Developing the use of formulaic language for study abroad: a targeted instructional intervention

Date

2022-06-25

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0957-1736

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

This study investigates the immediate and sustained effects of a pre-departure study abroad training on the oral production of L2 Chinese formulaic language across a range of social and transactional interactions. Eighteen upper-intermediate learners of Chinese were assigned to either an instructed or non-instructed group to determine the efficacy of instruction designed to enhance their study abroad year in China and beyond. A three-stage pre-post-delayed longitudinal experimental design was adopted to examine instructional effects over an academic year, elicited by means of a computerised oral task (COT). The assessment was based on quantitative appropriateness ratings and a qualitative analysis of the output. Results show that the instructed group outperformed the control group immediately after the pre-study abroad (pre-SA) instruction, as well as after the year abroad. The significant difference between the two groups, however, decreased after the period abroad as the control group also showed significant improvement without the pre-SA instruction. Nevertheless, the sustained effect of the instruction enabled the experimental group to retain their competitive edge, even after a year in the target language country. The findings demonstrate the longitudinal benefits of pre-SA instruction.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Applied Linguistics, Pragmatics, Language education, Study abroad, Pragmatics teaching and learning

Citation

Wang, J. and Halenko, N. (2022) Developing the use of formulaic language for study abroad: a targeted instructional intervention. The Language Learning Journal, 50 (4), 409-426

Rights

Research Institute