Students’ Attitude towards Oral Error Correction Techniques Employed by Secondary School Language Teachers in South Western Nigeria
Abstract
This paper investigated the attitude and preferences of students towards oral error correction techniques during teaching-learning process. Descriptive research design was adopted for the study. A questionnaire titled: the Students’ Preferences on Effective Error Correction Techniques (SPEECT) was used to collect the data. Ten schools and two hundred secondary school students were randomly sampled for the study. Findings revealed that students believe that teachers should correct their errors in the classroom using pragmatic error correction, phonological error correction and vocabulary error correction. It was therefore recommended that teachers should adoptshould adopteffective corrective measures that would enhance the spoken andwritten(Though the paper is concerned with the oral aspects of English, it’s technically impossible to omit the written aspect because often times, the spoken aspect is reported in the written form, therefore error correction techniques is equally extended to the writing skills of the students) English of the students.
Full Text: PDF DOI: 10.15640/jsspi.v5n1a5
Abstract
This paper investigated the attitude and preferences of students towards oral error correction techniques during teaching-learning process. Descriptive research design was adopted for the study. A questionnaire titled: the Students’ Preferences on Effective Error Correction Techniques (SPEECT) was used to collect the data. Ten schools and two hundred secondary school students were randomly sampled for the study. Findings revealed that students believe that teachers should correct their errors in the classroom using pragmatic error correction, phonological error correction and vocabulary error correction. It was therefore recommended that teachers should adoptshould adopteffective corrective measures that would enhance the spoken andwritten(Though the paper is concerned with the oral aspects of English, it’s technically impossible to omit the written aspect because often times, the spoken aspect is reported in the written form, therefore error correction techniques is equally extended to the writing skills of the students) English of the students.
Full Text: PDF DOI: 10.15640/jsspi.v5n1a5
Browse Journals
Journal Policies
Information
Useful Links
- Call for Papers
- Submit Your Paper
- Publish in Your Native Language
- Subscribe the Journal
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Contact the Executive Editor
- Recommend this Journal to Librarian
- View the Current Issue
- View the Previous Issues
- Recommend this Journal to Friends
- Recommend a Special Issue
- Comment on the Journal
- Publish the Conference Proceedings
Latest Activities
Resources
Visiting Status
Today | 269 |
Yesterday | 1251 |
This Month | 21514 |
Last Month | 26344 |
All Days | 1207257 |
Online | 17 |