JOURNAL ARTICLE

Enhancing Automaticity Through Task-based Language Learning

Isabelle de RidderLieve VangehuchtenMarta Seseña Gómez

Year: 2007 Journal:   Applied Linguistics Vol: 28 (2)Pages: 309-315   Publisher: Oxford University Press

Abstract

In general terms automaticity could be defined as the subconscious condition wherein ‘we perform a complex series of tasks very quickly and efficiently, without having to think about the various components and subcomponents of action involved’ (DeKeyser 2001: 125). For language learning, Segalowitz (2003) characterised automaticity as a more efficient, more accurate, and more stable performance. As such, automaticity is often associated with systematicity and a merely instructional approach. However, task-based learning seems not incompatible with automaticity either, since it incorporates activities that respect ‘transfer-appropriate processing and other positive features of communicative practices’ (Segalowitz 2003: 402) and thus allows students to creatively apply previously acquired knowledge in new communicative contexts. In order to test this assumption, an experiment was conducted at Antwerp University with a group of intermediate-level students of Spanish. Two groups were evaluated: an experimental group and a control group. The control group attended a traditional communicative course, whereas the experimental group's course had a task-based component built into it. The results of the experiment indicate that the experimental group outperformed the control group for automatization (as defined by a number of criteria).

Keywords:
Automaticity Task (project management) Subconscious Psychology Control (management) Cognitive psychology Group (periodic table) Computer science Artificial intelligence Cognition Engineering

Metrics

98
Cited By
8.31
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
7
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

EFL/ESL Teaching and Learning
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Language and Linguistics
Second Language Acquisition and Learning
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Developmental and Educational Psychology
Second Language Learning and Teaching
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Literature and Literary Theory

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