WIKINDX Resources
Chanquoy Lucile & Negro Isabelle (2005). « Explicit and Implicit Training of Subject–Verb Agreement Processing in 3rd and 5th Grades ». L1-Educational Studies in Language and Literature, vol. 5, n° 2, mai, p. 193–214.
Added by: Feyfant Annie (01 Jan 1970 01:00:00 Europe/Paris) |
Resource type: Journal Article BibTeX citation key: Chanquoy2005 ![]() |
Categories: Apprentissages et psychologie Keywords: apprentissage, écriture, psychologie de l'éducation Creators: Chanquoy, Negro Collection: L1-Educational Studies in Language and Literature |
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Abstract |
This paper focuses on grammar teaching with beginning writers. The study aimed to determine whether the grammatical encoding in French should be explicitly taught to improve beginner writers’ performances. Third and fifth graders were evaluated on their ability to correctly make a verb agree with its subject before (pre-test), during and after (post-test) training sessions. The training was either explicit or implicit. The explicitly trained group was requested to select the subject and the verb in erroneous sentences and to correct agreement errors. The implicitly trained group corrected only the errors they found. A global analysis showed a significant decrease in agreement errors between pre-test and post-test regardless of the training group, suggesting that agreement rules may be explicitly or implicitly taught. However, a more fine-grained analysis showed that younger writers took extra advantage of the explicit training during the training sessions, they did not do so during the post-test. Finally, explicit training benefited all participants during the post-test with sentences demonstrating syntactic ambiguity.
Added by: Feyfant Annie |