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Jacobs, Gabriel; Rodgers, Catherine – CALICO Journal, 1999
Discusses the use of a French computerized grammar checker as a learning and teaching resource. Presents the results of a controlled series of experiments in which groups of students were given the task of correcting French texts containing grammatical, lexical, and orthographical errors using an on-screen grammar checker or grammar books and…
Descriptors: Business Communication, College Students, Computer Assisted Instruction, Dictionaries
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Yang, Jie Chi; Akahori, Kanji – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 1999
Compares two Web-based systems. The Japanese writing computer-assisted language-learning system, the T system, enables learners to key-in sentences freely, detects learners' errors and displays appropriate feedback messages to guide learners to correct errors themselves. The M system enables learners to input their answer from a multiple selection…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Error Correction, Feedback
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Schmitt, Lothar M.; Christianson, Kiel T. – System, 1998
Describes the justification for design and implementation of a UNIX-based computer-assisted language-instruction system using a network of workstations containing functions useful for instructors and students as well as researchers. The present investigation is aimed at teaching writing to Japanese students at the University of Aizu in Japan.…
Descriptors: College Students, Computer Assisted Instruction, Electronic Mail, English (Second Language)
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Robinson, William S. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1998
Argues that, to deal effectively with sentence errors of basic writers, it is crucial to distinguish between what should be left alone and what can be productively marked and how it should be marked. Proposes a taxonomy of four sources of errors (knowledge, dialect, process, and developmental errors) and seven ways to address them. (SR)
Descriptors: Basic Writing, Classification, Error Correction, Error Patterns
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Williams, Jessica – Language Learning, 2001
Examines whether learners initiate attention to form, as requests for assistance, feedback on error, modeling, or repetitions, recasts, and requests for clarification. Results suggest that learners can and do attend to form, though relatively infrequently. The most frequent way they they do this is to request assistance from their teachers.…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), English (Second Language), Error Correction, Feedback
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Kitajima, Ruy – Applied Language Learning, 2001
Examines whether there is a strong relationship between second language learners' noticing of benefactive auxiliary verbs and their use in communication. Participants were university students who had acquired Japanese at home without receiving any formal instruction. Data were collected in face-to-face interviews, an interpretation task with 20…
Descriptors: College Students, Error Correction, Higher Education, Interviews
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Heift, Trude – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2006
This article discusses design and usability issues pertaining to context-sensitive "help" in computer-assisted language learning (CALL). As part of the discussion, we present a study in which we examined the effects of three independent factors on student usage of context-sensitive "help": feedback, exercise type, and language proficiency. Forty…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Feedback
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Goldstein, Lynn M. – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2004
Teachers and students agree that despite the time-consuming nature of providing written commentary and revising using this commentary, teacher feedback is both desirable and helpful. Nonetheless, teachers express concerns about how to provide commentary in ways that their students can effectively use to revise their texts and to learn for future…
Descriptors: Writing Teachers, Revision (Written Composition), Feedback, Teacher Student Relationship
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Lochtman, Katja – International Journal of Educational Research, 2002
The discussion on the role of corrective feedback is part of a larger discussion on the role of "focusing on form" in foreign language teaching ("Focus on form in classroom second language acquisition," Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1998). Studies conducted in communicative and content-based foreign language teaching…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Foreign Countries, Language Teachers, Language Proficiency
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Sheen, YoungHee – Language Teaching Research, 2004
This paper reports similarities and differences in teachers' corrective feedback and learners' uptake across instructional settings. Four communicative classroom settings--French Immersion, Canada ESL, New Zealand ESL and Korean EFL--were examined using Lyster and Ranta's taxonomy of teachers' corrective feedback moves and learner uptake. The…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Communicative Competence (Languages), Error Correction, Foreign Countries
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Quible, Zane K. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2006
This article reports a quasi-experimental study of how error labeling in remediation exercises affects students' writing performance. Students in five sections of a course in written business communication composed the control group, whereas students in two sections composed the treatment group. On the first letter each group wrote early in the…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Business Communication, Form Classes (Languages), Instructional Effectiveness
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Manfredo, Joseph – Music Educators Journal, 2006
One of the most common problems for school music ensembles is the lack of rehearsal time to prepare for public performances. Because of this, music educators all too often feel they need to eliminate various parts of the rehearsal so that more time can be spent on rehearsing performance literature. However, this approach can be shortsighted…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Interaction, Time Management, Music Teachers
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Quinonez, Ruben; Ryan, Terry; Olfman, Lorne – Journal of Information Technology Education, 2007
This study attempts to reconcile viewpoints on the role of errors in the design of computer-based training (CBT) systems. From one perspective, errors are detrimental to learning; from another, they can be beneficial. The results of an experiment are presented and discussed. When a CBT system is designed to allow learners to correct their own…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Technology, Learning Theories, Instructional Design
Hauger, Garnet Smith – 1997
Several studies have shown the difficulties students encounter in making sense of situations involving rate of change. This study concerns how students discover errors and refine their knowledge when working with rate of change. The part of the study reported here concerns the responses of four precalculus students to a task which asked them to…
Descriptors: Calculus, Error Correction, Graphs, Higher Education
Morgan, Robert L.; And Others – 1988
An alternating treatments design was used to evaluate and compare the instructional effectiveness of six treatment packages in teaching receptive picture vocabulary to 12 mildly handicapped children (ages 3-6 years). Independent variables in the treatment packages included: least-to-most prompting, correction, group instruction, and individual…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Error Correction, Feedback, Group Instruction
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