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A Descriptive Study Of Teacher’s 
Oral Feedback In An ESL 
Young Learner Classroom In 
Indonesia 
By E l i s H oms i n i M a o l i d a 
E - k i d s C e n d e k i a , B a n d u n g , I n d o n e s i a
ABSTRACT 
This study reports the teacher's oral positive and corrective feedback in 
a classroom interaction in ESL young learner context in Indonesia. The 
study was conducted in a primary one class of a newly-established 
international school where English was used as the medium of 
instruction not only in English class but also in almost all subjects. It was 
revealed that the teacher employed more positive feedback than 
corrective feedback in the interaction, and in employing positive 
feedback the teacher preferred to utilize non-verbal cues 
(paralinguistic strategy) and praise markers. However, there was a 
potential ambiguity in employing praise markers. In employing 
negative/corrective feedback, the teacher tended to use explicit 
feedback rather than implicit feedback. Besides the above, corrective 
feedback was used to expand conversation, scaffold learning and 
negotiate meaning and form.
RESEARCH DESIGN 
* Descriptive 
It involves a collection of techniques 
to specify or describe naturally 
occurring phenomena without 
experimental manipulation. And 
this study was carried out with 
video-audio recordings and field 
notes without experiencing 
something. 
Type of Descriptive 
Research 
*Interactional Research 
This research documents the 
interactional features of 
classroom discourse. And in 
this article, the data were 
collected from of video-audio 
recording of teacher-students 
interaction and field 
notes. 
Type of knowledge 
* Priori 
This was categorized in the priori 
knowledge because the research 
was based on observation. It’s was 
by doing a systematic research 
observation.
Purpose 
• This study was conducted to observe and focus on positive 
and corrective of feedback used in the classroom interaction. 
The term positive feedback used in this study refers to broader 
definition of oral positive feedback which combines some 
definitions from previous researchers(Reigel, 2005). By 
adapting three components of positive feedback from Reigel 
(2005), this study categorizes positive feedback strategies into 
three elements (p.32). Corrective feedback used in this study 
refers to the feedback that learners receive on the linguistic 
errors they make in their oral speaking.
Research questions 
• Two different types of 
feedback the positive and 
corrective used in the 
classroom interaction. 
• The teacher employs more 
positive feedback than 
corrective feedback in the 
interaction. 
PARTICIPANTS (case study) 
* An English Teacher 
with his twenty-two students 
ESL classroom in Indonesia. 
Materials 
• A classroom observation scheme 
designed to record teacher-students 
interaction. 
• Recordings 
• Field notes
Data collection 
• The data were 
collected from 180 
minutes of video-audio 
recording of 
teacher-students 
interaction and by 
observing (field 
notes). The video-audio 
recording was 
transcribed for detail 
analysis. Together 
with the result of field 
notes, the data were 
analyzed and 
interpreted. 
Data Analysis 
The analysis showed that positive 
feedback outnumbered 
corrective feedback. Of the forty-nine 
(100%) feedbacks given by 
the teacher, 34 (69.4%) 
feedbacks were positive and 15 
(30.6%) feedbacks were 
corrective. Below is the 
distribution of feedback. 
Observation in the class showed 
that the young learners enjoyed 
the interaction in class. It could 
be seen from the fact that the 
students participated in question 
and answer interactively. Every 
time the teacher gave a 
question, almost all students 
raised their hands, competing 
with each other.
Therefore, the teacher chose 
which student to answer first 
then distributed the 
participation. The classroom 
was also alive with concluded 
that the positive circumstance 
of interaction was the result 
from the positive feedbacks 
employed by the teacher. 
However, the positive 
feedback utilized by the 
teacher in the interaction might 
contribute to the positive 
learning environment that 
motivate and encourage 
students to participate in the 
interaction(Prabhu, 1992; 
Reigel, 2005; Tatawy, 2002). 
Why do you think each 
researcher chose that 
particular research desing 
and not other? 
• I strongly believe that the author 
Elis Homsini chose the 
descriptive research, because it 
was the more suitable for his 
research since that design 
involves a collection of 
techniques to describe a 
phenomena without 
experimental manipulation. And 
the author needed to describe 
a phenomena. In this case, the 
positive and corrective 
feedback used in the classroom 
interaction. In a nutshell, he 
carried out his research by 
observing under study. Without 
any kind of experimentation. So 
it couldn’t be another design 
since this one is the more 
appropriate for this research.
REFERENCES 
• Homsini, E. (2013). A Descriptive Study of Teacher’s Oral 
Feedback in an ESL Young Learner Classroom Indonesia. A 
biannual publication on the study of language and literature, 
Vol. 15. Retrieved from 
http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/18 
916
A Study Of English Phonological 
Errors Produced By 
English Department Students 
B y Na n i I n d r a j a n i T i o n o y Ar l e n e 
Ma r i a Y o s t a n t o 
English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian 
University, 
Siwalankerto 121-131, Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia
ABSTRACT 
• This qualitative research was conducted to find 
out the kinds of English phonological errors 
produced by English department students, 
particularly English consonantal sounds that do 
not exist in Indonesian phonetics system – [v], 
[θ], [ð], [߯], [d߯], and [t∫] – and the patterns of 
those errors. The result shows that the students 
produced thirty-four kinds of phonological errors 
and that the deviations occurred most 
frequently before, after, or in between vowels.
• TYPE OF RESEARCH 
* Practical Qualitative 
Research 
It was showed that there were 
experimental studies in this 
research, and also it was made 
based on a specific level, group of 
people in this case with 25 English 
department students and also in a 
particular place which was a 
private university in surabaya, 
Indonesia. Detailing results in a 
specific context. 
TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE 
* Empirical knowledge 
This was categorized in the 
empirical knowledge because 
there were involved many 
process such studies and 
experiments. 
PURPOSE 
This research was done to 
observe the phonological 
errors done by the 
Indonesian English learners in 
order to find out firstly the 
kinds of phonological errors 
made by the students in 
producing the English 
consonantal sounds which 
do not exist in Indonesian 
sound system – namely [v], 
[θ], [ð], [߯], [d߯], and [t∫], 
and secondly the patterns of 
the phonological deviations.
HYPOTHESIS 
As a consequence of all the 
difficulties provided by the English 
pronunciation, many English 
language learners as well as the 
Indonesian learners tend to 
generate errors in the articulation 
of the sounds. Therefore, this 
research was done to observe 
the phonological errors done by 
the Indonesian English learners in 
order to find out firstly the kinds of 
phonological errors. 
INSTRUMENTS 
* A tape recorder and 
pronunciation tasks, which were 
composed from the 
pronunciation exercises taken 
from Pronunciation in Action 
(Taylor, 1993), Pronunciation 
Exercises in English (Clarey & 
Dixson, 1963) and The Sounds of 
English (Deterding & 
Poedjosoedarmo, 1998), and 
from the ESL website 
(http://international.ouc.bc.ca/ 
pronunciation/). 
PARTICIPANTS 
* Twenty-five English department 
students who studied in a private 
university in Surabaya, a city in East 
Java, Indonesia.
DATA COLLECTION 
The data needed related only to the English consonantal sounds that 
do not exist in Indonesian. 
• The source of data was from the phonetic transcription of the 
recorded pronunciation of twenty-five English department students 
who studied in a private university in Surabaya, a city in East Java, 
Indonesia. 
• A tape recorder and pronunciation tasks, which were composed 
from the pronunciation exercises taken from Pronunciation in Action 
(Taylor, 1993), Pronunciation Exercises in English (Clarey & Dixson, 
1963) and The Sounds of English (Deterding & Poedjosoedarmo, 
1998), and from the ESL website 
(http://international.ouc.bc.ca/pronunciation/), were used to collect 
the data. 
• Having the phonetic transcription of the data which was done 
manually, the analysis began with the identification of the errors by 
comparing each student’s actual pronunciation with the standard 
phonetic transcription.
Data Analysis 
• The findings were grouped based 
on the six consonantal sounds 
investigated in this study, they 
are [v], [θ], [ð], [ʒ], [dʒ], and [t∫]. 
For additional description, each 
of those sounds was then 
classified into three categories in 
relation to the positions of their 
occurrences: they are initial, 
medial and final positions. 
Moreover, the phonological 
environments of the deviations 
were also formulated with the 
intention that further explanation 
about the patterns of the 
deviations could be provided. 
Why do you think each 
researcher chose that 
particular research desing 
and not other? 
• I think that the authors Indrajani 
and Yostanto chose the 
qualitative research, because it 
was the more appropriate for 
their research. That design 
involves investigation of 
concepts that are not 
numerically measurable, such as 
perceptions and the reasons 
behind them. That was the 
authors’ research about. They 
needed to know what were the 
reasons of what Indonesian 
students were not able to 
produce certain kinds of 
consonants sound . And 
according with their results they 
built some theory about it. So 
they couldn’t chose another 
design since this one involves 
everything what they needed to 
achieve their goal.
REFERENCES 
Indrajani, N. & Yostanto, A. (2008). A Study of English 
Phonological Errors Produced by English Department Students. A 
biannual publication on the study of language and literature, 
Vol. 10. Retrieved from 
http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/16 
761 
DELMY PAT PINTO
THE ROLE OF 
SUBTITLES IN SECOND 
LANGUAGE 
ACQUISITION 
By L i s a Ma r i a Gr ø n n Au r s t a d 
M a s t e r ’ s T h e s i s I n E n g l i s h 
N t n u 
S p r i n g 2 0 1 3
ABSTRAC 
• The aim of this master’s thesis is to provide further information about 
the role of subtitled audiovisual material in second language 
acquisition. Quantitative experimental research was conducted with 
49 17-year-old Norwegian high school students as participants. The 
participants were divided into three groups identical to their original 
school classes. One group watched an episode of the American 
animated cartoon Family Guy with Norwegian subtitles, the second 
group watched the same episode with English subtitles, and the 
control group watched the episode with no subtitles. Immediately 
after watching the episode, the participants responded to a 
comprehension questionnaire in order to investigate the potential 
short term effects of the subtitles, and four weeks later they 
responded to a word definition task and a lexical decision task in 
order to measure potential long term effects. The results indicated 
only short term effects of the subtitles as the presence of subtitles in 
the Norwegian group and the English group predicted better 
performance in the comprehension questionnaire. No effects of the 
subtitles were found in the word definition task and the lexical 
decision task, indicating that there were no long term effects of the 
subtitles in these two experiments.
TYPE OF APPROACH AND RESEARCH 
* Quantitative Experimental Research 
It was showed that the main variables in this experiment were 
different types of subtitles in watching audiovisual material: native 
language subtitles, target language subtitles, and no subtitles. The 
quantitative studies allow for a large number of participants whose 
results can be compared to each other related to a number of 
variables. The performances of the participants were measured 
with the variables, and the resulting numerical data was statistically 
analyzed in R. 
The research design of this study might well be argued to be 
experimental. In experimental designs, researchers explicitly 
manipulate the variables in order to prove/disprove their 
hypothesis. So the approach of this study is deductive and involves 
the manipulation of variables (type of subtitles). And it included 
two experimental groups.
TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE 
* Empirical knowledge 
This work was categorized in 
the empirical knowledge 
because there were involved 
many process such studies and 
experiments. 
PURPOSE 
The aim of this study was to 
investigate the potential effect of 
subtitled audiovisual material in 
enhancing second language 
acquisition. The experiment was 
constructed so as to reveal both 
potential short and long term 
effects as well as potential 
differences based on the 
language of the subtitles. The main 
area of interest was to investigate 
whether exposure to different 
types of subtitles when watching 
an animated cartoon episode in 
the target language had an effect 
on the results on a comprehension 
questionnaire, a word definition 
task, and a lexical decision task.
INSTRUMENTS 
• Three episodes of the 
American animated cartoon 
series Family Guy, one with 
English subtitles, other with 
Norwegian subtitles, and the 
last one with no subtitles . 
• Comprehension questionnaire 
• Vocabulary test 
• Grammar test 
PARTICIPANTS 
The participants were 49 17-year-olds 
native Norwegian students with 25 
females and 24 males. with a fairly 
high level of proficiency in English as 
a second language. The participants 
were selected randomly based on 
their original school classes and 
divided into participant groups 
identical to these original classes. 
The participants were divided into 
three groups where one group 
watched an episode of the 
American animated cartoon series 
Family Guy with Norwegian subtitles, 
the second group watched the 
same episode with English subtitles, 
and the third group watched the 
episode with no subtitles making this 
group the baseline control group.
DATA COLLECTION 
The experiment was divided into two 
parts in order to make room for both a 
pre-test and short-term effect part and 
a long-term effect part four weeks later. 
The participants were asked to 
complete a questionnaire, also a 
vocabulary test and a grammar test on 
the internet. After completing the 
background questionnaire and the 
vocabulary and grammar tests, the 
participants were told to watch a film 
clip. Immediately after watching the 
episode, the participants were given a 
comprehension questionnaire in paper 
format based on the contents of the 
episode . Four weeks after the first 
testing and the exposure to the stimuli, 
the participants were presented with a 
word definition task and a lexical 
decision task related to the episode 
they had watched. 
HYPOTHESIS 
The main hypothesis was that the 
subtitles would influence the 
performances of the groups in all 
the three tasks indicating both 
short term and long term effects. 
It was also hypothesised that the 
English subtitles group would 
outperform the other two groups 
as the facilitative effect of target 
language subtitles has been 
found in several studies (Bianchi & 
Ciabattoni, 2008; Markham, 1999; 
Mitterer & McQueen, 2009; 
Vanderplank, 1988).
Data Analysis 
Why do you think each 
researcher chose that 
particular research desing 
and not other? 
The author chose the 
experimental research, because 
it was the most suitable for her 
research. She couldn’t chose 
another design since it involves 
all the process that is required to 
achieve her goal. 
That design involves the 
manipulation of variables in this 
case (type of subtitles) in order to 
prove or disprove her hypothesis. 
And that was what the author 
wanted. So that she can prove 
her hypothesis she needed to 
work in experiments. In this case, 
her research included two 
experimental groups. 
All the collected data was therefore 
coded and entered into an Excel 
worksheet that provided the basis for 
descriptive statistics allowing for 
calculation of the potential patterns 
in the data set. In order to investigate 
further whether the potential patterns 
found in the descriptive analysis in 
fact were statistically significant and 
not just a coincident, inferential 
statistics was carried out in R to check 
for dependencies between the results 
and the type of stimulus and 
information from the background 
testing. In this way the patterns found 
in the descriptive statistics would be 
checked to see if the patterns “truly 
exist in some kind of meaningful way” 
(Levon, 2010, p.
REFERENCES 
• Gronn, L. (2013). The Role of Subtitles in Second 
Language Acquisition. Master’s thesis in English, 
NTNU, Norway. Retrieved from 
http://www.ntnu.edu/documents/38274309/40279009/Lis 
aMGAurstad_Master_2013_withtitlepage.pdf/190bc71d- 
3e85-4519-a78b-5064597e5298 
Delmy Pat Pinto

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Descriptive, Qualitative and Experimental Journals Analysis

  • 1. A Descriptive Study Of Teacher’s Oral Feedback In An ESL Young Learner Classroom In Indonesia By E l i s H oms i n i M a o l i d a E - k i d s C e n d e k i a , B a n d u n g , I n d o n e s i a
  • 2. ABSTRACT This study reports the teacher's oral positive and corrective feedback in a classroom interaction in ESL young learner context in Indonesia. The study was conducted in a primary one class of a newly-established international school where English was used as the medium of instruction not only in English class but also in almost all subjects. It was revealed that the teacher employed more positive feedback than corrective feedback in the interaction, and in employing positive feedback the teacher preferred to utilize non-verbal cues (paralinguistic strategy) and praise markers. However, there was a potential ambiguity in employing praise markers. In employing negative/corrective feedback, the teacher tended to use explicit feedback rather than implicit feedback. Besides the above, corrective feedback was used to expand conversation, scaffold learning and negotiate meaning and form.
  • 3. RESEARCH DESIGN * Descriptive It involves a collection of techniques to specify or describe naturally occurring phenomena without experimental manipulation. And this study was carried out with video-audio recordings and field notes without experiencing something. Type of Descriptive Research *Interactional Research This research documents the interactional features of classroom discourse. And in this article, the data were collected from of video-audio recording of teacher-students interaction and field notes. Type of knowledge * Priori This was categorized in the priori knowledge because the research was based on observation. It’s was by doing a systematic research observation.
  • 4. Purpose • This study was conducted to observe and focus on positive and corrective of feedback used in the classroom interaction. The term positive feedback used in this study refers to broader definition of oral positive feedback which combines some definitions from previous researchers(Reigel, 2005). By adapting three components of positive feedback from Reigel (2005), this study categorizes positive feedback strategies into three elements (p.32). Corrective feedback used in this study refers to the feedback that learners receive on the linguistic errors they make in their oral speaking.
  • 5. Research questions • Two different types of feedback the positive and corrective used in the classroom interaction. • The teacher employs more positive feedback than corrective feedback in the interaction. PARTICIPANTS (case study) * An English Teacher with his twenty-two students ESL classroom in Indonesia. Materials • A classroom observation scheme designed to record teacher-students interaction. • Recordings • Field notes
  • 6. Data collection • The data were collected from 180 minutes of video-audio recording of teacher-students interaction and by observing (field notes). The video-audio recording was transcribed for detail analysis. Together with the result of field notes, the data were analyzed and interpreted. Data Analysis The analysis showed that positive feedback outnumbered corrective feedback. Of the forty-nine (100%) feedbacks given by the teacher, 34 (69.4%) feedbacks were positive and 15 (30.6%) feedbacks were corrective. Below is the distribution of feedback. Observation in the class showed that the young learners enjoyed the interaction in class. It could be seen from the fact that the students participated in question and answer interactively. Every time the teacher gave a question, almost all students raised their hands, competing with each other.
  • 7. Therefore, the teacher chose which student to answer first then distributed the participation. The classroom was also alive with concluded that the positive circumstance of interaction was the result from the positive feedbacks employed by the teacher. However, the positive feedback utilized by the teacher in the interaction might contribute to the positive learning environment that motivate and encourage students to participate in the interaction(Prabhu, 1992; Reigel, 2005; Tatawy, 2002). Why do you think each researcher chose that particular research desing and not other? • I strongly believe that the author Elis Homsini chose the descriptive research, because it was the more suitable for his research since that design involves a collection of techniques to describe a phenomena without experimental manipulation. And the author needed to describe a phenomena. In this case, the positive and corrective feedback used in the classroom interaction. In a nutshell, he carried out his research by observing under study. Without any kind of experimentation. So it couldn’t be another design since this one is the more appropriate for this research.
  • 8. REFERENCES • Homsini, E. (2013). A Descriptive Study of Teacher’s Oral Feedback in an ESL Young Learner Classroom Indonesia. A biannual publication on the study of language and literature, Vol. 15. Retrieved from http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/18 916
  • 9. A Study Of English Phonological Errors Produced By English Department Students B y Na n i I n d r a j a n i T i o n o y Ar l e n e Ma r i a Y o s t a n t o English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian University, Siwalankerto 121-131, Surabaya, East Java, Indonesia
  • 10. ABSTRACT • This qualitative research was conducted to find out the kinds of English phonological errors produced by English department students, particularly English consonantal sounds that do not exist in Indonesian phonetics system – [v], [θ], [ð], [߯], [d߯], and [t∫] – and the patterns of those errors. The result shows that the students produced thirty-four kinds of phonological errors and that the deviations occurred most frequently before, after, or in between vowels.
  • 11. • TYPE OF RESEARCH * Practical Qualitative Research It was showed that there were experimental studies in this research, and also it was made based on a specific level, group of people in this case with 25 English department students and also in a particular place which was a private university in surabaya, Indonesia. Detailing results in a specific context. TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE * Empirical knowledge This was categorized in the empirical knowledge because there were involved many process such studies and experiments. PURPOSE This research was done to observe the phonological errors done by the Indonesian English learners in order to find out firstly the kinds of phonological errors made by the students in producing the English consonantal sounds which do not exist in Indonesian sound system – namely [v], [θ], [ð], [߯], [d߯], and [t∫], and secondly the patterns of the phonological deviations.
  • 12. HYPOTHESIS As a consequence of all the difficulties provided by the English pronunciation, many English language learners as well as the Indonesian learners tend to generate errors in the articulation of the sounds. Therefore, this research was done to observe the phonological errors done by the Indonesian English learners in order to find out firstly the kinds of phonological errors. INSTRUMENTS * A tape recorder and pronunciation tasks, which were composed from the pronunciation exercises taken from Pronunciation in Action (Taylor, 1993), Pronunciation Exercises in English (Clarey & Dixson, 1963) and The Sounds of English (Deterding & Poedjosoedarmo, 1998), and from the ESL website (http://international.ouc.bc.ca/ pronunciation/). PARTICIPANTS * Twenty-five English department students who studied in a private university in Surabaya, a city in East Java, Indonesia.
  • 13. DATA COLLECTION The data needed related only to the English consonantal sounds that do not exist in Indonesian. • The source of data was from the phonetic transcription of the recorded pronunciation of twenty-five English department students who studied in a private university in Surabaya, a city in East Java, Indonesia. • A tape recorder and pronunciation tasks, which were composed from the pronunciation exercises taken from Pronunciation in Action (Taylor, 1993), Pronunciation Exercises in English (Clarey & Dixson, 1963) and The Sounds of English (Deterding & Poedjosoedarmo, 1998), and from the ESL website (http://international.ouc.bc.ca/pronunciation/), were used to collect the data. • Having the phonetic transcription of the data which was done manually, the analysis began with the identification of the errors by comparing each student’s actual pronunciation with the standard phonetic transcription.
  • 14. Data Analysis • The findings were grouped based on the six consonantal sounds investigated in this study, they are [v], [θ], [ð], [ʒ], [dʒ], and [t∫]. For additional description, each of those sounds was then classified into three categories in relation to the positions of their occurrences: they are initial, medial and final positions. Moreover, the phonological environments of the deviations were also formulated with the intention that further explanation about the patterns of the deviations could be provided. Why do you think each researcher chose that particular research desing and not other? • I think that the authors Indrajani and Yostanto chose the qualitative research, because it was the more appropriate for their research. That design involves investigation of concepts that are not numerically measurable, such as perceptions and the reasons behind them. That was the authors’ research about. They needed to know what were the reasons of what Indonesian students were not able to produce certain kinds of consonants sound . And according with their results they built some theory about it. So they couldn’t chose another design since this one involves everything what they needed to achieve their goal.
  • 15. REFERENCES Indrajani, N. & Yostanto, A. (2008). A Study of English Phonological Errors Produced by English Department Students. A biannual publication on the study of language and literature, Vol. 10. Retrieved from http://puslit2.petra.ac.id/ejournal/index.php/ing/article/view/16 761 DELMY PAT PINTO
  • 16. THE ROLE OF SUBTITLES IN SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION By L i s a Ma r i a Gr ø n n Au r s t a d M a s t e r ’ s T h e s i s I n E n g l i s h N t n u S p r i n g 2 0 1 3
  • 17. ABSTRAC • The aim of this master’s thesis is to provide further information about the role of subtitled audiovisual material in second language acquisition. Quantitative experimental research was conducted with 49 17-year-old Norwegian high school students as participants. The participants were divided into three groups identical to their original school classes. One group watched an episode of the American animated cartoon Family Guy with Norwegian subtitles, the second group watched the same episode with English subtitles, and the control group watched the episode with no subtitles. Immediately after watching the episode, the participants responded to a comprehension questionnaire in order to investigate the potential short term effects of the subtitles, and four weeks later they responded to a word definition task and a lexical decision task in order to measure potential long term effects. The results indicated only short term effects of the subtitles as the presence of subtitles in the Norwegian group and the English group predicted better performance in the comprehension questionnaire. No effects of the subtitles were found in the word definition task and the lexical decision task, indicating that there were no long term effects of the subtitles in these two experiments.
  • 18. TYPE OF APPROACH AND RESEARCH * Quantitative Experimental Research It was showed that the main variables in this experiment were different types of subtitles in watching audiovisual material: native language subtitles, target language subtitles, and no subtitles. The quantitative studies allow for a large number of participants whose results can be compared to each other related to a number of variables. The performances of the participants were measured with the variables, and the resulting numerical data was statistically analyzed in R. The research design of this study might well be argued to be experimental. In experimental designs, researchers explicitly manipulate the variables in order to prove/disprove their hypothesis. So the approach of this study is deductive and involves the manipulation of variables (type of subtitles). And it included two experimental groups.
  • 19. TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE * Empirical knowledge This work was categorized in the empirical knowledge because there were involved many process such studies and experiments. PURPOSE The aim of this study was to investigate the potential effect of subtitled audiovisual material in enhancing second language acquisition. The experiment was constructed so as to reveal both potential short and long term effects as well as potential differences based on the language of the subtitles. The main area of interest was to investigate whether exposure to different types of subtitles when watching an animated cartoon episode in the target language had an effect on the results on a comprehension questionnaire, a word definition task, and a lexical decision task.
  • 20. INSTRUMENTS • Three episodes of the American animated cartoon series Family Guy, one with English subtitles, other with Norwegian subtitles, and the last one with no subtitles . • Comprehension questionnaire • Vocabulary test • Grammar test PARTICIPANTS The participants were 49 17-year-olds native Norwegian students with 25 females and 24 males. with a fairly high level of proficiency in English as a second language. The participants were selected randomly based on their original school classes and divided into participant groups identical to these original classes. The participants were divided into three groups where one group watched an episode of the American animated cartoon series Family Guy with Norwegian subtitles, the second group watched the same episode with English subtitles, and the third group watched the episode with no subtitles making this group the baseline control group.
  • 21. DATA COLLECTION The experiment was divided into two parts in order to make room for both a pre-test and short-term effect part and a long-term effect part four weeks later. The participants were asked to complete a questionnaire, also a vocabulary test and a grammar test on the internet. After completing the background questionnaire and the vocabulary and grammar tests, the participants were told to watch a film clip. Immediately after watching the episode, the participants were given a comprehension questionnaire in paper format based on the contents of the episode . Four weeks after the first testing and the exposure to the stimuli, the participants were presented with a word definition task and a lexical decision task related to the episode they had watched. HYPOTHESIS The main hypothesis was that the subtitles would influence the performances of the groups in all the three tasks indicating both short term and long term effects. It was also hypothesised that the English subtitles group would outperform the other two groups as the facilitative effect of target language subtitles has been found in several studies (Bianchi & Ciabattoni, 2008; Markham, 1999; Mitterer & McQueen, 2009; Vanderplank, 1988).
  • 22. Data Analysis Why do you think each researcher chose that particular research desing and not other? The author chose the experimental research, because it was the most suitable for her research. She couldn’t chose another design since it involves all the process that is required to achieve her goal. That design involves the manipulation of variables in this case (type of subtitles) in order to prove or disprove her hypothesis. And that was what the author wanted. So that she can prove her hypothesis she needed to work in experiments. In this case, her research included two experimental groups. All the collected data was therefore coded and entered into an Excel worksheet that provided the basis for descriptive statistics allowing for calculation of the potential patterns in the data set. In order to investigate further whether the potential patterns found in the descriptive analysis in fact were statistically significant and not just a coincident, inferential statistics was carried out in R to check for dependencies between the results and the type of stimulus and information from the background testing. In this way the patterns found in the descriptive statistics would be checked to see if the patterns “truly exist in some kind of meaningful way” (Levon, 2010, p.
  • 23. REFERENCES • Gronn, L. (2013). The Role of Subtitles in Second Language Acquisition. Master’s thesis in English, NTNU, Norway. Retrieved from http://www.ntnu.edu/documents/38274309/40279009/Lis aMGAurstad_Master_2013_withtitlepage.pdf/190bc71d- 3e85-4519-a78b-5064597e5298 Delmy Pat Pinto