This paper reports on a study that explored how nonnative speakers (NNSs) interacted with native speakers (NSs) in a chat room. Fifteen university students worked collaboratively with expert speakers to complete six task-based activities. The findings indicated that online communication fostered high levels of interaction using various types of negotiation strategies. Students benefited from being exposed to a wide range of functional discourse produced by the NSs. Further, expert scaffolding increased students’ awareness of linguistic forms that led to modified output including self-repairs. Students, however, experienced difficulties comprehending linguistic variations including regionalisms. Students also failed to perform certain tasks, such as direct and indirect speech acts. The results suggest that learners not only need to work toward maintaining a balance between fluency and accuracy, but also develop their intercultural communication skills in order to successfully engage in online exchanges with NSs. Expert speakers, on the other hand, need to be aware of not over intervening in the interaction. The study concludes that text-based chat involving NSs is a powerful mediating tool for the enrichment of language learning that goes beyond a traditional classroom setting.
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Al Jahrami, Diana
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2016. Twitter in Foreign Language Classes. In Handbook of Research on Learning Outcomes and Opportunities in the Digital Age [Advances in Educational Technologies and Instructional Design, ], ► pp. 769 ff.
Blattner, Geraldine, Amanda Dalola & Lara Lomicka
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van der Zwaard, Rose & Anne Bannink
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Van der Zwaard, Rose & Anne Bannink
2020. Negotiation of Meaning in Digital L2 Learning Interaction: Task Design Versus Task Performance. TESOL Quarterly 54:1 ► pp. 56 ff.
Cunningham, D. Joseph & Nina Vyatkina
2012. Telecollaboration for Professional Purposes: Towards Developing a Formal Register in the Foreign Language Classroom. The Canadian Modern Language Review 68:4 ► pp. 422 ff.
Lee, Lina
2011. Focus-on-form through peer feedback in a Spanish–American telecollaborative exchange. Language Awareness 20:4 ► pp. 343 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 24 october 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
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