The third approach uses planning effects on task performance to investigate how learners monitor their language.
The qualitative analyses focus on the learners' metalinguistic knowledge with regard to article selection.
They conclude that self-management strategies contribute to an increase in learners' self- and contextual knowledge which can assist in reducing anxiety.
This reorientation, in turn, led to a revision of the concept of error and a radical reappraisal of teacher and learner roles.
These sources, both linguistic (intraand interlingual) and extralinguistic, represent the learners' own knowledge interacting with cues from the words themselves and the surrounding text.
There has been research on teaching techniques for young learners, but what task types are appropriate and efficient for testing children is an under-researched area.
Methods of teaching peace topics should be developed in order to get the message across to the language learners.
For the most part, these learners took a pragmatic view of notation, viewing it as useful but not crucial.