Article published In: Research on EFL learning by young children in Spain
Edited by María del Pilar García Mayo
[Language Teaching for Young Learners 3:2] 2021
► pp. 275–299
Give me a second chance
Task repetition and collaborative writing with child EFL learners
Published online: 27 July 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/ltyl.20009.laz
https://doi.org/10.1075/ltyl.20009.laz
Abstract
Collaborative writing (CW) and task repetition have been claimed to aid language acquisition. Students produce
better texts when writing with a peer and their drafts improve if they write the same composition twice (same task repetition,
STR). However, little is known about young learners, about the effects of combining both constructs and, finally, about a more
common type of repetition in language lessons: repeating the same procedure with different content (procedural task repetition,
PTR). This study analyses the effects of CW (vs. individual writing) and of PTR (vs. STR). To do so, the writings of 59 Spanish
young learners (aged 11) of English divided into four groups were analysed. Two of these groups (N = 9,
N = 10) wrote a composition individually while two (N = 20, N = 20) wrote a
composition in pairs. A week later, one individual (N = 9) and one collaborative group (N = 20)
wrote the same composition again (STR) while the other individual (N = 10) and collaborative
(N = 20) groups wrote a new composition following the same procedure (PTR). Unlike findings from adult learners,
our students’ drafts show no differences that could be attributed to the collaboration. However, some improvements upon repetition
were hinted at, with students in the STR group obtaining greater holistic rates.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Literature background
- 2.1Collaborative writing
- 2.2Task repetition
- 3.The study
- 3.1Research questions and hypothesis
- 3.2Participants and setting
- 3.3Procedure
- 3.4Coding and analysis
- 4.Results
- 4.1Quantitative analyses: Complexity
- 4.2Quantitative analyses: Fluency
- 4.3Quantitative analyses: Accuracy
- 4.4Qualitative analysis
- 5.Discussion and conclusions
- Acknowledgements
References
References (50)
Abrams, Z., & Byrd, D. R. (2017). The
effects of meaning-focused pre-tasks on beginning-level L2 writing in German: An exploratory
study. Language Teaching
Research, 21(4), 434–453.
Adams, R., & Ross-Feldman, J. (2008). Does
writing influence learner attention to form? In D. Belcher & A. Hirvela (Eds.), The
oral-literate connection. Perspectives on L2 speaking, writing, and other media
interactions (pp. 243–265). Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press.
Amiryousefi, M. (2016). The
differential effects of two types of task repetition on the complexity, accuracy, and fluency in computer-mediated L2 written
production: A focus on computer anxiety. Computer Assisted Language
Learning, 29(5), 1052–1068.
Bitchener, J., & Storch, N. (2016). Written
corrective feedback for L2
development. Bristol: Multilingual Matters.
Bui, G., Ahmadian, M. J., & Hunter, A. M. (2018). Spacing
effects on repeated L2 task
performance. System, 811, 1–13.
Bygate, M. (1996). Effects
of task repetition: Appraising the developing language of
learners. In J. Willis & D. Willis (Eds.), Challenge
and change in language
teaching (pp. 136–146). Oxford: Macmillan Heinemann.
(2018). Introduction. In M. Bygate (Ed.), Learning
language through task
repetition (pp. 1–25). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Cambridge English. (2014). Young
learners. Young learners English tests (YLE). Sample Papers. Flyers. Practice Test
3. (p. 3). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
. (2014). Young
learners. Young learners English tests (YLE). Sample Papers.
Flyers. Volume 11 (p. 36). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Coyle, Y., & Roca de Larios, J. (2014). Exploring
the role played by error correction and models on children’s reported noticing and output production in a L2 writing
task. Studies in Second Language
Acquisition, 36(3), 451–485.
Fernández-Dobao, A. F. (2012). Collaborative
writing tasks in the L2 classroom: Comparing group, pair, and Individuals work. Journal of
Second Language
Writing 21(1), 40–58.
García Mayo, M. P. (2002). Interaction
in advanced EFL pedagogy: A comparison of form focused activities. International Journal of
Educational
Research, 371, 323–341.
García Mayo, M. P., & Azkarai, A. (2016). EFL
task-based interaction: Does task modality impact on language-related
episodes? In M. Sato & S. Ballinger (Eds.), Peer
interaction and second language learning: Research agenda and pedagogical
potential (pp. 241–266). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
García Mayo, M. P., & Imaz Agirre, A. (2016). Task
repetition and its impact on EFL children’s negotiation of meaning strategies and pair dynamics: An exploratory
study. Language Learning
Journal, 441, 451–466.
García Mayo, M. P., Imaz Agirre, A., & Azkarai, A. (2018). Task
repetition effects on CAF in EFL child task-based
interaction. In M. J. Ahmadian & M. P. García Mayo (Eds.), Recent
perspectives on task-based language learning and
teaching (pp. 11–28). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Hidalgo, M. A., & García Mayo, M. P. (2019). The
influence of task repetition type on young EFL learners’ attention to form. Language Teaching
Research.
Hidalgo, M. A., & Lázaro-Ibarrola, A. (2020). Task
repetition and collaborative writing by EFL children: Beyond CAF measures. Studies in Second
Language Learning and
Teaching, 10(3), 501–522.
Kim, Y. (2013). Effects
of pretask modeling on attention to form and question development. TESOL
Quarterly, 471, 8–35.
Kim, Y., & Tracy-Ventura, N. (2013). The
role of task repetition in L2 performance development: What needs to be repeated during task-based
interaction? System, 411, 829–840.
Kormos, J. (2014). Differences
across modalities of performance: An investigation of linguistic and discourse complexity in narrative
tasks. In H. Byrnes & R. M. Manchón (Eds.), Task-based
language learning – Insights from and for L2
writing (pp. 193–216). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Kormos, J., & Trebits, A. (2012). The
role of task complexity, modality and aptitude in narrative task performance. Language
Learning, 62(2), 439–472.
Lázaro-Ibarrola, A., & Hidalgo, M. A. (2017). Procedural
repetition in task-based interaction among young EFL learners: Does it make a
difference? International Journal of Applied
Linguistics, 168(2), 183–202.
Long, M. H. (1983). Native
speaker/non-native speaker conversation and the negotiation of comprehensible input. Applied
Linguistics, 4(2), 126–141.
Mackey, A. (2007). Conversational
interaction in second language acquisition: A collection of empirical
studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Mackey, A., & Gass, S. M. (2006). Pushing
the methodological boundaries in interaction research: An introduction to the special
issue. Studies in Second Language
Acquisition, 281, 169–178.
Manchón, R. M. (2011). Writing
to learn the language: Issues in theory and research. In R. M. Manchón (Ed.), Learning-to-write
and writing-to-learn in an additional
language (pp. 61–82). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
(2014). The
distinctive nature of task repetition in writing: Implications for theory, research, and
pedagogy. Estudios de Lingüística Inglesa
Aplicada, 141, 13–41.
McDonough, K., & García Fuentes, C. (2015). The
effect of writing task and task conditions on Colombian EFL learners’ language use. TESL Canada
Journal, 321, 67–79.
McDonough, K., de Vleeschauwer, J., & Crawford, W. (2018). Comparing
the quality of collaborative writing, collaborative prewriting, and individual texts in a Thai EFL
context. System, 741, 109–120.
Nassaji, H., & Tian, J. (2010). Collaborative
and individual output tasks and their effects on learning English phrasal verbs. Language
Teaching
Research, 14(4), 397–419.
Nitta, R., & Baba, K. (2014). Task
repetition and L2 writing development: A longitudinal study from a dynamic systems
perspective. In H. Byrnes & R. M. Manchón (Eds.), Task-based
language learning: Insights to and from
writing (pp. 107–136). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Patanasorn, C. (2010). Effects
of procedural content and task repetition on accuracy and fluency in an EFL
context (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff.
Pica, T., Kang, H., & Sauro, S. (2006). Information
gap tasks: Their multiple roles and contributions to interaction research methodology. Studies
in Second Language
Acquisition, 281, 301–338.
Pinter, A. (2006). Verbal
evidence of task related strategies: Child versus adult
interactions. System, 241, 615–630.
(2007). Some
benefits of peer-peer interaction: 10 year-old children practicing with a communicative
task. Language Teaching
Research, 11(2), 189–207.
Shehadeh, A. (2011). Effects
and student perceptions of collaborative writing in L2. Journal of Second Language
Writing, 201, 286–305.
Storch, N. (2005). Collaborative
writing: Product, process, and students’ reflections. Journal of Second Language
Writing, 141, 153–173.
(2007). Investigating
the merits of pair work on a text editing task in ESL classes. Language Teaching
Research, 11(2), 143–159.
(2011). Collaborative
writing in L2 contexts: Processes, outcomes, and future directions. Annual Review of Applied
Linguistics, 311, 275–288.
(2016). Collaborative
writing. In R. M. Manchón & P. Matsuda (Eds.), Handbook
of second and foreign language
writing (pp. 387–406). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Storch, N., & Wigglesworth, G. (2007). Writing
tasks: Comparing individual and collaborative writing. In M. P. García Mayo (Ed.), Investigating
tasks in formal language
learning (pp. 157–177). Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.
Swain, M. (2005). The
output hypothesis: Theory and research. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook
of research in second language teaching and
learning (pp. 471–484). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Swales, J. M., & Feak, C. B. (1994). Academic
writing for graduate students: Essential tasks and skills. A course for nonnative speakers of
English. Ann Arbor MI: University of Michigan Press.
Teng, M. F. (2017). The
effectiveness of group, pair and individual output tasks on learning phrasal verbs. The
Language Learning
Journal, 48(2), 187–200.
Vasylets, O., Gilabert, R., & Manchón, R. M. (2017). The
effects of mode and task complexity on second language production. Language
Learning, 671, 394–430.
Wigglesworth, G., & Storch, N. (2009). Pair
versus individual writing: Effects on fluency, complexity and accuracy. Language
Testing, 26(3), 445–466.
Cited by (10)
Cited by ten other publications
García Mayo, María del Pilar
2025. Task-based language learning among children in an EFL context. In Broadening the Horizon of TBLT [Task-Based Language Teaching, 17], ► pp. 82 ff.
Niu, Ruiying, Wenjie Luo & Xiaoye You
Rogers, John & Peilin Li
Roothooft, Hanne, Amparo Lázaro-Ibarrola & Bram Bulté
Garcés-Manzanera, Aitor
Lázaro-Ibarrola, Amparo & María Ángeles Hidalgo
Calzada, Asier & María del Pilar García Mayo
2023. Do task repetition and pretask focus on form instruction impact
collaborative writing performance?. In L2 Collaborative Writing in Diverse Learning Contexts [Language Learning & Language Teaching, 59], ► pp. 80 ff.
Lázaro-Ibarrola, Amparo
Vasylets, Olena, Raquel Criado & Joaquín Gris-Roca
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 27 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
