May 2008, Volume 6, No.5 (Serial No.56)
US -China Foreign Language, ISSN1539-8080, US A
To correct or to ignore? WEI Li-qiu (Department of Foreign Languages and Literature, Hechi University, Yizhou 546300, China)
Abstract: The correction of language learners’errors has been a controversial issue in the world of second language acquisition. This article starts with error analysis to reveal the multi-sources characteristic of errors, then proceeds to some empirical studies on the effects of error correction in students’written work to show the complexity and variety of correcting strategies, and finally addresses some practical implications. Key words: learners’errors; error correcting strategies; error analysis
1. Introduction The author is often made frustrated to some degree by some of the “persistent errors”her students make, but when asked “Do you believe that learners’errors should be corrected as soon as they are made in order to prevent the formation of bad habits?”the author will give a definite “No”. As we know, error correction and feedback has been a very complicated and controversial issue which involves many factors such as learner’s age, personality characteristics, capabilities or level of performance, the task at hand, the focus of the activity, the modality in which the task is accomplished (i.e. oral or written production). Besides, theoretically, error analysis (EA) reveals to us that there are different types of learners’errors and these errors can be traced to different possible causes (interlingual transfer, intralingual transfer, transfer of training, communicative strategies and cognitive and affective factors) and sources (linguistic, cognitive, affective, communicative). So learner differences (in belief, attitude, learning styles and preferences, etc.), the multi-sources and multi-types of errors determine the complexity and variety of correction and feedback strategies. Furthermore, the fact that many empirical studies on the effects of feedback and evaluation in second and foreign language writing have yielded contradictory results also shows that error correction is by no means a matter of correction and prevention of bad habit, but something far more complicated, which requires a combination of affective, cognitive and linguistic judgment. This paper starts with error analysis to reveal the multi-sources characteristic of errors, then proceeds to some empirical studies on the effects of error correction in students’written work, and finally addresses some practical implications.
2. Error analysis and possible sources of errors Error analysis (EA) refers to “the study and analysis of the errors made by second language learners” (Richards, Platt & Platt, 1998, p. 160). EA has language learners’language as its staring point of analysis. Since an ESL learner inevitably makes errors when she/he engages in language production activities, Brown (2000, p. 218) called error analysis as a study of learners’errors that “can be observed, analyzed, and classified to reveal something of the system operating within the leaner”. Richards, Platt and Platt (1998) indicated that the purposes WEI Li-qiu (1967- ), associate professor of Department of Foreign Languages and Literature, Hechi University; research fields: English language teaching, second language acquisition. 25