Dissertation/ Thesis

Does the Provision of an Intensive and Highly Focused Indirect Corrective Feedback Lead to Accuracy?

Bibliographic Details
Title: Does the Provision of an Intensive and Highly Focused Indirect Corrective Feedback Lead to Accuracy?
Authors: Jhowry, Kheerani
Contributors: Larson-Hall, Jenifer, Chelliah, Shobhana L., Wulff, Stefanie
Publisher Information: University of North Texas Libraries, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: English language -- Errors of usage, English language -- Study and teaching -- Foreign speakers, accuracy, Corrective feedback, Feedback (Psychology), focused feedback, indirect feedback
Description: This thesis imparts the outcomes of a seven-week long quasi-experimental study that explored whether or not L2 learners who received intensive and highly focused indirect feedback on one type of treatable error - either the third person singular -s, plural endings -s, or definite article the - eventually become more accurate in the post-test as compared to a control group that did not. The paired-samples t-test comparing the pre-test and post-test scores of both groups demonstrates that the experimental group did no better than the control group after they received indirect corrective feedback. The independent samples t-test measuring the experimental and control group's accuracy shows no significant difference between the two groups. Effect sizes calculated, however, do indicate that, had the sample sizes been bigger, both groups would have eventually become more accurate in the errors targeted, although this would not have been because of the indirect feedback.
Document Type: Doctoral thesis
Thesis
File Description: Text
DOI: 10.12794/metadc28437
Accession Number: edsair.doi.dedup.....d4a9a1a0861a023ceaf7d849da349a47
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
DOI:10.12794/metadc28437