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Peer reviewedHan, ZhaoHong – Foreign Language Annals, 2001
Explores the notion of "fine-tuning" in connection with the corrective feedback process. Describes a longitudinal case study, conducted in the context of Norwegian as a second a language, that shows how fine-tuning and lack thereof in the provision of written corrective feedback differentially affects a second language learner's restructuring of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Error Correction, Feedback, Interlanguage
Bitchener, John; Young, Stuart; Cameron, Denise – Journal of Second Language Writing, 2005
Debate about the value of providing corrective feedback on L2 writing has been prominent in recent years as a result of Truscott's [Truscott, J. (1996). The case against grammar correction in L2 writing classes. Language Learning, 46, 327-369] claim that it is both ineffective and harmful and should therefore be abandoned. A growing body of…
Descriptors: Feedback, Error Correction, English (Second Language), Grammar
Mercurius, Neil – T.H.E. Journal, 2005
Data-driven decision-making (D3M) appears to be the new buzz phrase for this century, the information age. On the education front, teachers and administrators are engaging in data-centered dialog in grade-level meetings, lounges, hallways, and classrooms as they brainstorm toward closing the gap in student achievement. Clearly, such discussion…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Academic Achievement, Educational Improvement, Data Collection
Holdich, C. E.; Chung, P. W. H.; Holdich, R. G. – Computers and Education, 2004
Children usually improve their writing in response to teacher comments. HARRY is a computer tutor, designed to assist children improve their narrative writing, focusing particularly upon grammar and style. Providing assistance involved identifying aspects of grammar and style on which to concentrate, including ways to enable the computer to detect…
Descriptors: Writing Improvement, Computer Assisted Instruction, Intervention, Editing
Curran, Michael J.; Smith, Elizabeth C. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2005
The Imposter is a strategy that encourages a focused approach to reading among adolescents. Contradictions or other types of conceptual flaws are inserted into a reading passage. The reader, knowing that flaws are hidden in the text, attempts to discover the errors. The reader then justifies his or her identification of flaws based on the concepts…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Reading Strategies, Reading Motivation, Mathematics Instruction
Alber, Sheila R.; Walshe, Suzanne E. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2004
Previous studies have consistently demonstrated self-correction to be more effective than "traditional" approaches to spelling instruction. This investigation examined the comparative effects of self-correction after attempting each word and self-correction after attempting a list of 10 words by six fifth-graders with learning disabilities or…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Spelling, Spelling Instruction, Grade 5
Alon, Sigal – Research in Higher Education, 2005
The focus of the paper is the development of a novel conceptual framework that aims to remedy a critical mis-specification in prior research on the impact of financial aid on academic outcomes: the blending of the effect of aid eligibility with the influence of aid amounts on academic outcomes. To assess the impact of aid amounts received on…
Descriptors: Student Financial Aid, Outcomes of Education, Graduation, Predictor Variables
Knowles, Martin E.; Delaney, Peter F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
The authors present 3 experiments demonstrating ways to reduce illegal moves in problem-solving tasks. They propose a 3-stage framework for the rejection of illegal moves. An illegal move must come to mind and be selected, checked for legality, and correctly rejected. Illegal move reduction can occur at any stage. Control group participants…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Error Patterns, Experimental Psychology, Task Analysis
Havranek, Gertraud – International Journal of Educational Research, 2002
The article presents findings from a comprehensive study of oral corrective feedback involving 207 classroom learners of English as a foreign language at different age and proficiency levels who elicited 1700 instances of corrective feedback. The study showed that those who are corrected profit from the correction in about 50% of all cases, as…
Descriptors: Test Results, Error Correction, Feedback (Response), English (Second Language)
Quible, Zane K. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2006
Two types of sentence-level writing problems are often observed in student writing: (1) those that violate conventions of standard written English, such as subject-verb agreement errors and comma splices; and (2) those that involve a stylistic choice, such as beginning a sentence with an expletive structure like "There are" or using "if" rather…
Descriptors: Writing Strategies, Writing Improvement, Writing Instruction, Writing Skills
Smith, Linda B.; Samuelson, Larissa – Developmental Psychology, 2006
Recently, "Developmental Psychology" published 2 articles on the shape bias; both rejected the authors' previous proposals about the role of attentional learning in the development of a shape bias in object name learning. A. Cimpian and E. Markman (2005; see record EJ733667) did so by arguing that the shape bias does not exist but is an…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Cognitive Development, Misconceptions, Attention
Suzuki, Manami – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2008
The current study examined 24 Japanese university students' processes of negotiation in conditions of self revision and of peer revision about their English as a foreign language (EFL) writing. Analyzing their negotiation episodes and text changes, I categorized within a common coding scheme the types of negotiation from (a) think-aloud protocols…
Descriptors: Text Structure, Protocol Analysis, College Students, Revision (Written Composition)
Hawes, Kathy – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2007
This article describes activities that promote students' understanding of equation solving through analyzing and correcting student work. (Contains 5 figures.)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Equations (Mathematics), Problem Solving, Middle School Students
Heller, Kathryn Wolff; Rupert, Jenny Hayes; Coleman-Martin, Mari Beth; Mezei, Peter J.; Calhoon, Mary Beth – Physical Disabilities: Education and Related Services, 2007
Although fluency instruction is an essential part of teaching reading, there is limited information on providing this type of instruction with students who have physical disabilities. This article examines three case studies across two students, one with cerebral palsy and the other with both arthrogryposis and spina bifida. In the first study,…
Descriptors: Reading Fluency, Reading Skills, Special Needs Students, Case Studies
Bruton, Anthony – Language Teaching Research, 2007
A significant, but rarely posed, question in EFL writing is what new language the writers assimilate from the process. In this study, a group of intermediate EFL students in a state secondary school in Spain completed an L1(Spanish)-to-FL(English) written translation task on their own, with bilingual dictionary/glossary support. Three days later,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Translation, Vocabulary, Foreign Countries

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