book chapterCambridge University Press eBooksAug 14, 2006Closed access

Does error feedback help student writers? New evidence on the short- and long-term effects of written error correction

California State University, Sacramento

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Attitudes and approaches toward student error have been a source of debate among second language acquisition (SLA) and second language (L2) writing scholars for more than two decades. The debate has ranged from calls for correction of all student errors to prevent fossilization (e.g., Higgs & Clifford, 1982; Lalande, 1982) to a preference for selective correction that focuses on patterns of error that can be addressed productively (Bates et al., 1993; Ferris, 1995c; Hendrickson, 1978) torecommendations that all error correction be eliminated because it is unnecessary, ineffective and even counterproductive (Cook, 1991; Corder, 1981; Krashen, 1984; Selinker, 1992; Truscott, 1996).

Citation impact

636
total citations
FWCI
57.39
Percentile
100%
References
0
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • BATES
  • Term (time)
  • Fossilization
  • Error detection and correction
  • Computer science
  • Preference
  • Linguistics
  • Cognitive psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
No related works found for this paper.