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Negative Feedback in Child NS-NNS Conversation
312
Citations
44
References
1995
Year
Second Language LearningNs ModificationLanguage DevelopmentAtypical Language DevelopmentPsycholinguisticsCommunicationLanguage LearningDevelopmental PsychologySocial Communication DisorderSecond Language AcquisitionChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionSchool-age LanguageConversation AnalysisAdult Language LearningLanguage StudiesVerbal InteractionInteractional LinguisticsChild PsychologyHeritage Language AcquisitionNegative FeedbackLanguage MonitoringSpeech CommunicationChild DevelopmentImplicit Negative FeedbackSpeech DevelopmentInterpersonal CommunicationArtsLanguage InterventionLinguistics
Children adjust their speech for less proficient partners in both first‑ and second‑language contexts, providing negative feedback to aid acquisition. The study examines whether native‑speaking children give negative feedback to non‑native‑speaking peers during conversation. The study found that native‑speaking children use negotiation strategies and recasts as reactive and implicit negative feedback, tailoring responses to error type and complexity, and that non‑native peers incorporate this feedback into their interlanguage systems.
This paper reports on a study that examines the pattern of interaction in child native speaker (NS)–nonnative speaker (NNS) conversation to determine if the NSs provide negative feedback to their NNS conversational partners. It appears that just as children are able to modify their input for their less linguistically proficient conversational partners in first language acquisition (Snow, 1977), so too are children able to modify their interactions for NNS peers in the second language acquisition process and, in doing so, provide negative feedback. Two forms of NS modification were identified in this study as providing reactive and implicit negative feedback to the NNS. These were (a) negotiation strategies, including repetition, clarification requests, and comprehension checks, and (b) recasts. The results indicated that NSs respond differentially to the grammaticality and ambiguity of their NNS peers' conversational contributions. Furthermore, NS responses (negotiate, recast, or ignore) appeared to be triggered by the type and complexity of NNS errors, although it was more likely overall that negative feedback would be used rather than the error ignored. Additionally, evidence suggested that negative feedback was incorporated by the NNSs into their interlanguage systems. This indicates that not only does negative evidence exist for child second language learners in these types of conversations, but that it is also usable and used by them in the language acquisition process.
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