Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)

Linguistic errors are pervasive in second language (L2) students’ writing. Depending on their gravity, the errors may cause a minor degree of irritation to the reader or even lead to total communication breakdown. As such, errors have always been a major concern to both students and teachers, and er...

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Main Author: Yuan-Yuan Meng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2013-12-01
Series:Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
Online Access:https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1339
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spelling doaj-156aa66285d44eca9b439290a9f92b872020-11-25T02:39:37ZengColumbia University LibrariesStudies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL2689-193X2013-12-0113210.7916/salt.v13i2.1339Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)Yuan-Yuan MengLinguistic errors are pervasive in second language (L2) students’ writing. Depending on their gravity, the errors may cause a minor degree of irritation to the reader or even lead to total communication breakdown. As such, errors have always been a major concern to both students and teachers, and error correction has also assumed a central position in language teaching. Students generally expect that their errors will be pointed out and dealt with by their teachers. For L2 teachers, providing written corrective feedback (CF) on student writing has long been an essential practice. In fact, “grammar correction is something of an institution” (Truscott, 1996, p. 327) in L2 writing courses. Despite the fact that correcting students’ written errors is a time-consuming ordeal, and the endeavor is “fraught with uncertainty about its long-term effectiveness” (Ferris, 1999, p. 1), most L2 teachers have continued to slave over students’ errors in one form or another. As confirmed by a recent study on practitioners’ perspectives, the majority of teachers believe that students need CF and that written CF is overall an effective pedagogical practice (Evans et al., 2010). https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1339
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuan-Yuan Meng
spellingShingle Yuan-Yuan Meng
Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
author_facet Yuan-Yuan Meng
author_sort Yuan-Yuan Meng
title Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
title_short Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
title_full Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
title_fullStr Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
title_full_unstemmed Written Corrective Feedback: A Review of Studies since Truscott (1996)
title_sort written corrective feedback: a review of studies since truscott (1996)
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL
issn 2689-193X
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Linguistic errors are pervasive in second language (L2) students’ writing. Depending on their gravity, the errors may cause a minor degree of irritation to the reader or even lead to total communication breakdown. As such, errors have always been a major concern to both students and teachers, and error correction has also assumed a central position in language teaching. Students generally expect that their errors will be pointed out and dealt with by their teachers. For L2 teachers, providing written corrective feedback (CF) on student writing has long been an essential practice. In fact, “grammar correction is something of an institution” (Truscott, 1996, p. 327) in L2 writing courses. Despite the fact that correcting students’ written errors is a time-consuming ordeal, and the endeavor is “fraught with uncertainty about its long-term effectiveness” (Ferris, 1999, p. 1), most L2 teachers have continued to slave over students’ errors in one form or another. As confirmed by a recent study on practitioners’ perspectives, the majority of teachers believe that students need CF and that written CF is overall an effective pedagogical practice (Evans et al., 2010).
url https://journals.library.columbia.edu/index.php/SALT/article/view/1339
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