In:Technology-mediated TBLT: Researching Technology and Tasks
Edited by Marta González-Lloret and Lourdes Ortega
[Task-Based Language Teaching 6] 2014
► pp. 51–78
Chapter 3. Prior knowledge and second language task production in text chat
Published online: 24 July 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/tblt.6.03ada
https://doi.org/10.1075/tblt.6.03ada
The Cognition Hypothesis framed by Robinson (2001; 2003; 2005) has generated a large body of research on how varying task complexity may influence second language (L2) production and learning opportunities; however, most of these studies were conducted in a face-to-face setting (e.g. Gilabert 2007; Gilabert, Baron & Llanes 2009; Kim 2009; Michel, Kuiken & Vedder 2007; Nuevo 2006; Nuevo, Adams & Ross-Feldman 2011). As computer-mediated communication becomes more pervasive in educational contexts, research that extends current understandings of principles of second language learning is increasingly important to help learners and teachers understand how best to make use of this technology to promote specific learning goals (see Kern 2006). The role of task complexity in computer-mediated environments may be particularly important, as this may influence how learners commit attentional resources to language processing during communication (Robinson 2005; Skehan 1998). This study examines the role of one task complexity factor, prior knowledge, on second language production in text-based chat. Analysis of the language produced by first language Malay engineering students engaged in text-based chat group tasks in English indicated that prior knowledge of the task subject area had a limited effect on the complexity and accuracy of language production. We conclude with a critical discussion of the applicability of the Cognition Hypothesis to task-based communication via text chat. We also provide suggestions for how L2 tasks can be implemented in computer-mediated contexts in order to promote attention to form, noting that considering language production and learning in CMC tasks challenges task-based theories and requires transformation of research methods and analysis.
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Cited by (18)
Cited by 18 other publications
Khezrlou, Sima
Tao, Na & Ying Wang
Mohammad Javad Ahmadian & Michael H. Long
Cunningham, D. Joseph
González-Lloret, Marta & Nicole Ziegler
Huang, Xin, Xiaobin Liu, Yiya Hu & Qingsheng Liu
Smith, Bryan & Marta González-Lloret
Egbert, Joy, Seyed Abdollah Shahrokni, Xue Zhang, David Herman, Intissar Yahia, Adnan Mohamed, Faraj M. Aljarih, Chioma Ezeh, Nataliia Borysenko & Sonia Lopez-Lopez
González-Lloret, Marta & Lourdes Ortega
2018. Pragmatics, tasks, and technology. In Task-based approaches to teaching and assessing pragmatics [Task-Based Language Teaching, 10], ► pp. 191 ff.
Amiryousefi, Mohammad
González-Lloret, Marta
González-Lloret, Marta
González‐Lloret, Marta
Ziegler, Nicole
Bowles, Melissa A. & Rebecca J. Adams
Ortega, Lourdes & Marta González-Lloret
2015. Staking out the territory of technology-mediated TBLT. In Domains and Directions in the Development of TBLT [Task-Based Language Teaching, 8], ► pp. 59 ff.
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
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