International Journal of English Language and Translation Studies (Jan 2018)

Can Translation Improve EFL Students' Grammatical Accuracy? [

  • Carol Ebbert-Hübner,
  • Clare Maas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 05, no. 04
pp. 191 – 202

Abstract

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This report focuses on research results from a project completed at Trier University in December 2015 that provides insight into whether a monolingual group of learners can improve their grammatical accuracy and reduce interference mistakes in their English via contrastive analysis and translation instruction and activities. Contrastive analysis and translation (CAT) instruction in this setting focusses on comparing grammatical differences between students’ dominant language (German) and English, and practice activities where sentences or short texts are translated from German into English. The results of a pre- and post-test administered in the first and final week of a translation class were compared to two other class types: a grammar class which consisted of form-focused instruction but not translation, and a process-approach essay writing class where students received feedback on their written work throughout the semester. The results of our study indicate that with C1 level EAP students, more improvement in grammatical accuracy is seen through teaching with CAT than in explicit grammar instruction or through language feedback on written work alone. These results indicate that CAT does indeed have a place in modern language classes.

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