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Applied Linguistics Advance Access originally published online on April 4, 2007
Applied Linguistics 2007 28(2):309-315; doi:10.1093/applin/aml057
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© Oxford University Press 2007

Enhancing Automaticity Through Task-based Language Learning

Isabelle De Ridder1, Lieve Vangehuchten2 and Marta Seseña Gómez3

1Flemish Council for Education, 2University of Antwerp, 3University of Salamanca


   Abstract

In general terms automaticity could be defined as the subconscious condition wherein ‘we perform a complex series of tasks very quickly and efficiently, without having to think about the various components and subcomponents of action involved’ (DeKeyser 2001: 125). For language learning, Segalowitz (2003) characterised automaticity as a more efficient, more accurate, and more stable performance. As such, automaticity is often associated with systematicity and a merely instructional approach. However, task-based learning seems not incompatible with automaticity either, since it incorporates activities that respect ‘transfer-appropriate processing and other positive features of communicative practices’ (Segalowitz 2003: 402) and thus allows students to creatively apply previously acquired knowledge in new communicative contexts. In order to test this assumption, an experiment was conducted at Antwerp University with a group of intermediate-level students of Spanish. Two groups were evaluated: an experimental group and a control group. The control group attended a traditional communicative course, whereas the experimental group's course had a task-based component built into it. The results of the experiment indicate that the experimental group outperformed the control group for automatization (as defined by a number of criteria).


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