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Exploratory research on second language practice distribution: An Aptitude × Treatment interaction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2016

YUICHI SUZUKI*
Affiliation:
Kanagawa University
ROBERT DEKEYSER
Affiliation:
University of Maryland College Park
*
ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE Yuichi Suzuki, Faculty of Foreign Languages, Kanagawa University, 3-27-1, Rokkakubashi, Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama-shi, Kanagawa 221–8686, Japan. E-mail: szky819@kanagawa-u.ac.jp

Abstract

The current exploratory study aimed at investigating the role of cognitive aptitudes in determining the effect of practice distribution on second language learning. The study investigated to what extent language-analytic ability and working-memory capacity predicted the acquisition of grammar under two learning conditions that differ in the interval between the two training sessions. Learners of Japanese as a second language were trained on an element of Japanese morphosyntax under either distributed practice (7-day interval) or massed practice (1-day interval). The results revealed that language-analytic ability was only related to performance after distributed practice, whereas working-memory capacity was only related to performance after massed practice. These Aptitude × Treatment interaction findings can help establish the learning processes operating under distributed/massed practice conditions.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

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