types provided, and recast was the second most frequently used CF type, constituting
29.5 percent of all CF types. All the other CF types (i.e. request for clarification,
confirmation check, repetition, metalinguistic feedback, elicitation, and multiple
feedback) constituted 22 percent of the CF. Repetition was the least frequently used CF
type, amounting to 0.66 percent of the CF given by teachers. As to the linguistic focus
of CF, pronunciation errors were found to be the mostly noticed target for teachers‟ CF,
constituting 47 percent of all errors addressed, while vocabulary was the least frequently
addressed linguistic target, accounting for 17.5 percent of all errors. The study suggests
that teachers prefer explicit corrective strategies over implicit ones and that they provide
CF mainly to correct pronunciations errors. The study suggests that there is a need for
change in the types of CF teachers use and the relative attention they assign to different
linguistic error types they treat through CF.
Keywords :
Corrective feedback , Types of feedback , Explicit correction , Implicit correction , Linguistic feedback , Recast