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ACCURACY AND CORRECTING MISTAKES

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Title: That s right! The place of accuracy and correction in the teaching of English Author: Penny Last modified by: Penny Created Date: 6/2/2005 7:25:59 AM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ACCURACY AND CORRECTING MISTAKES


1
ACCURACY AND CORRECTING MISTAKES
  • Penny Ur
  • ETAI Mini-conference, 2011
  • Ohalo College, Katzrin

2
A. How important is it to be accurate?
3
What do you think?
  • Would you agree or disagree with the following
    statements?
  • Its not important for students to spell English
    words correctly, as long as their meaning is
    clear
  • Its not important for students to pronounce like
    a native speaker, as long as they are easily
    comprehensible.
  • Its not important for students to use correct
    grammar, as long as they are getting their
    message across
  • If you answered disagree to any of the above
    can you say why?

4
Accuracy is important because
  • From the point of view of the hearer/reader,
    inaccuracy, even if it doesnt affect meaning, is
  • distracting
  • uncomfortable
  • may lower respect for the speaker/writer

5
And because
  • from the point of view of the speaker/writer,
    inaccuracy may
  • lower self-respect as a language user
  • lower prestige in eyes of others

6
And because
  • from the point of view of the teacher,
    professionalism means teaching the language as
    best we can, not compromising on careless or
    unacceptable usage.

7
Achieving accuracy(Prevention is better than
cure)
8
Research indicates that to achieve accuracy,
learners need...
  • communicative language use
  • some explicit discussion of form or rules
  • practice

9
There are various theories about how accuracy is
achieved
  1. Comprehensible Input (Krashen, 1982)
  2. Rule-based practice (traditional, e.g. Murphy,
    1985)
  3. Consciousness raising (Ellis, 2001)
  4. Task-based learning (Skehan, 1996)

10
Probably the optimal answer is a combination of
these
  • Communicative tasks, with time out for focus on
    form, including practice exercises
  • Rule explanation, leading into both mechanical
    and communicative practice
  • But also time for
  • Communication on its own
  • Focus on form on its own
  • Language play (songs, chants, rhymes)

11
Communication ( accuracy)Task-based instruction
  • The basis of the lesson is a communicative task.
  • We may teach bits of grammar / vocabulary /
    spelling before, during or after but the focus
    is always on the communicative task.
  • Example

12
A communicative task
  • Discuss how far you agree with the following
    statements
  • The teacher should correct me when I make a
    mistake.
  • Agree .Disagree
  • The teacher should ask other students to correct
    me when I make a mistake.
  • Agree .Disagree
  • The teacher should get me to correct myself.
  • Agree .Disagree
  • The teacher should make me rewrite essays after
    shes corrected them.
  • Agree .Disagree
  • The teacher should not only correct me, but also
    explain why what I said was wrong.
  • Agree .Disagree

13
  • Meaning-focused
  • Pair/group work
  • Full-class summary and discussion
  • Form-focused
  • modal should
  • object / reflexive pronouns (correct me/myself)

14
2. Accuracy ( communication)
  • We start with a grammatical rule or set of
    vocabulary items, or spelling rule or whatever
  • We do some mechanical exercises, then progress
    to more communicative work.
  • We assess the learning of the language items
    through a test.

15
Practice activities move from attending to
accuracy towards attending to fluency
  • form-focused-----------------------?meaning-focuse
    d
  • make sure
    make sure you its correct---------------------
    -------------?communicate
  • controlled----------------------------------------
    -----?free
  • decontextualized ---------------------?contextuali
    zed

16
ExampleThe Present Perfect
  • Conventional form-focus
  • Nina is looking everywhere but she cant find her
    keys. She (lose them)
  • Peter weighs only 50 kilos. Last month, he
    weighed 60. He (be on a diet)

17
ExampleThe Present Perfect
  • 1. Focus on meaning, but controlled form
  • Find someone who...
  • ...has slept in a cave.____________
    ____________
  • ... has eaten caviar ____________
    _____________
  • ... has visited India ___________ ____________
  • ... has been in a car accident ________
    _________

18
  • 2. Focus on meaning, semi-controlled form
    (sentence completion)
  • Since this time last year, I have .
  • 3. Focus on meaning, free sentence-making
  • Think of a situation (using the present perfect)
    that would produce the reaction
  • 1. Oh dear! 2. Wonderful! 3. What a surprise!
  • 4. Congratulations! 5. Help!
    6. What a relief!
  • 7. What a pity 8. Thank you! 9. What a
    pity!
  • 10. Im sorry! 11. Oh no!
    12. (sigh)

19
4. Focus on meaning, full paragraph writing
Today is picture B. What has happened since
yesterday (picture A)?
20
  • 5. Focus on communication
  • Group discussion
  • You are a committee of experts who have to
    interview candidates for a specific course or
    profession.
  • Your candidate is requesting
  • to become a marriage counsellor
  • to become a kindergarten teacher
  • to join the police force
  • to work on a summer camp for teenagers
  • to become an ambulance driver

21
3. Communication only
  • Just getting learners to use the language for
    understanding or conveying messages.
  • No following language work.

22
  • Receptively
  • listening to stories,
  • listening and responding,
  • reading stories,
  • reading and responding,
  • watching movies
  • Productively
  • talking, communication games
  • exchanging information,
  • creative or transactional writing

23
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24
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25
4. Accuracy only
  • Talking about the language or doing
    activities that focus on getting it right
  • Examples
  • Tip of the day isolated language points.
  • Grammar explanations
  • Learning lists of vocabulary for a test
  • Dictations
  • Drills
  • Pronunciation work

26
5. Language play
  • Language work based on learning things by heart
    and performing or reciting
  • May or may not be communicative
  • The learning is based on chunks.
  • Examples chants, dialogues, songs

27
Interim conclusions
  • If we wish our learners to become both accurate
    and fluent in English, we need to provide
  • explicit and implicit teaching/learning
  • meaning- and form-focus
  • unthinking and cognitively demanding language
    production
  • serious transactional language and language
    play.

28
And we need to organize these within a balanced
methodology that includes different teaching
processes because
  • Learners are different
  • Language items are different

29
C. CORRECTION WHENPREVENTION HASNT WORKED!
30
Various issues
  1. Does it help?
  2. What different kinds of correction are there? And
    which is the most effective?
  3. What are learners preferences?
  4. When should we NOT correct?

31
1. Does it help?
  • Truscott (1999, 1996) claims that correction in
    both oral and written work does not work
  • teachers correct inconsistently, sometimes
    wrongly
  • students are sometimes hurt by being corrected
  • students may not take corrections seriously
  • correction may interfere with fluency
  • learners do not learn from the correction

32
But
  • teacher intuitions
  • learners themselves claim it does help (Harmer,
    2005)
  • there is some empirical evidence in support of
    the hypothesis that learners do learn from being
    corrected (Doughty and Varela, 1998)

33
2. What different kinds of correction are there?
And which is the most effective?
  • Which types of correction, on the whole, lead to
    better uptake? (Lyster and Ranta, 1997 Lyster,
    1998)

34
Types of correction Recast Elicitation Clarificat
ion request Metalinguistic feedback Explicit
correction Repetition
Frequency of use 55 14 11 8 7 5
Uptake 18 46 28 45 36 31
35
RESULTS
  • Simple recast was most often used, but least
    uptake!
  • Recasts may not be perceived as correction at
    all!
  • The best results are gained from corrective
    feedback some negotiation.

36
Further thoughts
  • Within communicative interaction, we try to make
    our corrections unobtrusive because we dont want
    to disturb the flow so we use quick
    recasts, and dont demand self-correction
  • But many of these may not be perceived as
    corrections, or even noticed, so may be a waste
    of time!
  • If we correct, we need to make sure uptake has
    occurred, even if this slows things down a bit.

37
What are learners preferences?
When I make a mistake in oral work I think it's very good / good / not very good / bad if the teacher... Very Good Good Not Very Good Bad
... doesn't correct me at all.
tells me there's a mistake, but doesn't tell me what it is, so I have to correct myself.
..tells me a mistake and also tells me what the correct form should be.
tells me there's a mistake, tells me the correct form, and makes me repeat it.
tells me there's a mistake, and gets another student to correct me.
corrects my mistake and also explains why it was wrong.
38
What are learners preferences?
When I make a mistake in written work I think it's very good / good / not very good / bad if the teacher... Very Good Good Not Very Good Bad
doesn't correct me at all.
indicates there's a mistake, but doesn't tell me what it is.
indicates there's a mistake, and gives me a hint what kind of mistake it is.
Indicates there's a mistake and writes what the correct form should be.
Corrects me in any of the ways indicated above, and doesn't make me rewrite.
Corrects me in any of the ways indicated above, and makes me rewrite.
39
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40
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41
Main points
  • Learners want to be corrected.
  • Learners feel corrective feedback is valuable
    (Harmer, 2005).
  • Learners prefer explicit correction (but maybe
    not adults and more advanced learners, Harmer,
    2005).
  • Learners understand the value of repeating /
    rewriting the correct form.
  • Learners do not, on the whole, like to be
    corrected by peers.

42
When should we NOT correct?
  • Perhaps we should not correct when a learner is
    focusing on communicating?
  • Because
  • non-communicative, inauthentic!
  • not appropriate to the aims of the task.
  • distracting, disturbing

43
But
  • Some evidence that learners want to be corrected
    at the moment they make the mistake (Harmer,
    2005)
  • We need to balance the benefit against the
    damage which is more important
  • preserving the fluent process and communicative
    nature of the interaction?
  • or
  • providing corrective feedback where it is needed
    to help learners improve their accuracy?

44
No easy answer to this one!
  • But it is clear that
  • there is no absolute rule about when not to
    correct
  • our decision will involve a lot of different
    considerations specific to the learner
  • the importance of encouraging fluency
  • the importance of encouraging accuracy
  • the confidence and self-image of the learner
  • the sheer number of mistakes

45
D. Summary and conclusions
46
Accuracy-oriented as well as communicative
teaching of language
  • We need to do all we can to make sure that as
    students are learning new language they learn it
    correctly so we should provide opportunities for
    students to
  • learn rules
  • talk about the language (language awareness),
    including contrast with L1
  • practise accurate as well as meaningful
    production
  • learn chunks by heart
  • as well as lots of communicative work
  • exposure to (correct) spoken and written language
  • communicative speaking and writing tasks

47
Effective corrective feedback
  • If after all this learners are still making
    mistakes, corrective feedback can help improve
    accuracy.
  • Corrective feedback may be provided during
    communicative tasks.
  • But recasts on their own are probably
    ineffective.
  • The most effective corrective feedback occurs
    when learners actively participate in negotiation
    of the correction, to make sure that there is
    uptake.

48
Thank you for listening!
  • pennyur_at_gmail.com
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