Experienced and Novice Language Teachers’ Beliefs about Corrective Feedback
author
Abstract:
The present study attempts to uncover language teachers’ beliefs about oral corrective feedback. It also explores the role of teachers’ experiences in their choice of error correction techniques. To achieve the purpose of the study, 137 foreign language teachers were asked to fill out the developed questionnaire and follow-up interviewed were conducted with 10 teachers, five novice and experienced teachers. The obtained results were analyzed both quantitatively and qualitatively. The results of descriptive analysis indicated that didactic recast, elicitation and conversational recast were among the most preferred oral correction strategies employed by the teachers. Teachers had different opinions and reasons regarding their favorite corrective feedback type. To examine whether teachers’ experiences affect their choice of a particular oral corrective feedback independent sample t-tests were run. It was found that the experienced teachers preferred conversational and didactic recast and metalinguistic cues whereas the novice teachers held more optimistic views about explicit correction, elicitation, metalinguistic explanations, clarification request, repetition, and paralinguistic feedback. The results of the follow-up interviews showed that novice teachers regarded direct corrective feedbacks as more effective since they are more noticeable and therefore can assist students to learn from their errors. Conversely, experienced teachers gave more importance to learners’ affects and emotions, considering emotions and learning to be interweaved and negative emotions hinder learning. Teacher education programs should therefore assist both novice and experienced practitioners to examine their own belief system and to realize the nature of errors and corrective feedback, diversity of contexts, individual differences in learning.
similar resources
EFL TEACHERS’ BELIEFS ABOUT ORAL CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK AND THEIR FEEDBACK-PROVIDING PRACTICES ACROSS LEARNERS’ PROFICIENCY LEVELS
The present study investigated EFL teachers’ beliefs about oral corrective feedback (CF), their CF-provision practices across elementary and intermediate levels, and their beliefs-practices correspondence. To this end, the researchers conducted a semi-structured interview with the teachers and went on an overall forty-hour observation of their classrooms across both levels. The findings reveale...
full textIranian EFL Experienced vs. Novice Teachers’ Beliefs Regarding Learner Autonomy
Learner autonomy has been described as the ultimate objective in many language teaching programs since the third quarter of the twentieth century and educators have highlighted the significant role of promoting learner autonomy in the process of language learning and teaching. However, only limited number of studies has been awarded to what leaner autonomy mean to teachers. This study addressed...
full textefl teachers’ beliefs about oral corrective feedback and their feedback-providing practices across learners’ proficiency levels
the present study investigated efl teachers’ beliefs about oral corrective feedback (cf), their cf-provision practices across elementary and intermediate levels, and their beliefs-practices correspondence. to this end, the researchers conducted a semi-structured interview with the teachers and went on an overall forty-hour observation of their classrooms across both levels. the findings reveale...
full textTeacher Language Awareness from the Procedural Perspective: The Case of Novice versus Experienced EFL Teachers
Despite the abundance of research on ELT teachers, little is known about teacher language awareness (TLA) with focus on its impact on pedagogical practice in the EFL context. To fill this gap, an in-depth study was conducted to examine the procedural dimension of TLA among eight EFL teachers with different teaching experiences (novice versus experienced) related to teaching grammar at Iranian l...
full text: examining l2 teachers’ corrective feedback types in relation to learners’ uptake, proficiency levels, and context types
abstract this study investigates the teachers’ correction of students’ spoken errors of linguistic forms in efl classes, aiming at (a) examining the relationship between the learners’ proficiency level and the provision of corrective feedback types, (b) exploring the extent to which teachers’ use of different corrective feedback types is related to the immediate types of context in which err...
Native and Non-Native Teachers’ Changing Beliefs about Teaching English as an International Language
In view of the paucity of evidence on teachers’ conceptions of teaching English an International Language (EIL), the present study used panel discussions to investigate the beliefs of 10 native and 10 non-native English-speaking teachers about their roles in teaching English in the EIL contexts and the perceptions of EIL. The findings revealed that some aspects of teachers’ beliefs about their ...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 6 issue 4
pages 64- 83
publication date 2018-06-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023