Javascript must be enabled to continue!
LEARNERS AFFECTIVE ENGAGEMENT WITH CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK ON ORAL PRESENTATIONS IN EFL UNIVERSITY CLASSROOMS
View through CrossRef
The present study investigated Pakistani English as a foreign language (EFL) students’ affective engagement with teachers’ corrective feedback (CF) on their oral presentations. Fifty undergraduate students studying English language courses from three different universities participated in the study. The research first explored students’ views on CF-related practices, including timing (immediate vs. delayed), mode (public vs. private), and focus (language accuracy vs. content and delivery). Second, students’ individual and contextual factors were examined, particularly regarding speaking skills, feedback expectations, and attitudes toward error correction. Third, the study analyzed how these factors shaped students’ emotional responses to CF in emotionally laden speaking skill tasks. Data from open-ended questionnaires, classroom observations, semi-structured interviews, stimulated recalls and reflected accounts revealed that while students sometimes ignored teachers’oral and written comments, they held a positive attitude for corrective feedback and expressed appreciation for its role in their language learning and communication skills development. The feedback process elicited a spectrum of distinct emotional responses, ranging from feelings of encouragement and motivation to moments of apprehension, discomfort or self-consciousness, which varied across individuals. It is also observed that students with better proficiency were more appreciative of feedback provided. The findings of the paper offer valuable pedagogical implications for English as a foreign language (EFL) instruction, particularly for oral performances and tasks. The findings suggest that teachers can play a pivotal role in shaping the emotional climate of feedback encounters, helping students transform potentially negative emotional reactions into constructive learning opportunities. By fostering an atmosphere of respect, encouragement, and mutual trust, EFL teachers can enhance students’ willingness to receive and act on corrective feedback, thereby maximizing the affective and cognitive benefits of the feedback process. In short, the study highlights the need for feedback approaches that balance accuracy-focused instruction with strategies that protect learners’ confidence in oral performance settings.
Noble Institute for New Generation
Title: LEARNERS AFFECTIVE ENGAGEMENT WITH CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK ON ORAL PRESENTATIONS IN EFL UNIVERSITY CLASSROOMS
Description:
The present study investigated Pakistani English as a foreign language (EFL) students’ affective engagement with teachers’ corrective feedback (CF) on their oral presentations.
Fifty undergraduate students studying English language courses from three different universities participated in the study.
The research first explored students’ views on CF-related practices, including timing (immediate vs.
delayed), mode (public vs.
private), and focus (language accuracy vs.
content and delivery).
Second, students’ individual and contextual factors were examined, particularly regarding speaking skills, feedback expectations, and attitudes toward error correction.
Third, the study analyzed how these factors shaped students’ emotional responses to CF in emotionally laden speaking skill tasks.
Data from open-ended questionnaires, classroom observations, semi-structured interviews, stimulated recalls and reflected accounts revealed that while students sometimes ignored teachers’oral and written comments, they held a positive attitude for corrective feedback and expressed appreciation for its role in their language learning and communication skills development.
The feedback process elicited a spectrum of distinct emotional responses, ranging from feelings of encouragement and motivation to moments of apprehension, discomfort or self-consciousness, which varied across individuals.
It is also observed that students with better proficiency were more appreciative of feedback provided.
The findings of the paper offer valuable pedagogical implications for English as a foreign language (EFL) instruction, particularly for oral performances and tasks.
The findings suggest that teachers can play a pivotal role in shaping the emotional climate of feedback encounters, helping students transform potentially negative emotional reactions into constructive learning opportunities.
By fostering an atmosphere of respect, encouragement, and mutual trust, EFL teachers can enhance students’ willingness to receive and act on corrective feedback, thereby maximizing the affective and cognitive benefits of the feedback process.
In short, the study highlights the need for feedback approaches that balance accuracy-focused instruction with strategies that protect learners’ confidence in oral performance settings.
Related Results
Investigating the Psychological Impact of Corrective Feedback on ESL Students’ Language Anxiety
Investigating the Psychological Impact of Corrective Feedback on ESL Students’ Language Anxiety
This study investigates the psychological impact of corrective feedback on English as a Second Language (ESL) students' language anxiety using a quantitative research approach. Con...
STUDENTS’ ATTITUDE TOWARDS CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK IN EFL CLASSROOM
STUDENTS’ ATTITUDE TOWARDS CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK IN EFL CLASSROOM
This research is conducted to find out the teacher’s corrective feedback in an EFL classroom and to find out the students’ attitude after given corrective feedback. This research a...
Written Corrective Feedback Employed by Lecturer on Students’ Writing
Written Corrective Feedback Employed by Lecturer on Students’ Writing
Purpose – The aim of the study is to identify the types of written corrective feedback and find out the types that are frequently employed by lecturer of students’ writing in her f...
Oral Corrective Feedback on Pronunciation Errors: The Mediating Effects of Learners’ Engagement with Feedback
Oral Corrective Feedback on Pronunciation Errors: The Mediating Effects of Learners’ Engagement with Feedback
This study examined low-proficiency Iranian EFL students’ affective, behavioral, and cognitive engagement with oral corrective feedback (OCF) on interdental fricative errors: /θ/an...
Teachers’ translanguaging practices in providing written corrective feedback: An exploratory study of learners’ affective engagement with feedback
Teachers’ translanguaging practices in providing written corrective feedback: An exploratory study of learners’ affective engagement with feedback
The present study investigated five intermediate English learners’ affective engagement with teacher-generated written corrective feedback. In addition, the mediating effects of th...
STUDENT TEACHERS’ BELIEFS ABOUT CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK
STUDENT TEACHERS’ BELIEFS ABOUT CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK
This research study compared the student teachers’ beliefs about corrective feedback in the EFL learning context in the 2018-2019 academic year, spring semester. The participants (...
EFL Listening Anxiety: Online and Face-to-Face Learning
EFL Listening Anxiety: Online and Face-to-Face Learning
Saudi Arabia is undergoing constant educational changes with online learning as one of the convenient alternatives to face-to-face (FTF) classrooms. This study focuses on English a...
An epistemic justice account of students’ experiences of feedback
An epistemic justice account of students’ experiences of feedback
I am a storyteller. I believe in the power of stories to share experiences and to elucidate thoughts and ideas and to help us to make sense of complex social practices. This thesis...

