Focus on form in the uptake, stability and transfer of relative clause use across tasks
Published online: 12 September 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/task.00028.che
https://doi.org/10.1075/task.00028.che
Abstract
This study compares the effectiveness of two instructional interventions on the uptake and transfer of relative
clauses (RCs) during picture-based oral narrative tasks: (1) Focus on Form (FonF), which involves incidental focus on language
problems as they arise naturally in learners’ language during meaning-focused task-based communication, and (2) Focus on Forms
(FonFs), which involves explicit attention to specific forms felt by the teacher or materials planner to be natural, useful or
essential to the performance of a task (Long, M. (2015). Task-based
language teaching and second language acquisition. Wiley & Sons.). A third treatment, focus on
meaning (FonM), which involved no form-focused instruction at all, provided a baseline to compare the relative effects of these
two instructional interventions. Thirty-six Chinese ESL learners participated in the study. The study employed a pre-test,
post-test, and delayed post-test design. Results revealed that FonM did not promote uptake or transfer of RCs, and that FonFs and
FonF had comparable effects on the uptake, stability, and transfer of RCs to novel versions of oral narrative tasks. The study
demonstrates that: (1) form-focused instruction was essential in promoting uptake and transfer of challenging task-relevant
language; and (2) FonF was at least as effective as FonFs for promoting Chinese ESL learners’ use and acquisition of task-relevant
structures. The results of the study provide support for the use of FonF in instruction as consistent with the principles of
task-based language teaching.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Tasks in language teaching
- Relative clauses (RCs)
- The present study
- Methods
- Design
- Participants
- Materials
- Procedures
- Pre-tests
- Treatments
- FonFs treatment
- FonF treatment
- FonM treatment
- Immediate post-tests
- Delayed post-tests
- Analysis
- Results
- RC tokens
- RC types
- Accurate RC use
- Discussion
References
References (42)
Abdolmanafi, S. (2012). Effects
of form-focused instruction on the learning of relative clauses. The Journal of Language and
Linguistic
Studies, 8(1), 192–210. [URL]
Cai, J. (2020). Research
on the main conflicts in College English Education in the new era. China University
Teaching, (1), 51–55.
Carless, D. (2009). Revisiting
the TBLT versus P-P-P Debate: Voices from Hong Kong. Asian Journal of English Language
Teaching, 191, 49–66.
Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical
power analysis for the behavioural sciences (2nd ed.). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
DeKeyser, R. (1998). Beyond
focus on form: Cognitive perspectives on learning and practicing second language grammar. Focus
on form in classroom second language
acquisition, 281, 42–63.
(2020). Skill
acquisition theory. In B. VanPatten, G. D. Keating & S. Wulff (Eds.), Theories
in second language acquisition: An introduction (3rd
ed., pp. 83–104). Routledge.
Deng, C., & Carless, D. (2009). The
communicativeness of activities in a task-based innovation in Guangdong, China. Asian Journal
of English Language
Teaching, 191, 113–134.
Diessel, H., & Tomasello, M. (2005). A
new look at the acquisition of relative
clauses. Language, 811, 882–906. [URL]
Ellis, R. (2005). Planning
and task-based research: Theory and research. In R. Ellis (Ed.), Planning
and task-performance in an
L2 (pp. 3–34). John Benjamins.
Ellis, R., Skehan, P., Li, S., Shintani, N., & Lambert, C. (2020). Task-based
language teaching: Theory and practice. Cambridge University Press.
Givon, T. (1985). Function,
structure and language acquisition. In D. Slobin (Ed.) The
crosslinguistic study of language acquisition, Vol. 2: Theoretical
issues (pp. 1005–1027). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Harris, J., & Leeming, P. (2022). The
impact of teaching approach on growth in L2 proficiency and self-efficacy: A longitudinal classroom-based study of TBLT and
PPP. Journal of Second Language
Studies, 5(1), 114–143.
Lambert, C. (2019). Task-induced
second language development: A micro-genetic study. In E. Wen & M. Ahmadian, M. (Eds). Researching
L2 task performance and
pedagogy (pp. 279–302). John Benjamins.
(2023). Practice
in Task-Based Language Teaching. In Suzuki, Y. (Ed.). Practice
and automatization in second language research: Theory, methods, and pedagogical
implications (pp. 144–159). Routledge.
Lambert, C., Aubrey, S., & Leeming, P. (2021). Pre-task
preparation and second language speech processing. TESOL
Quarterly 55(2): 331–365.
Lambert, C., & Engler, S. (2007). Information
distribution and goal orientation in second language task
design. In P. del García Mayo (Ed.) Investigating
tasks in formal language
learning (pp. 27–43). Multilingual Matters.
Lambert, C., Kormos, J., & Minn, D. (2017). Task
repetition and second language speech processing. Studies in Second Language
Acquisition, 39(1), 167–196.
Lambert, C., & Minn, D. (2007). Personal
investment in L2 task design and learning: A case study of two Japanese learners of
English. ELIA: Estudios de Lingüística Inglesa
Aplicada, 71, 127–148.
Lambert, C., & Robinson, P. (2014). Learning
to perform narrative task: A semester long study of task sequencing
effects. In M. Maralt, R. Gilabert, & P. Robinson (Eds.), Task
sequencing and instructed second language
learning (pp. 207–230). Bloomsbury.
Li, S., Ellis, R., & Shu, D. (2016). The
differential effects of immediate and delayed feedback on learners of different proficiency
levels. Foreign Languages and Foreign Language
Research, 2861, 1–15.
Li, S., Ellis, R., & Zhu, Y. (2019). The
associations between cognitive ability and L2 development under five different instructional
conditions. Applied
Psycholinguistics, 40(3), 693–722.
Long, M., & Robinson, P. (1998). Focus
on form theory, research and practice. In C. Doughty & J. William (Eds.), Focus
on form in classroom second language
acquisition (pp. 15–41). Cambridge University Press.
Loschky, L., & Bley-Vroman, R. (1993). Grammar
and task-based methodology. In S. Gass. & G. Crookes (Eds.) Tasks
and language
learning (pp. 123–167). Multilingual Matters.
Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China
(MOE). (2022). Yiwu Jiaoyu Yingyu Kechen
Biaozhun [Curriculum Standards for teaching English in Compulsory
Education]. Beijing Normal University Publishing Group.
Nippold, M., Hesketh, L., Duthie, J., & Mansfield, T. (2005a). Conversational
versus expository discourse: A study of syntactic development in children, adolescents, and
adults. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing
Research, 481, 1048–1064.
Nippold, M., Ward-Lonergan, J., & Fanning, J. (2005b). Persuasive
writing in children, adolescents, and adults: A study of syntactic, semantic and pragmatic
development. Language, Speech and Hearing Services in
Schools, 361, 125–138.
Norris, J. M., & Ortega, L. (2000). Effectiveness
of L2 instruction: A research synthesis and quantitative meta-analysis. Language
learning, 50(3), 417–528.
Pang, F., & Skehan, P. (2014). Self-reported
planning behaviour and L2 performance in narrative
retelling. In P. Skehan, (Ed.), Processing
perspectives on task
performance (pp. 95–128). John Benjamins.
Plonsky, L., & Oswald, F. L. (2014). How
big is “big”? Interpreting effect sizes in L2 research. Language
learning, 64(4), 878–912.
Sheen, R. (2006). Focus
on forms as a means of improving accurate oral production. In A. Housen, & M. Pierrard (Eds.), Investigations
in instructed second language
acquisition. (pp. 271–309). Mouton de Gruyter.
Shintani, N. (2015). The
incidental grammar acquisition in focus on form and focus on forms instruction for young beginner
learners. TESOL
Quarterly, 49(1), 115–140.
Soongpankhao, W., Aubrey, S. & Lambert, C. (2023). Impact of goal-tracking on engagement in language use in an online TBLT module for Thai university students. System (early view)
Suzuki, Y. (2021). Optimizing
fluency training for speaking skills transfer: Comparing the effects of blocked and interleaved task
repetition. Language
Learning, 71(2), 285–325.
White, R., & Robinson, P. (1995). Current
approaches to syllabus design: A discussion with Ron White. RELC
Guidelines, 17(1), 93–101.
