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Encuentros con la escritura en el ingreso a la educación superior: representaciones sociales de los estudiantes en seis áreas de conocimiento
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Humour loss in the Indonesian translation of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
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Language learning motivation of students from a special educational school in Hong Kong
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Autonomy in teaching practice: Insights from Vietnamese English language teachers trained in Inner-Circle countries
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On evaluating the effectiveness of university-wide credit-bearing English language enhancement courses
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Supporting online L2 academic reading comprehension with computer-mediated synchronous discussion and elaborative feedback
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Bown, A. - : The Reading Matrix, Inc, 2018
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Constructing identities online- an exploratory study of Saudi youths' strategies
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Language Outcomes at 7 Years: Early Predictors and Co-Occurring Difficulties
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Language education policy among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
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Language education policy and practice in East and Southeast Asia
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The Languages of Higher Education in East and Southeast Asia: Will EMI Lead to Englishisation?
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Direct teaching of vocabulary after listening: is it worth the effort and what method is best?
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Elaborative feedback to enhance online second language reading comprehension
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Bown, A. - : Canadian Center of Science and Education, 2017
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Abstract:
Many higher education students across the world are studying in situations where a high proportion of the academic materials they encounter are online reading texts written in their second language. While the online medium presents a number of challenges to L2 readers, it also enables the provision of a range of support mechanisms, such as instant feedback. This quasi-experimental study investigated the use of two types of feedback, elaborative and knowledge of response, and compares their effectiveness for enhancing online second language reading comprehension. The participants were 113 Emirati students of L2 English at a higher education college in the United Arab Emirates. Data were collected using a pre-test and a post-test measure of reading comprehension and an online reading comprehension exercise containing either elaborative or knowledge of response feedback. The results of the quasi-experiment showed no significant difference between the effects of the two feedback types on comprehension of an online reading text for the sample as a whole. Equally, for the high-proficiency readers, feedback type had no significant effect on text comprehension. However, with regard to the low-proficiency readers, those receiving elaborative feedback performed significantly better on the post-test than those who received knowledge of response feedback. The findings suggest that elaborative feedback can enhance online L2 reading comprehension but that it needs to be tailored specifically to the needs of the L2 readers it is intended to support.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics; Communication and Culture; Language; Linguistics
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URL: http://ecite.utas.edu.au/122341 http://www.ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/elt/issue/view/1937 https://doi.org/10.5539/elt.v10n12p164
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English as a lingua franca and its educational impact in Asia
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