The Effect of the Corrective Feedback on Iranian EFL Learners' Speaking Accuracy and Breakdown Fluency

The purpose of the current study was to explore the effects of different corrective feedback (CF) conditions on Iranian EFL learners’ spoken general accuracy and breakdown fluency and their relationships. Consequently, four pre-intermediate intact classes were randomly selected as the control, delay...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of language horizons Vol. 1; no. 2; pp. 107 - 129
Main Authors: Farrokhi, Farahman, Zohrabi, Mohammad, Mohammad Hassan Chehr Azad
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran Alzahra University, Vice President for Research, Journal of Language Horizons 01-11-2017
Alzahra University
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Summary:The purpose of the current study was to explore the effects of different corrective feedback (CF) conditions on Iranian EFL learners’ spoken general accuracy and breakdown fluency and their relationships. Consequently, four pre-intermediate intact classes were randomly selected as the control, delayed explicit metalinguistic CF, extensive recast, and intensive recast groups; these groups participated in spoken reproduction tasks for six sessions and their errors were treated differently. Then, the data was transcribed, coded for accuracy and fluency, and analyzed. The results indicated that the different CF conditions had insignificant effects on the number of error free Analysis of Speech (AS)-units, as an index of the spoken general accuracy. Considering the fluency, although different CF conditions had insignificant effects on the number of pauses the participants produced, it had a significant effect on the whole number of pauses; there was a significant correlation between participants' pauses and the whole number of pauses, with a medium effect size. The correlations between the general accuracy and breakdown fluency of all groups were negative and insignificant. In addition, different CF conditions had insignificant effects on the relationship between the accuracy and fluency. These findings suggest that there is no trade-off between spoken general accuracy and breakdown fluency. In addition, different CF conditions have insignificant effects on the EFL learners' spoken general accuracy, breakdown fluency, and their relationships.
ISSN:2588-350X
2588-5634
DOI:10.22051/lghor.2018.16786.1064