Errors
and error correction
What
and why?
Making
errors is an inevitable and necessary part of language learning.
It is only through making errors, and hearing the correct forms,
that students can develop their own understanding of how English
works. It is thus important that students have as much opportunity
as possible to produce language and, with the focus on using English
creatively (rather than simply repeating language), the number of
errors that students make will inevitably rise. Teachers thus need
to think carefully about how they will respond to these errors.
The
process of absorbing a new language structure takes considerable
time. Teachers cannot, therefore, expect that simply correcting
an error will produce immediate results. Some errors can remain
even up to very advanced levels (such as the 's' in 'she lives',
'he goes', etc.). A strong emphasis on error correction cannot be
expected to produce students who make few errors. In fact, an over-emphasis
on error correction is likely to be counter-productive as students
become deterred from using - and experimenting with - new language
and vocabulary. But students do need to have their errors pointed
out to them. The key is to limit correction to a small number of
points at a time and to judge when the right moment for correction
is.
Practical
ideas
- The
HELP YOURSELF
section in the Workbook includes ideas on students' checking of
their own work.
- Correcting
students when they are in the middle of saying something may produce
students who are afraid to talk. You can make a note of the errors
students make and go through them at the end of the discussion/lesson.
- Limit
yourself to correcting only a few errors in written work or after
the students speak.
- For
errors in WRITING,
students can be encouraged to build up a short list of their most
common errors. The list can be arranged to form a mnemonic of
things to check (e.g. PATTIBS = plurals, articles, tenses, 'there
is/are', '-ing' form, 'be', spelling).
- In
monolingual classes most students will make the same errors. You
may want to have 'an error of the week' game. Choose an error
which most students make, tell them what it is and write the correct
version on a piece of paper on the wall. This raises the students'
consciousness about this particular error. They then have to try
not to make this error all week. The student who succeeds can
choose the 'error of the week' for the next week.

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