Affiliation:
1. Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (UPV/EHU)
Abstract
Abstract
Research on L1 use among young EFL learners is scarce and has been mainly conducted with oral tasks, while
collaborative writing (CW) tasks have been underexplored. CW provides learners with many opportunities for L2 development,
especially when they work in collaborative patterns of interaction. In research with young EFL learners, the relationship between
L1 use, CW and patterns of interaction has not been studied yet, and it is important to assess the extent to which the patterns of
interaction formed in CW tasks play a role in L1 use by these learners, because these three factors have been claimed to impact L2
development. Thus, this study examines whether the patterns of interaction formed played a role in the L1 use and functions of 56
young EFL learners while they worked on a CW task at two different times. The findings indicated that these EFL learners showed
mainly parallel/passive or collaborative patterns of interaction at both testing times, that the L1 was used mainly for
metacognitive issues, although differences existed from pattern to pattern, and that a collaborative pattern of interaction
resulted in more L1 use. The results are discussed following the pedagogical implications of these findings for the EFL
classroom.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Education,Language and Linguistics