Instructional Effects of Positive and Negative Evidence on Prepositional/Phrasal Verbs

An experiment in Japan investigated the kind of input that is effective in enabling college-level students of English as a Second Language to formulate grammar, specifically prepositional and phrasal verbs. A grammaticality judgment test and a translation test were given to 131 Japanese university s...

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Veröffentlicht in:IRLT (Institute for Research in Language Teaching) Bulletin 1997-11 (11), p.1
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description An experiment in Japan investigated the kind of input that is effective in enabling college-level students of English as a Second Language to formulate grammar, specifically prepositional and phrasal verbs. A grammaticality judgment test and a translation test were given to 131 Japanese university students, who were divided into three treatment groups and one control group. The treatment groups were taught these verbs with different approaches: (1) providing positive evidence (grammatically correct examples); (2) providing examples of both grammatical and ungrammatical forms (positive and negative evidence); and (3) providing individualized error correction to each student. Subjects were then tested immediately after the treatment, 1 month later, and 1 year after treatment. Results indicate that the second treatment was most beneficial over 1 month. Over the period of a year, provision of positive evidence did not have a significant effect on grammatical knowledge, and it had only an immediate effect in translation. In addition, it was easier to make a correct grammaticality judgment on phrasal verbs with the pronoun "it" than on lexical phrasal verbs. Contains 46 references. (MSE)
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subjects Classroom Research
Classroom Techniques
College Students
Comparative Analysis
English (Second Language)
Foreign Countries
Grammar
Higher Education
Instructional Effectiveness
Japan
Language Research
Retention (Psychology)
Second Language Instruction
Second Language Learning
Verbs
title Instructional Effects of Positive and Negative Evidence on Prepositional/Phrasal Verbs
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