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A short history of SLA: Where have we come from and where are we going?
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The relative effects of implicit and explicit corrective feedback on the acquisition of 3rd person -s by Chinese university students: A classroom-based study
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The relative effects of implicit and explicit corrective feedback on the acquisition of 3rd person -s by Chinese university students: A classroom-based study ...
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The relative effects of implicit and explicit corrective feedback on the acquisition of 3rd person -s by Chinese university students: A classroom-based study ...
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The Social Lives of Adolescent Study Abroad Learners and Their L2 Development
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Input-based tasks for beginner-level learners: An approximate replication and extension of Erlam & Ellis (2018)
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Effects of computer-assisted glosses on EFL learners’ vocabulary acquisition and reading comprehension in three learning conditions
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Position paper: Moving task-based language teaching forward
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The Effects of the Timing of Corrective Feedback on the Acquisition of a New Linguistic Structure
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Task-Based Versus Task-Supported Language Instruction: An Experimental Study
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The Effects of Inference-Training and Text Repetition on Chinese Learners' Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition While Listening
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Orders and Sequences in the Acquisition of L2 Morphosyntax, 40 Years On: An Introduction to the Special Issue
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Understanding Second Language Acquisition 2nd Edition - Oxford Applied Linguistics
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The importance of focus on form in communicative language teaching
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Abstract:
Long (1991) distinguished two approaches to language teaching, which he called ‘focus-on-forms’ and ‘focus-on-form’. In this article I discuss ‘focus-on-form’ from both a theoretical perspective by outlining the psycholinguistic rationale for this type of instruction and from a practical perspective by identifying the strategies that students and teachers can use when doing focus-on-form. I conclude by emphasizing the importance of including a focus-on-form in communicative language teaching in order to facilitate incidental language learning and thus reject the commonly held view that teachers should not ‘interfere’ when students are performing a communicative task. I also suggest that ‘focus-on-forms’ and ‘focus-on-form’ should be seen as complementary rather than oppositional approaches to teaching.
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/58878
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