Learner autonomy and critical thinking skills seem to be essential learning attainments for foreign language learners. As an attempt to promote these skills and attainments, this study outlines a three-week project carried out to discover how class surveys designed by learners themselves contribute to the development of writing and speaking skills of a group of elementary EFL learners in a state school (n=24). In groups of six, the learners followed a number of steps ranging from group formation to task allocation and from peer correction to self-evaluation. These steps gradually helped each group build a survey on a chosen topic, administer it to peers, analyse and report the results, and evaluate the overall process and the video-recorded presentations, thereby giving the group the chance to account for a real-life problem. It was observed that learner-generated surveys make some major contributions to the struggles to develop writing and speaking skills. The process of preparing the questions, editing them and commenting on the results broadened their horizons. They also developed their public speaking skills. Despite these valuable contributions, some problems pertaining to affective domain emerged. That is, during these task-based lessons, proliferation of such restricting affective factors as the fear of being observed or the challenge to express oneself before people seemed to persist. In the light of these observations, this study not only provides the reader with strong points of such instruction, but it also makes some suggestions to come up with possible solutions to the aforementioned problems that may persist in prospective in-class applications.
Other ID | JA46DK36FY |
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Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | July 14, 2016 |
Published in Issue | Year 2012 Volume: 2 Issue: 1 |