An investigation into ESL student interaction during task-based activities
Authors: Trần Bá Tiến
Journal for Educators, teachers and trainers
: :
Publishing year: 6/2022
Interaction in general or negotiation of meaning in particular plays a crucial role in language learning
as it provides learners with comprehensible input that leads to speaking fluency and language
acquisition. This paper is an attempt to look into student interaction in a high intermediate English
class. It aims to find out what strategies for negotiation of meaning the students used and possible
problems arising during task-based interaction. The participants were fifteen international students of
various citizenships studying at a university in the United States. The data sources were taken from a
video with its transcription filming an English learning session. The qualitative research method is
employed for data analysis. Long’s (1980) three strategies of negotiation of meaning are used as the
analytic framework. It was found that the students of high language proficiency infrequently resorted
to negotiation of meaning during task-based interaction. Clarification requests were the most
common while confirmation checks and comprehension checks were at lower frequency. Uneven
participation, however, was a problem as a student tended to dominate the discussion. The findings
imply that the role of group leader should be circulated to overcome the personal dominance during
discussion; and task-based activities should be inclusive and collaborative to ensure equal
contributions among the participants.
Interaction, negotiation of meaning, task-based activity, clarification requests, confirmation, comprehension checks.