Task modality and languagerelated episodes in young learners: An attempt to manage accuracy and editing
Language Teaching Research 0(0)
Abstract
Task modality (oral vs. writing) has been found to affect the production, nature and
resolution of the language-related episodes (LREs) produced by adult learners in collaborative
interaction, a finding also attested in very recent and still limited research with young learners,
a population that deserves greater attention in the literature. Besides, previous research has
not yet considered the incorporation of LREs in the final output of both oral and written
tasks. Nor has it controlled for the differential levels of accuracy that the oral vs. the written
modality demand, or the opportunity for revising the output equally in both modalities.
Besides, little is known about learners’ motivation towards tasks of different modality. This
article fills these gaps by examining the effect of task-modality on the production of LREs by
10- to 12-year-old schoolchildren performing an oral+writing task and an oral+editing task,
as well as its effect on their task motivation. Task modality effects were evinced in terms of
nature and incorporation of LREs, the written mode leading to greater focus on form and
incorporation of accurately resolved LREs. The possibility of editing the oral output resulted
in enhanced target-likeness of resolved LREs. As for task motivation, learners perceived both
tasks as equally motivating.