Abstract:
This study aimed at examining how Ghanaian high school English language teachers
implement FFI in their teaching practice and as well as how it impacts on their
students’ language acquisition. A qualitative textual analysis design was adopted to
analyze lesson recordings and focus group discussions from 15 teachers and 862 Form
3 students in three public senior high schools in the Ga West Municipality. The results
showed that teachers utilized diverse implicit and explicit FFI techniques including
recasts, repetition, elicitation, explicit correction and input-flooding. With this, it
found that usage of these techniques was predominantly intuitive rather than planned
applications of specific methods. The results also revealed that the FFI episodes
focused on lexical/morphological, morphosyntactic, and phonological forms in
addition to semantic and pragmatic forms. This suggests that teachers make real-time
decisions to address errors or difficulties related to vocabulary and pronunciation;
representative of broader intuitive FFI behaviour. Lastly, students reported perceiving
positive effects on learning outcomes from FFI techniques, especially on linguistic
accuracy. The study also revealed potential drawbacks of form-focused instruction
(FFI) techniques. Students felt it discouraged risk-taking and participation, leading to
peer mockery. Rapid instruction pace also made it difficult to process and recall target
forms, indicating potential ineffectiveness. These results have valuable practical
implications for teacher development and optimizing language policy to curriculum
implementation in Ghana. The recommendations therefore emphasize teacher
education on both reactive and preemptive FFI techniques to consciously embed
within lessons to maximize accuracy gains without sacrificing communication.
Description:
A thesis in the Department of Applied Linguistics, Faculty of Foreign
Languages Education and Communication, submitted to the
School of Graduate Studies, in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(Teaching English as a Second Language – TESL)
in the University of Education, Winneba