Topic familiarity and story continuation in young English as a foreign language learners’ writing tasks

IF 3.7 1区 文学 Q1 LINGUISTICS Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching Pub Date : 2021-09-13 DOI:10.14746/ssllt.2021.11.3.4
G. Bui, Xuewei Luo
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Prior research demonstrates that primary and secondary school teachers often find teaching young learners to write in a second language a slow and effortful process. Moreover, students in this age range lack the motivation to write. Therefore, it is important to explore the EFL writing pedagogy suitable for young learners. The present study investigated how story continuation (with or without reading input) under different topic familiarity conditions serves as a viable pedagogical means for secondary school students. Ninety-one Chinese students in four intact classes of comparable proficiency levels were assigned four writing task conditions in a 2 ⨉ 2 factorial design. Group 1 (Fam) was provided with the beginning of a familiar story in L1 Chinese and was required to complete the story in L2 English. Group 2 (UnFam) had the same task as Group 1, with an unfamiliar story. Group 3 (Fam+Input) was initially provided with the complete familiar story in Chinese (the same story as Group 1) as reading input and were then instructed to write the story in English with the reading material taken away. Group 4 (Unfam+Input) received the full unfamiliar story in Chinese (the same story as Group 2) as input before writing. Again they were not allowed to refer to the reading in the composing process. The results revealed that the young learners who wrote on familiar topics (Groups 1 and 3) produced longer texts and demonstrated greater lexical diversity than those with unfamiliar stories (Groups 2 and 4), although topic familiarity did not affect their writing quality or lexical sophistication. As for the story continuation conditions, students who completed writing the story without the L1 reading input on the topics (Groups 1 and 2) developed longer compositions and better writing quality than those with such input (Groups 3 and 4), although their lexical profiles (both lexical diversity and lexical sophistication) remained uninfluenced. Pedagogical implications for EFL writing among young learners were also discussed in the present study.
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主题熟悉和故事延续在青少年英语外语学习者写作任务中的作用
先前的研究表明,中小学教师经常发现教年轻学习者用第二语言写作是一个缓慢而费力的过程。此外,这个年龄段的学生缺乏写作的动力。因此,探索适合青年学习者的英语写作教学法是十分重要的。本研究探讨了在不同主题熟悉度条件下,故事继续(有或没有阅读输入)如何成为中学生可行的教学手段。在2 * 2因子设计中,为四个完整班级的91名中国学生分配了四个写作任务条件。第一组(Fam)被要求用母语中文开始一个熟悉的故事,并要求用二语英语完成这个故事。第二组(联合国儿童基金会)和第一组有同样的任务,讲一个不熟悉的故事。第3组(Fam+Input)在阅读输入时,先提供与第1组相同的完整熟悉的中文故事,然后指导他们在拿走阅读材料的情况下用英文书写故事。第4组(Unfam+输入)在写作前收到完整的中文陌生故事(与第2组相同)作为输入。同样,他们也不允许在写作过程中参考阅读材料。结果显示,写熟悉主题的年轻学习者(第1组和第3组)比写不熟悉故事的年轻学习者(第2组和第4组)写出了更长的文章,并表现出更大的词汇多样性,尽管熟悉主题并不影响他们的写作质量或词汇的复杂性。在故事延续条件下,在没有母语阅读输入的情况下完成故事的学生(第1组和第2组)比有母语阅读输入的学生(第3组和第4组)写出了更长的文章和更好的写作质量,尽管他们的词汇特征(词汇多样性和词汇复杂性)没有受到影响。本研究也讨论了对青少年英语写作的教学意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
2.90%
发文量
21
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching (ISSN 2083-5205) is a refereed journal published four times a year by the Department of English Studies, Faculty of Pedagogy and Fine Arts, Adam Mickiewicz University, Kalisz, Poland. The language of publication is English. The journal is devoted to reporting previously unpublished highest quality theoretical and empirical research on learning and teaching second and foreign languages. It deals with the learning and teaching of any language, not only English, and focuses on a variety of topics ranging from the processes underlying second language acquisition, various aspects of language learning in instructed and non-instructed settings, as well as different facets of the teaching process, including syllabus choice, materials design, classroom practices and evaluation. Each issue carries about 6 papers, 6000-8000 words in length, as well as reply articles and reviews. At least one of the four issues per year is a special focus issue devoted to a particular area of second language learning and teaching, sometimes with a guest editor who is an expert on a specific topic.
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