What Is Corrective Feedback in Language Learning?

Corrective feedback in language learning is any response that helps a learner notice, understand, and correct an error in their language use. It can happen in speaking, writing, pronunciation practice, grammar exercises, conversation classes, online tutoring, peer review, or digital learning tools.

Corrective feedback is not only about telling learners they are wrong. Good feedback shows learners where their language differs from the target form, gives them enough support to improve, and encourages them to use the corrected form again. In second language acquisition, corrective feedback is often discussed as a form of negative evidence, because it signals that something in the learner’s output may be inaccurate, incomplete, or inappropriate.

Definition of Corrective Feedback

Corrective feedback is information given to a language learner in response to an error. The feedback may be direct or indirect, immediate or delayed, oral or written, explicit or implicit. It may correct grammar, pronunciation, vocabulary, spelling, word order, collocation, register, or pragmatic appropriateness.

In classroom research, corrective feedback is often studied as part of an error treatment sequence: a learner produces an error, a teacher or interlocutor responds, and the learner may then react through uptake, meaning a response to the feedback. Lyster and Ranta’s influential study of corrective feedback and learner uptake helped classify several feedback types commonly used in second language classrooms [2].

Error

The learner produces a form that is inaccurate, unclear, unnatural, or inappropriate for the context.

Feedback

A teacher, peer, tutor, or tool signals the problem and may provide a correction, hint, prompt, or explanation.

Uptake

The learner responds by repeating, correcting, revising, asking a question, or attempting a new form.

Simple definition: Corrective feedback is guidance that helps language learners notice and improve errors in speaking, writing, grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, or communication style.

Why Corrective Feedback Matters

Learners need input, practice, and meaningful communication, but they also need help noticing the gap between what they say and what the target language requires. Without feedback, learners may continue using forms that are understandable but inaccurate. Over time, repeated errors can become automatic.

Corrective feedback can support language learning by drawing attention to errors, encouraging self-correction, clarifying rules, improving accuracy, and preventing fossilization. Research has generally found corrective feedback to be useful, although its effectiveness depends on factors such as feedback type, learner level, target structure, timing, classroom context, and how learners respond to it [5].

Benefit How Corrective Feedback Helps Example
Noticing Shows learners that a form may be incorrect or unnatural. A learner notices that he go should be he goes.
Accuracy Helps learners produce more target-like grammar, pronunciation, and word choice. A teacher corrects I am agree to I agree.
Self-correction Encourages learners to repair their own errors instead of only receiving answers. A teacher asks, Can you say that again in the past tense?
Fluency with control Helps learners communicate smoothly without ignoring important errors. A teacher lets the student finish speaking, then reviews repeated errors.
Long-term development Prevents repeated incorrect forms from becoming fixed habits. A learner practices a corrected pronunciation pattern several times.

Corrective Feedback vs. General Feedback

Not all feedback is corrective feedback. General feedback may praise effort, comment on organization, encourage participation, or evaluate performance. Corrective feedback specifically addresses language errors or non-target-like forms.

Type General Feedback Corrective Feedback
Main purpose Encourages, evaluates, or comments on performance. Identifies or helps repair a language error.
Example Good job. Your answer was clear. Say she works, not she work.
Focus Content, effort, confidence, organization, fluency, task completion. Grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, spelling, word order, pragmatics.
Learner response Learner may feel encouraged or understand overall performance. Learner may revise, repeat, repair, or ask for clarification.
Useful balance: Language learners usually need both encouragement and correction. Praise builds motivation. Corrective feedback builds accuracy.

Types of Oral Corrective Feedback

Oral corrective feedback is feedback given during or after spoken language use. Lyster and Ranta’s classroom research identified several major types, including explicit correction, recasts, clarification requests, metalinguistic feedback, elicitation, and repetition [2]. Later reviews of oral corrective feedback continued to examine how these types work across second language classrooms [4].

Explicit Correction

Explicit correction directly tells the learner that there is an error and usually provides the correct form. It is clear and efficient, but it can feel interruptive if used too often.

Explicit Correction

Learner: She go to school every day.

Teacher: You should say She goes to school every day.

Recast

A recast reformulates the learner’s error into the correct form without directly saying that the learner made a mistake. Recasts are common because they are gentle and keep communication moving, but learners may not always notice them as correction.

Recast

Learner: He go home early.

Teacher: Yes, he went home early.

Clarification Request

A clarification request signals that the learner’s message was unclear or inaccurate. It pushes the learner to try again.

Clarification Request

Learner: Yesterday I go shopping.

Teacher: Sorry, yesterday you…?

Metalinguistic Feedback

Metalinguistic feedback gives a clue, rule, or grammatical comment without immediately giving the full answer. It encourages learners to think about the language system.

Metalinguistic Feedback

Learner: She have two brothers.

Teacher: Remember, with she, the verb needs a different form.

Elicitation

Elicitation prompts the learner to produce the correct form. The teacher may pause, ask a guiding question, or ask the learner to reformulate.

Elicitation

Learner: I am agree.

Teacher: I…?

Learner: I agree.

Repetition

Repetition involves repeating the learner’s error with a questioning tone or emphasis, making the problem more noticeable.

Repetition

Learner: She don’t like coffee.

Teacher: She don’t?

Learner: She doesn’t like coffee.

Comparison of Oral Feedback Types

Different feedback types create different learning conditions. Some provide the answer directly. Others push learners to repair the error themselves. Some are more explicit, while others are more implicit.

Feedback Type Explicit or Implicit? Gives Correct Form? Encourages Self-Repair? Best Used For
Explicit correction Explicit Yes Sometimes Serious errors, beginner support, quick clarification.
Recast Usually implicit Yes Less directly Maintaining conversation while modeling the target form.
Clarification request Implicit or semi-explicit No Yes Errors that block meaning or require reformulation.
Metalinguistic feedback Explicit or semi-explicit Not always Yes Grammar rules, recurring errors, learners with enough language awareness.
Elicitation Semi-explicit No Yes Forms the learner probably knows but did not produce correctly.
Repetition Implicit or semi-explicit No Yes Short spoken errors that the learner can notice and repair.
Teaching point: Recasts give learners a model. Prompts push learners to retrieve or create the corrected form themselves.

Written Corrective Feedback

Written corrective feedback is feedback on language errors in written work. It may address grammar, spelling, punctuation, vocabulary, sentence structure, cohesion, collocation, or academic style. Written feedback has been a major topic in second language writing and second language acquisition research since the 1970s [6].

Direct Feedback

The teacher provides the correct form directly.

Example: He go is corrected to He goes.
Indirect Feedback

The teacher marks that an error exists but does not provide the answer.

Example: Underlining He go and asking the learner to fix it.
Metalinguistic Feedback

The teacher gives a rule, code, or explanation.

Example: Writing subject-verb agreement in the margin.
Focused Feedback

The teacher corrects one or a few selected error types.

Example: Only correcting article errors in one assignment.
Unfocused Feedback

The teacher corrects many or all error types.

Example: Marking grammar, spelling, punctuation, and vocabulary together.
Revision Feedback

The learner uses feedback to revise and submit a better version.

Example: Editing an essay after receiving correction codes.
Writing tip: Written corrective feedback is most useful when learners revise. If learners only read corrections and move on, the learning effect is usually weaker.

Direct vs. Indirect Corrective Feedback

Direct and indirect feedback are especially important in writing instruction. Direct feedback is clearer, while indirect feedback encourages learners to solve the problem. The better option depends on learner level, error type, task goal, and whether revision is expected.

Feature Direct Feedback Indirect Feedback
Correction style Provides the correct form. Signals the error but asks the learner to correct it.
Example He go becomes He goes. He go is underlined or marked with SV.
Best for Beginners, complex errors, errors the learner cannot self-correct. Intermediate or advanced learners, errors learners can diagnose.
Risk Learners may copy the correction without understanding. Learners may not know how to fix the error.
Learning effect Clear model of the correct form. Encourages deeper processing and self-editing.

Explicit vs. Implicit Corrective Feedback

Another major distinction is between explicit and implicit corrective feedback. Explicit feedback clearly tells learners that an error has occurred. Implicit feedback gives a signal or model without directly explaining the error. Ellis, Loewen, and Erlam studied implicit and explicit corrective feedback in the acquisition of L2 grammar and helped shape later discussion of how different feedback types affect learning [3].

Explicit Feedback

Learner: She have a car.

Teacher: That should be She has a car. With she, use has.

Implicit Feedback

Learner: She have a car.

Teacher: Yes, she has a car.

Type Strength Limitation
Explicit feedback Clear, easy to notice, useful for rule explanation. Can interrupt fluency or feel too corrective if overused.
Implicit feedback Natural, less disruptive, keeps conversation moving. Learners may not notice that correction occurred.

Immediate vs. Delayed Feedback

Corrective feedback can be given immediately during communication or later after the task is finished. Both choices have advantages.

Immediate Feedback

Correction during the task

Useful when the error blocks meaning, when the learner is practicing a specific form, or when the teacher wants the learner to repair the error immediately.

Delayed Feedback

Correction after the task

Useful for fluency activities, presentations, debates, conversation practice, and situations where interruption would reduce confidence or communication flow.

Timing Useful For Possible Problem Good Practice
Immediate Accuracy drills, pronunciation practice, grammar focus. May interrupt communication. Use briefly and respectfully.
Delayed Fluency tasks, speaking confidence, group discussions. Learners may forget the original context. Take notes and review examples after the task.

Corrective Feedback and Learner Uptake

Uptake refers to the learner’s immediate response after feedback. The learner may repair the error, repeat the corrected form, produce another error, ask a question, or continue without change.

Uptake is important because it shows whether the learner noticed the feedback and attempted to respond. However, uptake is not the same as long-term acquisition. A learner may repair an error in the moment but still make it later. Long-term learning requires repeated noticing, practice, and use.

1

Learner produces an error.

2

Feedback is given.

3

Learner notices or misses the signal.

4

Learner repairs, repeats, asks, or ignores.

5

Practice helps the form become more stable.

Uptake Type Example What It Shows
Repair Learner changes she go to she goes. The learner noticed and corrected the error.
Repetition Learner repeats the teacher’s corrected form. The learner may be processing the model.
Needs repair Learner tries again but still produces an error. The learner noticed a problem but has not mastered the form.
No uptake Learner continues without responding. The learner may not have noticed the correction or may be focused on meaning.

Corrective Feedback for Grammar

Grammar feedback helps learners notice and correct errors in tense, agreement, articles, prepositions, word order, sentence structure, and clause formation.

Learner Error Feedback Option Corrected Form
She go to work every day. Remember third-person singular -s. She goes to work every day.
I am agree. Agree is a verb. Do not use am here. I agree.
I have seen him yesterday. Use simple past with a finished time expression. I saw him yesterday.
She is interested about music. The usual preposition is in. She is interested in music.
I don’t know where is he. Embedded questions use statement word order. I don’t know where he is.

Corrective Feedback for Pronunciation

Pronunciation feedback can address individual sounds, word stress, sentence stress, rhythm, intonation, linking, vowel length, and clarity. It is especially useful when pronunciation affects intelligibility or causes repeated misunderstanding.

Sound Correction

The teacher helps learners distinguish difficult sounds, such as /ɪ/ and /iː/ in ship and sheep.

Stress Feedback

Learners receive feedback on word stress, such as PHOtograph, phoTOGraphy, and photoGRAPHic.

Intonation Feedback

The teacher models how pitch changes in questions, statements, lists, uncertainty, and politeness.

Clarity Feedback

Feedback focuses on whether the listener can understand the message, not only whether the accent sounds native-like.

Pronunciation tip: Corrective feedback should focus on intelligibility and communication, not on removing every trace of accent.

Corrective Feedback for Vocabulary and Collocation

Vocabulary feedback helps learners choose more accurate, natural, or appropriate words. This includes correcting false friends, word choice errors, collocations, phrasal verbs, register, and idiomatic expressions.

Learner Form Problem Feedback Better Form
make a photo Wrong collocation In English, we usually say take a photo. take a photo
strong rain Wrong collocation Heavy rain is the natural phrase. heavy rain
economic car Wrong adjective choice Use economical when something saves money or fuel. economical car
look a movie Wrong verb Use watch with movies and TV. watch a movie
do a decision Wrong verb-noun combination The correct collocation is make a decision. make a decision

Corrective Feedback for Pragmatics

Pragmatic feedback helps learners use language appropriately in social situations. A sentence can be grammatically correct but still sound too direct, too formal, too casual, or culturally inappropriate.

Situation Learner Form Feedback More Appropriate Form
Asking a teacher for help Explain this. This sounds like a command. Use a polite request. Could you explain this, please?
Refusing an invitation No, I don’t want. In English, refusals often include thanks or a softener. Thanks for inviting me, but I can’t make it.
Disagreeing at work You are wrong. This may sound too direct in many professional settings. I see your point, but I think there may be another option.
Email request Send me the file now. Add politeness and context. Could you send me the file when you have a chance?
Pragmatics point: Corrective feedback should not only fix grammar. It should also help learners sound appropriate for the situation.

Teacher Feedback, Peer Feedback, and Automated Feedback

Corrective feedback can come from different sources. Each source has advantages and limitations.

Teacher Feedback

Usually more reliable, targeted, and pedagogically informed. Teachers can choose which errors matter most and explain patterns.

Peer Feedback

Encourages collaboration and awareness, but peers may miss errors or give uncertain explanations.

Automated Feedback

Fast and convenient for spelling, grammar, and writing suggestions, but may miss context, nuance, register, or meaning.

Feedback Source Strength Limitation Best Use
Teacher Accurate, selective, and connected to learning goals. Time-consuming in large classes. Recurring errors, complex grammar, pronunciation, pragmatics.
Peer Promotes interaction and learner awareness. May be inaccurate or incomplete. Draft review, noticing tasks, collaborative editing.
Automated tool Immediate and scalable. May overcorrect, undercorrect, or ignore context. First-pass editing, grammar practice, spelling, repeated patterns.

Focused vs. Unfocused Feedback

Focused feedback targets one or a small number of error types. Unfocused feedback responds to many different errors. Focused feedback can be easier for learners to process, while unfocused feedback gives a broader picture of accuracy.

Focused Feedback

In this essay, the teacher corrects only article errors: a, an, and the.

Unfocused Feedback

In this essay, the teacher corrects articles, verb tense, prepositions, word choice, spelling, and punctuation.

Teaching tip: Focused feedback is often better when the goal is learning one structure deeply. Unfocused feedback is useful when the goal is overall editing and revision.

How Corrective Feedback Supports Acquisition

Corrective feedback can support acquisition when it helps learners move from noticing an error to using the corrected form automatically. This usually requires more than one correction. Learners need repeated exposure, chances to produce the form, and meaningful practice.

1

Error

The learner produces a non-target form.

2

Feedback

The teacher, peer, or tool signals the problem.

3

Noticing

The learner notices the gap between their form and the target form.

4

Repair

The learner tries to correct the form.

5

Practice

The learner uses the corrected form again in new contexts.

6

Automatization

The corrected form becomes faster and more stable.

When Corrective Feedback Can Be Harmful

Corrective feedback is useful, but poor feedback can damage confidence, interrupt communication, or overwhelm learners. The problem is usually not correction itself, but how, when, and how much correction is given.

Problem Why It Hurts Learning Better Approach
Correcting every error Learners may feel discouraged and lose fluency. Prioritize errors based on lesson goals and communication needs.
Public embarrassment Learners may avoid speaking or taking risks. Use respectful tone and consider delayed or private feedback.
Unclear correction Learners may not know what was wrong. Add a short explanation or example.
Too much metalanguage Beginners may not understand grammar terminology. Use simple examples and model sentences.
No chance to revise Correction remains passive. Ask learners to repeat, rewrite, or use the corrected form in a new sentence.
Important: Corrective feedback should guide learning, not punish mistakes. Errors are a normal part of second language development.

Best Practices for Teachers

Effective corrective feedback is selective, clear, respectful, and connected to practice. Teachers should consider the purpose of the activity before correcting. A fluency activity and an accuracy activity need different feedback styles.

1

Match feedback to the task

Use more immediate feedback in accuracy practice and more delayed feedback in fluency practice.

2

Prioritize recurring errors

Focus on patterns that appear often or interfere with communication.

3

Encourage self-repair

When possible, use prompts that help learners produce the correction themselves.

4

Keep explanations short

Give enough explanation to help, but do not turn every correction into a long lecture.

5

Use examples

Model the correct form in a meaningful sentence.

6

Follow up with practice

Correction is stronger when learners use the corrected form again.

Best Practices for Learners

Learners can benefit more from corrective feedback by treating it as data, not as criticism. Feedback shows what the learner’s current interlanguage system is doing and what needs more attention.

Keep an Error Log

Write down repeated mistakes and group them by category: grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, spelling, or pragmatics.

Ask for Examples

If a correction is unclear, ask for one or two natural example sentences.

Repeat the Correct Form

Saying or writing the corrected form helps turn feedback into active practice.

Focus on Patterns

One mistake may not matter much. A repeated pattern deserves attention.

Revise Your Work

Written feedback is more useful when learners edit and resubmit or rewrite sentences.

Stay Patient

Correcting a form once does not mean it will disappear immediately. Repetition is normal.

Examples of Corrective Feedback in Practice

The examples below show how different feedback styles can be used for the same learner error.

Learner Error Feedback Type Teacher Response
I goed to the park. Explicit correction Use went, not goed. Say I went to the park.
I goed to the park. Recast Oh, you went to the park.
I goed to the park. Elicitation Yesterday, I…?
I goed to the park. Metalinguistic feedback Go is irregular in the past tense.
I goed to the park. Repetition You goed?
I goed to the park. Delayed feedback After the activity: Several people used goed. The past tense is went.

Corrective Feedback and Fossilization

Fossilization happens when certain learner errors become stable and resistant to change. Corrective feedback can help prevent fossilization by making repeated errors visible before they become automatic.

However, feedback alone is not always enough. If learners understand the correction but continue using the old form in fast speech, they need focused practice, monitoring, and repeated opportunities to use the corrected form.

Fossilized Pattern Feedback Strategy Practice Follow-Up
He go instead of he goes Focused feedback on third-person -s. Short daily drills with he, she, and it.
Pronouncing ship and sheep the same Pronunciation feedback with minimal pairs. Listening discrimination and production practice.
Using direct requests in formal contexts Pragmatic feedback with role-play. Practice polite request forms in workplace scenarios.
Wrong collocations such as do a decision Vocabulary feedback with phrase-level correction. Collocation lists and sentence creation.

FAQ

What is corrective feedback in language learning?

Corrective feedback is information given to a learner in response to a language error. It helps the learner notice, understand, and improve inaccurate or inappropriate language use.

What are the main types of corrective feedback?

Common types include explicit correction, recasts, clarification requests, metalinguistic feedback, elicitation, repetition, direct written feedback, indirect written feedback, and focused feedback.

Is corrective feedback always direct?

No. Corrective feedback can be direct or indirect. A teacher may provide the correct form, give a hint, ask for clarification, repeat the error with emphasis, or simply reformulate the sentence.

What is a recast?

A recast is an implicit correction where the teacher reformulates the learner’s incorrect sentence into a correct version without directly saying that it was wrong.

Should teachers correct every mistake?

No. Correcting every mistake can overwhelm learners and interrupt communication. Teachers should prioritize errors based on lesson goals, learner level, frequency, and communication impact.

How can learners use corrective feedback effectively?

Learners should notice the correction, ask for clarification if needed, record repeated errors, practice the corrected form, and use it again in speaking or writing.

References

  1. Cambridge University Press, “Corrective Feedback in Second Language Teaching and Learning,” in The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching
  2. Lyster, R., and Ranta, L. “Corrective Feedback and Learner Uptake.” Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1997
  3. Ellis, R., Loewen, S., and Erlam, R. “Implicit and Explicit Corrective Feedback and the Acquisition of L2 Grammar.” Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2006
  4. Lyster, R., Saito, K., and Sato, M. “Oral Corrective Feedback in Second Language Classrooms.” Language Teaching, 2013
  5. Li, S. “The Effectiveness of Corrective Feedback in SLA: A Meta-Analysis.” Language Learning, 2010
  6. Cambridge University Press, “Written Corrective Feedback,” in The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Second Language Learning and Teaching
  7. Nassaji, H., and Kartchava, E., editors. Corrective Feedback in Second Language Teaching and Learning. Routledge, 2017
  8. Sheen, Y. “Differential Effects of Oral and Written Corrective Feedback in the ESL Classroom.” Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2010

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