Difference between revisions of "Fluency Pressure"

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Fluency Pressure is present when an instructional manipulation requires the learner to make responses at a rate that exceeds the learner's current rate. An example comes from de Jong's study of English second language learners, who were given increasingly shorter periods of time in which to produce a short "speech", an activity that, by hypothesis, will increase the fluency of production.
 
Fluency Pressure is present when an instructional manipulation requires the learner to make responses at a rate that exceeds the learner's current rate. An example comes from de Jong's study of English second language learners, who were given increasingly shorter periods of time in which to produce a short "speech", an activity that, by hypothesis, will increase the fluency of production.
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[[Category:Independent Variables]]

Latest revision as of 02:50, 12 December 2007

Fluency Pressure is present when an instructional manipulation requires the learner to make responses at a rate that exceeds the learner's current rate. An example comes from de Jong's study of English second language learners, who were given increasingly shorter periods of time in which to produce a short "speech", an activity that, by hypothesis, will increase the fluency of production.