2020
DOI: 10.26858/ijole.v4i2.13601
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Association between Oral Error Corrections of University Teacher and English Majors’ Language Anxiety in Philippine Higher Education Context

Abstract: This study sought to answer the question on the level of English language anxiety in the ESL and mainstream classrooms of 61 total number of English major students utilizing the 20-item self-assessment questionnaire of English Language Anxiety Scale (ELAS) developed by Pappamihiel (2002). Actual one-hour footage of classroom was documented through a MONACORR audio-recorder, thrice with each teacher. The recorder was given to one of the teachers’ students without knowledge for the authenticity of their oral cor… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Spiller (2009), Cruz (2012) Elsaghayer (2014) and Calsiyao (2015) declare that over-correction of students' errors can increase students' anxiety and decrease students' selfconfidence. This current study is also in line with the research finding that conducted by Guibangguibang (2020). It was found out that the frequency of explicit correction, recast, and repetition, as perceived by ESL major students of their English teachers' oral error correction types, have no significant relationships to their English language anxiety (Guibangguibang (2020).…”
Section: Impact Of Lecturers' Oral Corrective Feedbacksupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Spiller (2009), Cruz (2012) Elsaghayer (2014) and Calsiyao (2015) declare that over-correction of students' errors can increase students' anxiety and decrease students' selfconfidence. This current study is also in line with the research finding that conducted by Guibangguibang (2020). It was found out that the frequency of explicit correction, recast, and repetition, as perceived by ESL major students of their English teachers' oral error correction types, have no significant relationships to their English language anxiety (Guibangguibang (2020).…”
Section: Impact Of Lecturers' Oral Corrective Feedbacksupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This current study is also in line with the research finding that conducted by Guibangguibang (2020). It was found out that the frequency of explicit correction, recast, and repetition, as perceived by ESL major students of their English teachers' oral error correction types, have no significant relationships to their English language anxiety (Guibangguibang (2020).…”
Section: Impact Of Lecturers' Oral Corrective Feedbacksupporting
confidence: 90%