An Investigation Into Collaborative Behaviours In Task-Based Foreign Language Peer Interactions
Özet
The present study investigated the effect of task type and group structuring on
learners’ collaborative behaviours during L2 task-based peer interaction from a
sociocultural perspective. A total of 15 learners who were studying English at an
intensive language programme participated in a speaking club as an
extracurricular activity in groups of four or five. They were assigned two different
types of speaking tasks; namely convergent and divergent tasks, in two group
structuring conditions; namely unstructured and structured. The emerging
interactions from these tasks were analysed through applying a grounded
qualitative analysis. The results suggest that learners employed 13 different
collaborative behaviours which were grouped under language-related and taskrelated
collaborative behaviours. There were eight language-related and five taskrelated
collaborative behaviours. A frequency analysis of these collaborative
behaviours was later conducted to draw conclusions on the effect of task type and
group structuring. Overall, the quantitative findings showed that learners displayed
language-related collaborative behaviours more frequently in convergent tasks. On
the other hand, task-related collaborative behaviours were more frequently
observed in divergent tasks. Additionally, learners displayed more collaborative
behaviours during unstructured tasks than structured tasks. Language-related
collaborative behaviours were more frequently employed in unstructured tasks
while task-related collaborative behaviours were more frequently employed in
structured tasks. These findings suggest both task type and group structuring had
an impact on learners’ overall use of collaborative behaviours. Additionally,
individual collaborative behaviours showed a difference in frequency between
divergent and convergent tasks. Moreover, they showed a difference in frequency
between unstructured and structured tasks.