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Featured researches published by Clare Wright.


Journal of Research in International Education | 2013

‘I can’t … I won’t?’ International students at the threshold of social interaction

Clare Wright; Alina Schartner

This mixed-method study tracked social interaction and adaptation among 20 international postgraduates on a 1-year programme in the UK, examining assumptions that language proficiency and interactional engagement directly underpin sociocultural adaptation. Participants remained frustrated by a perceived ‘threshold’ barring successful interaction with English speakers, while reporting reluctance to take up available opportunities, independent of language proficiency and sociocultural adaptation. We challenge linear models of adaptation and call for assistance to international students in crossing the threshold to successful interaction.


International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching | 2016

New directions and developments in defining, analyzing and measuring L2 speech fluency

Clare Wright; Parvaneh Tavakoli

In studying second language (L2) fluency attainment, researchers typically address questions about temporal and hesitation phenomena in a descriptive manner, cataloguing which features appear under which learning circumstances. The goal of this paper is to present a perspective on L2 fluency that goes beyond description by exploring a potential explanatory framework for understanding L2 fluency. This framework focuses on the cognitive processing that underlies the manifestation of fluency and disfluency, and on the ways social context might contribute to shaping fluency attainment. The framework provides a dynamical systems perspective of fluency and its development, with specific consequences for a research program on L2 fluency. This framework gives rise to new questions because of its focus on the intimate link between cognitive fluency and utterance fluency, that is, between measures of the speed, efficiency and fluidity of the cognitive processes thought to underlie implementation of the speech act and measures of the oral fluency of that speech act. Moreover, it is argued that cognitive and utterance fluency need to be situated in the social context of communication in order to take into account the role played by the pragmatic and the sociolinguistic nature of communication in shaping L2 fluency development.


Computer Assisted Language Learning | 2018

Enhancing beginner learners’ oral proficiency in a flipped Chinese foreign language classroom

Jun Wang; Na An; Clare Wright

ABSTRACT Flipped instruction has become a hot issue in foreign language teaching technology. In this study, we tracked learners in a beginner-level Chinese Foreign Language classroom to see if flipped teaching based on a MOOC made a difference to their oral proficiency development and rate of progresscompared to a baseline group. Language developmentwas assessed by standard complexity, accuracy and fluency measures, alongside subjective ratings. Learners’ investment of time and perceptions of the new method were also investigated. Results showed that learners exposed to flipped instruction significantly (p < .01) outperformed the baseline group in oral proficiency in many measures, especially in speech fluency, though their advantage in complexity and accuracy was less evident. Rate of progress through the syllabus for the flipped group was also faster, requiring 25% less face-to-face time. Learners in the flipped group also demonstrated more (out of class) time investment in their learning and more positive attitudes toward the course, though these two factors did not significantly associate with the proficiency measures. These results support the implementation of flipped instruction in foreign language classrooms for both better and faster learner improvement; we explore how far psycho-social models of active learning might explain its methodological advantages.


Language Teaching Research | 2017

Contextualization and authenticity in TBLT: Voices from Chinese classrooms

Qi Chen; Clare Wright

In view of ongoing debates about the future of task-based language teaching (TBLT) in contexts of English as a foreign language (EFL), we present a detailed case study of teacher beliefs and practices regarding TBLT conducted in a secondary school in mainland China with a long history of communicative and task-based teaching approaches. We used a mixed-methods approach to gather a broad range of triangulated data, combining individual interviews, material analysis and observations coded using a novel task-focused version of the scheme ‘Communicative Orientation of Language Teaching’ (COLT). Quantitative and qualitative findings revealed positive beliefs about TBLT principles in general, reflecting strong institutional support for communicative teaching. However, there was marked variability between beliefs and practices in using tasks, especially with beginner-level learners. Most teachers demonstrated an intrinsic lack of confidence in using tasks as more than a communicative ‘add-on’ to standard form-focused teaching. We argue that this demonstrates a need for building teacher autonomy, in implementing TBLT, even in supportive settings, to support successful authentic contextualizing TBLT principles in different EFL contexts.


TESOL Quarterly | 2013

An investigation of working memory effects on oral grammatical accuracy and fluency in producing questions in English

Clare Wright


Archive | 2010

Variation, asymmetry and working memory in the process of second language acquisition

Clare Wright


Novitas-ROYAL journal for Research on Youth and Language | 2009

I STILL CAN'T QUESTIONS: ISSUES AFFECTING EFL DEVELOPMENT IN AN IMMERSION ENVIRONMENT

Clare Wright


Archive | 2018

Turkish Heritage language acquisition and maintenance in Germany

F Bayram; Clare Wright


System | 2017

I think that’s what he’s doing: Effects of intentional reasoning on second language (L2) speech performance

Anas Awwad; Parvaneh Tavakoli; Clare Wright


Archive | 2014

Examining the effects of study abroad on L2 Chinese development among UK university learners

Clare Wright; Z. Cong

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Parvaneh Tavakoli

London Metropolitan University

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Jun Wang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Na An

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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