Oral corrective feedback: use and impact on junior secondary level students
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Date
2019-08Publisher
BRAC UniversityAuthor
Tasnuva, SamiraMetadata
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The study attempted to find out how junior secondary level English language teachers utilize
their corrective feedback verbally in classroom settings. To fulfill that purpose, the research was
conducted in 3 Bengali medium schools of Dhaka city. It tried to identify the types and the
timing of oral corrective feedback that were used by English language teachers. Besides, it tried
to find out the impact of oral corrective feedback on the performance of the students. In the
study, 174 students and 6 English language teachers participated and two part survey
questionnaires were used to get information from them. To collect research data, classrooms
were observed too. The findings of the study revealed that junior secondary level English
language teachers always corrected their students in class by mostly using ‘explicit correction’
and ‘recast’. ‘Meta-linguistic feedback’ was also utilized less frequently. Moreover, teachers
mostly used ‘delayed feedback’ in terms of timing which meant they corrected the students at the
end of their erroneous utterances. In the case of impact, the positive aspects of oral corrective
feedback influenced students more than the negative ones.
Description
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English, 2019.Department
Department of English and Humanities, Brac UniversityType
Collections
- Thesis, M.A. (English) [121]