Published May 10, 2012 | Version v1
Journal article Open

BRAIN Journal - Self-initiated Self-repair Attempts by Japanese High School Learners While Speaking English

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Nara University of Education, Nara, Japan

Description

ABSTRACT

In Japanese high school English classes, students are often left to have interactions or perform communicative activities not with a teacher but with other students due to a large class size. In the situation, students are ideally notice their own insufficient utterances in order to carry out self-initiated self-repair. This study investigated self-initiated self-repair attempts and their effects on Japanese high school learners. Thirty-two Japanese high school students with low-intermediate English ability and a native speaker of English participated in the study, with the native speaker interviewing the students. The students’ utterances were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed, and it was found that: self-initiated self-repair occurred frequently and, in general, successfully; error repair was most frequently recorded; the success rate of lexical repair was the lowest. Findings observed during the students’ self-initiated self-repair attempts are discussed, followed by discussion of their possible effects. Finally, suggestions are given based on the pedagogical implications from the study.

Notes

http://www.edusoft.ro/brain/index.php/brain/article/view/359/403

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