“…Languaging manifests itself when learners get involved in completing communicative tasks through collaborative dialogues. Various studies (Kobayashi, 2003 ; Lapkin et al, 2002 ; Morris & Tarone, 2003 ; Storch, 1998 , 2004 ; Swain & Lapkin, 1998 ; Tin, 2003 ; Zabihi & Bayan, 2020 ; Zabihi & Ghahramanzadeh, 2022 ) have demonstrated that student collaboration, frequently referred to as small-group work, is of great significance in second language (L2) acquisition, social aspects of the classroom (i.e., how learners join together), and language pedagogy since working collaboratively enables learners to have a relatively better performance than working alone (e.g., Storch, 1999 ). One way for benefiting from collaboration is through a specific kind of interaction known as collective scaffolding (Donato, 1994 ), where learners can pool their cognitive and linguistic knowledge and work together to solve their language-related problems.…”