In:Individual Differences and Task-Based Language Teaching
Edited by Shaofeng Li
[Task-Based Language Teaching 16] 2024
► pp. 140–160
Chapter 5Written languaging, language aptitude, and L2 learning through dictogloss tasks
Published online: 6 June 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/tblt.16.05ish
https://doi.org/10.1075/tblt.16.05ish
Abstract
Languaging, learners’ reflections/comments on language use, has been shown to facilitate second
language (L2) learning, presumably because it creates opportunities for noticing L2 constructions. If so, it would
appear that the extent to which learners can make use of these opportunities might be influenced by their aptitude, as
those with greater aptitude may be more prone to learning through noticing. Little research, however, has been
conducted to explore this possibility. This study investigated whether learners with varying degrees of language
analytic ability differentially benefit from engaging in written languaging when it is integrated into task-based
work. The study employed a pretest-posttest-delayed posttest design, with 64 participants assigned to two groups. As
part of dictogloss tasks, one group engaged in written languaging when comparing their reconstructed text with the
original. The other group received the same treatment but did not have the opportunity to carry out written languaging
during the dictogloss procedure. We measured language analytic ability with Part 4 of the MLAT, Part 2 of the LABJ,
and the LLAMA_F test. A grammar production test and a grammar recognition test were included to assess development in
the knowledge of the target construction, the if-clause of the present counterfactual conditional. Spearman
correlations revealed that language analytic ability had stronger relationship to participants’ learning when they did
not engage in written languaging than when they did during the dictogloss task. We interpreted this finding as
suggesting that written languaging can help mitigate the influence of language analytic ability on L2 learning.
Keywords: languaging, aptitude, writing, explicit knowledge, dictogloss tasks
Article outline
- Introduction
- Background
- Languaging
- Aptitude-treatment interaction
- The present study
- Method
- Design
- Participants
- Linguistic target
- Assessment tasks and scoring
- Aptitude measures
- Treatment task and procedure
- Data collection procedures
- Statistical analyses
- Results
- Preliminary analyses
- Pretest, posttest, and delayed posttest results
- Results for aptitude tests
- Relationships between aptitude tests and posttest /delayed posttest scores
- Preliminary analyses
- Discussion
- Conclusion
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