Abstract
This experimental study investigates the differential effects of three conditions (nonnegotiated
premodified input, negotiation without “pushed output” [Swain, 1985],
and negotiation plus pushed output) on L2 learners' vocabulary comprehension and
acquisition (receptive and productive). Analyses of variance performed on the data indicated that:
(a) negotiated interaction had a positive effect on the comprehension of L2 words; (b) only
negotiated interaction that incorporated pushed output appeared to have promoted both receptive
and productive acquisition of words as well as an increase in productive word retention; and (c)
negotiated interaction plus output did not promote receptive acquisition more than negotiation
without output, but it was more effective in promoting productive acquisition. The findings of this
study provide empirical evidence for the important role of negotiation in facilitating the
comprehension and acquisition of L2 vocabulary, which suggests that output plays a key role
within the negotiation process for productive lexical acquisition.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education
Cited by
124 articles.
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