The effects of explicit grammar instruction on the learning of simple and complex grammar rules
This study examines the effects of explicit instruction on learning simple and complex rules. While the target simple rule underlies the optional inversion of subject and verb following fronting of adverb of place, the two target complex rules underlie the formation of pseudo-cleft sentences headed...
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Published in | Majallat al-ʻulūm al-insānīyah (Constantine, Algeria) Vol. أ; no. 43; pp. 7 - 38 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | Arabic English |
Published |
قسنطينة، الجزائر
جامعة الإخوة منتوري قسنطينة 1
2015
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 1111-505X 2588-2007 |
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Summary: | This study examines the effects of explicit instruction on
learning simple and complex rules. While the target simple rule
underlies the optional inversion of subject and verb following
fronting of adverb of place, the two target complex rules
underlie the formation of pseudo-cleft sentences headed by
‘where’ and ‘what’. Difference in the instructional condition
depends on the presence or absence of explicit grammatical
information. The results indicate that subjects in the explicit
grammar condition outperformed the subjects in the implicit
condition in both the simple and complex rules. These results
support previous findings that explicit instruction leads to gains
in learning second / foreign language grammatical items. |
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ISSN: | 1111-505X 2588-2007 |