posted on 2014-04-15, 00:00authored byKara Morgan-Short, Jeanne Heil, Andrea Botero-Moriarty, Shane Ebert
The aims of the present study were twofold. The study addressed the issues of simultaneous attention to form and meaning in second language (L2) written input and reactivity of think-alouds. Specifically, the study examined the comprehension of L2 learners of Spanish who either attended to lexical or grammatical forms while
reading for meaning or read for meaning alone. Learners completed these tasks while either thinking aloud or not. Results indicated only a minimal effect for thinking aloud that did not appear to compromise
the internal validity of the study. Additionally, results showed
that attending to grammatical or lexical form while reading for meaning did not affect comprehension. Indeed, learners who processed these forms more deeply evidenced greater comprehension.
Morgan-Short K, Heil J, Botero-Moriarty A, Ebert S. Allocation Of Attention To Second Language Form And Meaning. Studies in Second Language Acquisition. Dec 2012;34(4):659-685. DOI: 10.1017/S027226311200037X