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The Gossiping Witness: Narrative Voice and Reliability in Machado de Assis’s Manuscrito de um Sacristão

Brazilian Literature, Literary Analysis, Machado de Assis, Machiavellian Narration, Narrative Voice, Unreliable Narrator 0 comments

Moral ambiguity
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in February 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     After reading Mãe by José de Alencar, I felt compelled to continue my exploration of classical Brazilian literature, which led me to Manuscrito de um Sacristão by Machado de Assis. What began as a continuation of literary curiosity quickly became a deeper engagement with narrative experimentation. I was not expecting to encounter the type of narrator Machado includes in this short story, a voice that appears modest and observational, yet subtly manipulative and ethically evasive.

     This reading experience has not only expanded my understanding of Brazilian literary tradition but also strengthened my confidence in engaging directly with literature produced in Portuguese. As I continue exploring classical Brazilian texts, I remain attentive to how narrative voice shapes truth, authority, and moral perception. I am eager to see where this literary journey will lead, both in terms of Brazilian canonical works and in my ongoing immersion in Portuguese as a language of literary sophistication and narrative complexity.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


The Gossiping Witness: Narrative Voice and Reliability in Machado de Assis’s Manuscrito de um Sacristão

 

Abstract

This paper forms part of an ongoing exploration of classical Brazilian literature following the reading of José de Alencar’s Mãe, which led to a deeper engagement with Machado de Assis’s Manuscrito de um Sacristão. The study analyzes the narrative voice of the short story, focusing on the sacristan as a first-person witness narrator whose account resembles gossip rather than objective testimony. Based on Acuña Solano’s analytical framework for narrative voice, the discussion examines point of view, narrative distance, credibility, tone, atmosphere, stylistic features, and narrative purpose. Particular attention is paid to the narrator’s reliability, given his proximity to the priest and the priest’s cousin, who occupy the moral center of the story. The paper also considers the sacristan’s Machiavellian dimension, arguing that his manipulation operates not through action but through rhetorical control of interpretation. Through individual character analyses, the study demonstrates how Machado de Assis uses a marginal observer to expose moral ambiguity, institutional hypocrisy, and the ethical instability of narrated truth, while also reflecting on the experience of engaging directly with Brazilian literature in Portuguese.

Keywords:

Machado de Assis, Narrative Voice, Unreliable Narrator, Machiavellian Narration, Brazilian Literature. Literary Analysis

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo forma parte de una exploración continua de la literatura clásica brasileña iniciada tras la lectura de Mãe de José de Alencar, la cual condujo a un análisis más profundo de Manuscrito de um Sacristão de Machado de Assis. El estudio examina la voz narrativa del relato, centrándose en el sacristán como narrador testigo en primera persona cuyo relato se asemeja más al rumor que a un testimonio objetivo. A partir del marco analítico de Acuña Solano sobre la voz narrativa, se analizan el punto de vista, la distancia narrativa, la credibilidad, el tono, la atmósfera, el estilo y la finalidad de la narración. Se presta especial atención a la fiabilidad del narrador, dada su cercanía con el sacerdote y su prima, quienes ocupan el centro moral de la historia. Asimismo, se explora la dimensión maquiavélica del sacristán, argumentando que su manipulación no se manifiesta en acciones directas, sino en el control retórico de la interpretación. Mediante el análisis individual de los personajes, el trabajo demuestra cómo Machado de Assis utiliza a un observador marginal para revelar la ambigüedad moral, la hipocresía institucional y la inestabilidad ética de la verdad narrada, al tiempo que reflexiona sobre la experiencia de leer literatura brasileña directamente en portugués.

 

 

Resumo

Este trabalho integra uma exploração contínua da literatura clássica brasileira iniciada após a leitura de Mãe, de José de Alencar, que conduziu a uma análise mais aprofundada de Manuscrito de um Sacristão, de Machado de Assis. O estudo examina a voz narrativa do conto, concentrando-se no sacristão como narrador-testemunha em primeira pessoa, cujo relato se aproxima mais do rumor do que de um testemunho objetivo. Com base no referencial analítico de Acuña Solano sobre voz narrativa, analisam-se o ponto de vista, a distância narrativa, a credibilidade, o tom, a atmosfera, o estilo e a finalidade da narração. Dá-se especial atenção à confiabilidade do narrador, considerando sua proximidade com o padre e sua prima, que ocupam o centro moral da história. Além disso, investiga-se a dimensão maquiavélica do sacristão, argumentando que sua manipulação não ocorre por meio de ações diretas, mas pelo controle retórico da interpretação. Por meio da análise individual das personagens, o estudo demonstra como Machado de Assis utiliza um observador marginal para revelar a ambiguidade moral, a hipocrisia institucional e a instabilidade ética da verdade narrada, ao mesmo tempo em que reflete sobre a experiência de ler literatura brasileira diretamente em língua portuguesa.

 


Introduction

Machado de Assis repeatedly undermines the assumption that narration functions as a neutral or transparent vehicle for truth. Rather than relying on omniscient or overtly authoritative narrators, he frequently entrusts his stories to voices marked by limitation, bias, and ethical ambiguity. As Hakobyan (2017) observes, “The narrator in Machado’s stor[ies] is ingenious in that he seems to know and manipulate the reader’s mind which, along with his ability to hold the reader in constant oscillation between the two versions of truth, makes him a Machiavellian narrator.” This oscillation between competing versions of truth is not incidental but structural in Machado’s fiction. In Manuscrito de um Sacristão, the act of narration is delegated to a sacristan, an individual embedded within the religious institution yet peripheral to its formal authority, thereby reinforcing this pattern of strategic instability. The choice of such a narrator is therefore central to the story’s meaning, as it situates truth within a voice that is simultaneously informed, interested, and ethically evasive.

Based on Acuña Solano’s (n.d.) framework for analyzing narrative voice, this paper argues that the sacristan functions as an unreliable witness (Machiavellian) narrator whose account blends observation, interpretation, and moral evasion. Although the priest and his cousin appear to be the central figures of the story, it is ultimately the sacristan’s voice that shapes the reader’s understanding of events. Through a careful examination of narrative point of view, distance, credibility, tone, and purpose, this analysis demonstrates how Machado de Assis transforms gossip into a powerful narrative strategy that exposes not only individual frailty, but the ethical consequences of narrating without responsibility.

Narrative Point of View and Distance

The story is narrated in the first person, immediately situating the sacristan within the world he describes. However, this first-person perspective does not result in intimacy or confession. Instead, the narrator establishes himself as a recorder of events, someone who observes rather than acts. Early in the narrative, he explicitly defines his role:

“Não escrevo para acusar ninguém, mas para relatar o que vi e ouvi.”
(“I do not write to accuse anyone, but to report what I saw and heard.”) (Machado de Assis, 2012)

This statement appears to assert neutrality, yet it simultaneously raises suspicion. By denying any intention to accuse, the sacristan implicitly acknowledges that his account may invite judgment. Narrative distance, therefore, is unstable. The narrator is close enough to witness intimate moments, yet distant enough to deny ethical involvement. He treats the reader as a confident while refusing the vulnerability that genuine confession would require. He plants the seed of doubt in a Machiavellian way; he asserts to say things such as “I cannot judge …, but it seems to me that …”, leaving the rest to the readers’ imagination.

This oscillation between proximity and withdrawal creates a hybrid narrative stance. The sacristan is neither a fully detached observer nor an engaged participant. Instead, he occupies a liminal space that allows him to speak with apparent authority while shielding himself from moral accountability.

Credibility and the Problem of Reliability

The question of credibility lies at the heart of Manuscrito de um Sacristão. The narrator insists on the modesty of his account, repeatedly downplaying its significance. As stated by Psychology Today (n.d.) while describing a Machiavellian personality, it can be perceived through the sacristan’s “a negative, cynical view of the world and of other people’s motivations.” Yet this very insistence on his modesty functions as a rhetorical strategy. At one point, he remarks:

“Talvez nada houvesse de extraordinário naquilo; mas as pequenas coisas, vistas de perto, tomam vulto.”
(“Perhaps there was nothing extraordinary in it; but small things, when seen up close, take on weight.”) (Machado de Assis, 2012)

Here, the sacristan justifies the act of narration itself. What might otherwise seem trivial becomes narratable through proximity. This logic legitimizes gossip by transforming closeness into moral relevance. The narrator does not claim omniscience; instead, he claims access. However, access does not guarantee understanding, and the sacristan’s interpretations often exceed what observation alone can support though the readers cannot really perceive what his intentions are not revealing the priest and his cousin’s backstory.

The sacristan’s credibility is further compromised by selectivity. He chooses which details to emphasize and which to leave ambiguous, shaping the reader’s perception while maintaining the illusion of neutrality. As a result, the narration is not false, but it is ethically unstable, filtered through implication rather than assertion.

Attitude, Tone, and Atmosphere

The sacristan’s tone is marked by restraint and irony. As a Machiavellian character, the narrator displays “a lack of empathy and consider [himself] superior to others” Psychology Today (n.d.). He rarely expresses strong emotion or explicit condemnation. Instead, he relies on understatement, allowing implications to accumulate quietly. This tonal choice creates an atmosphere of subdued unease, particularly striking given the religious setting of the story. Machiavellian characters like the sacristan are “characterized by manipulation, deceit, a cynical worldview, and a cold, strategic focus on personal gain over morality” (Nader, 2026).

The church, traditionally associated with moral clarity, becomes a space of ambiguity. The narrator’s calm delivery contrasts sharply with the ethical tension of what he recounts. This dissonance intensifies the reader’s discomfort. Machado’s irony emerges precisely from this contrast: troubling events are narrated in a voice that refuses to acknowledge their gravity openly. The atmosphere, therefore, is neither openly ominous nor reassuring. It is morally suspended, reflecting the narrator’s own reluctance to take a clear ethical stance.

Style of the Telling

Stylistically, the sacristan’s narration is measured and controlled. The sentences are often complex but not ornate, and the vocabulary suggests education without scholarly pretension. This stylistic moderation reinforces the narrator’s self-presentation as a reasonable and trustworthy observer.

However, this apparent simplicity is deceptive. The narrator’s language is carefully calibrated to suggest rather than state, to imply rather than declare. The absence of emotional excess lends the narration an air of credibility, even as the underlying interpretations remain subjective. Machado uses this stylistic restraint to demonstrate how authority can emerge not from overt rhetoric, but from quiet confidence.

Purpose of the Narration and Central Themes

The primary purpose of the narration is the revelation of a secret, but not a sensational one. What the sacristan reveals is not merely a series of events, but a moral contradiction in his eyes. The story explores dilemmas of desire, restraint, and institutional expectation, without offering resolution.

Rather than instructing the reader how to judge, the narrator presents circumstances that invite judgment while disclaiming responsibility for it. This refusal to moralize explicitly is itself a moral stance, one that aligns with Machado de Assis’s broader skepticism toward absolute ethical positions.

Character Analysis

The Priest

The priest in the short story emerges as a figure defined by restraint and internal conflict based on the sacristan’s point of view. He is not portrayed by the narrator as overtly transgressive, but as deeply divided. The sacristan characterizes him through silence rather than action:

“Era um homem calado, como se as palavras lhe custassem mais do que aos outros.”
(“He was a quiet man, as if words cost him more than they did others.”) (Machado de Assis, 2012)

This description transforms silence into psychological evidence. The priest’s reticence suggests inner turmoil, yet the narrator never grants access to his thoughts. As a result, the priest remains partially opaque, defined by what he does not say or was not heard by the sacristan. He embodies the tension between institutional role and human vulnerability, a tension the narrator observes but does not resolve.

The Cousin

The cousin functions as a destabilizing presence within the narrative. However, she is never granted an interior voice. Instead, she is constructed through the sacristan’s observation and communal perception:

“A prima vinha muitas vezes à casa paroquial; parecia não notar o que todos notavam.”
(“The cousin came often to the parish house; she seemed not to notice what everyone else noticed.”) (Machado de Assis, 2012)

The phrase “todos notavam” dissolves responsibility into collective awareness. The cousin becomes an object of shared implication rather than an autonomous subject. This narrative choice reinforces the gossip-like quality of the account and highlights the sacristan’s role as a mediator of social judgment rather than a neutral witness.

The Sacristan

As narrator, the sacristan is the most complex character in the story. He presents himself as marginal, passive, and ethically detached, but he isn’t. His control over the narrative grants him significant power. Near the end of the account, he insists:

“Se houve culpa, não me cabe julgá-la.”
(“If there was guilt, it is not for me to judge.”) (Machado de Assis, 2012)

This statement encapsulates the ethical paradox of the narration. Although the sacristan refuses to judge explicitly, judgment has already occurred through description, tone, and selection of the facts being described. His refusal to assume responsibility does not absolve him; rather, it exposes the moral implications of narrating without accountability. In this sense, the sacristan becomes a symbol of quiet complicity.

Conclusion

Based on Acuña Solano’s (n.d.) framework for narrative voice analysis, Manuscrito de um Sacristão emerges as a meditation on the instability of truth and the ethics of narration. The sacristan’s voice, intimate yet evasive, informed yet unreliable, forces readers to confront not only the moral ambiguities surrounding the priest and his cousin, but also the ethical implications embedded in the act of storytelling itself. Machado de Assis demonstrates that narration is never neutral: to tell a story is already to shape judgment, to guide perception, and to distribute responsibility.

In this sense, the sacristan reveals a distinctly Machiavellian dimension, not in his actions within the plot, but in his control over the narrative. He does not manipulate events; he manipulates interpretation. By presenting himself as a modest witness who merely “relates what he saw and heard,” he cultivates an appearance of neutrality while carefully arranging the evidence that invites suspicion. His repeated refusal to judge, insisting that it is not his place to determine guilt, functions less as ethical restraint than as strategic self-preservation. Judgment has already been engineered through tone, emphasis, and omission.

The sacristan’s Machiavellianism, therefore, is rhetorical rather than political. His power lies in shaping the reader’s oscillation between innocence and culpability, between rumor and fact, between silence and implication. He occupies a marginal institutional position yet wields absolute narrative authority. This paradox underscores Machado’s broader insight: moral uncertainty does not thrive solely in human weakness or forbidden desire, but in the structures through which such weaknesses are narrated.

Through the voice of a seemingly minor observer, Machado de Assis exposes the fragile boundary between witnessing and judging, between recounting and influencing. Manuscrito de um Sacristão ultimately suggests that the most subtle form of manipulation is not overt accusation, but the quiet arrangement of details that leads others to accuse on one’s behalf. In this way, the sacristan becomes both narrator and strategist, embodying the unsettling truth that storytelling itself can be the most refined form of power.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, February 21, 2026


📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (n.d.). Analyzing the narrative voice in a story [Unpublished instructional framework].

Hakobyan, L. (2017), The Machiavellian Narrator in Machado de Assis’s “Missa do Galo”. Purdue University. https://seer.ufrgs.br/brasilbrazil/article/download/80286/47129

Machado de Assis, J. M. (2012). Manuscrito de um sacristão. Livro de domínio publico https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Machado-Assis-ebook/dp/B00AGZHZ48

Nader, R. (2026, February 5). The DARK TRIAD explained: Narcissism, machiavellianism & psychopathy [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6kuOp-U1Kw




The Gossiping Witness Narrative Voice and Reliability in M de Assis’s Manuscrito de Um Sacristão by Jonathan Acuña



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Saturday, February 21, 2026



The Nature of Learner Error in ELT: Distinguishing Errors from Mistakes in Theory and Practice

CEFR, CLT, Error Correction, Fossilization, Interlanguage, Mistake vs. Error, Second Language Acquisition, SLA, TBLT 0 comments

 

Balancing errors and mistakes
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in February 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     As a language teacher and a committed follower of communicative methodologies in language education, I have come to understand that distinguishing between mistakes and errors is not a minor technicality but a pedagogical necessity. If we aim to help learners move from their current zone of development toward their zone of proximal development, we must first diagnose the nature of their linguistic deviations. Failing to make this distinction can impede communication, generate unnecessary correction, and ultimately scourge the learner’s affective filter, increasing anxiety rather than promoting acquisition.

     In communicative classrooms, where meaning-making and interaction are central, correction must be principled rather than reactive. Understanding whether a deviation is a performance slip or evidence of developmental interlanguage determines how and when teachers intervene. To contribute to this ongoing discussion in ELT and TESOL, I present here my perspective as a seasoned English teacher, one informed by both classroom practice and foundational SLA scholarship.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


The Nature of Learner Error in ELT: Distinguishing Errors from Mistakes in Theory and Practice

 

Abstract

Error correction remains one of the most complex and debated aspects of English Language Teaching (ELT). This paper examines the theoretical and pedagogical distinction between errors and mistakes, drawing on foundational work by Corder (1967), Selinker (1972), and Ellis (1997, 2008). Errors are defined as systematic, competence-related deviations reflecting interlanguage development, whereas mistakes are performance-based slips that learners can typically self-correct. The discussion explores how understanding this distinction reshapes classroom correction practices within Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT). Additionally, the paper analyzes how the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) supports a developmental interpretation of learner errors rather than a deficit-based model. Implications are provided for principled corrective feedback that balances fluency, accuracy, and learner affect. Ultimately, effective error correction depends on understanding what an error represents within the learner’s evolving linguistic system.

Keywords:

Error Correction, Interlanguage, Mistake vs. Error, CEFR, CLT, TBLT, Fossilization, Second Language Acquisition, SLA

 

 

Resumen

La corrección de errores continúa siendo uno de los aspectos más debatidos y complejos en la enseñanza del inglés como lengua extranjera. Este artículo examina la distinción teórica y pedagógica entre errores y equivocaciones, apoyándose en los aportes de Corder (1967), Selinker (1972) y Ellis (1997, 2008). Los errores se definen como desviaciones sistemáticas relacionadas con la competencia lingüística y el desarrollo de la interlengua, mientras que las equivocaciones corresponden a deslices de actuación que el estudiante puede autocorregir. Asimismo, se analiza cómo esta distinción transforma las prácticas de corrección dentro del Enfoque Comunicativo (CLT) y la Enseñanza Basada en Tareas (TBLT). El artículo también destaca la relevancia del Marco Común Europeo de Referencia (MCER) para interpretar los errores desde una perspectiva evolutiva y no deficitista. Se proponen implicaciones pedagógicas para una retroalimentación correctiva equilibrada entre fluidez, precisión y afectividad.

 

 

Resumo

A correção de erros continua sendo um dos aspectos mais debatidos e complexos no ensino de inglês como língua estrangeira. Este artigo examina a distinção teórica e pedagógica entre erros e enganos, com base nas contribuições de Corder (1967), Selinker (1972) e Ellis (1997, 2008). Os erros são definidos como desvios sistemáticos relacionados à competência linguística e ao desenvolvimento da interlíngua, enquanto os enganos correspondem a lapsos de desempenho que o aprendiz geralmente pode autocorrigir. O texto também analisa como essa distinção influencia práticas corretivas no Ensino Comunicativo de Línguas (CLT) e no Ensino Baseado em Tarefas (TBLT). Além disso, destaca-se a relevância do Quadro Europeu Comum de Referência (QECR) para interpretar os erros de forma desenvolvimental e não deficitária. São apresentadas implicações pedagógicas para uma abordagem de feedback corretivo que equilibre fluência, precisão e aspectos afetivos.

 


Introduction

Error correction remains one of the most debated and emotionally charged practices in English Language Teaching (ELT). Language instructors routinely face the dilemma of whether, when, and how to correct learners without interrupting communication or undermining student confidence. However, before these practical decisions can be made responsibly, a more fundamental question must be addressed: What exactly is being corrected? As seminal research in Second Language Acquisition (SLA) has demonstrated, not all deviations from the target language are equal. Some of these deviations reflect temporary performance lapses, while others reveal deeper developmental processes inherent to language learning.

Stephen Pit Corder’s groundbreaking insight reframed learner errors not as signs of failure but as evidence of learning in progress. As Corder famously argued, “Errors are significant in three different ways. First, to the teacher, because they tell him how far towards the goal the learner has progressed” (Corder, 1967, p. 161). This reconceptualization laid the groundwork for later theories such as Selinker’s interlanguage hypothesis and Ellis’s extensive work on error analysis and corrective feedback.

This essay explores the theoretical distinction between errors and mistakes, examines their relevance to interlanguage development, and discusses the pedagogical implications for correction practices in Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT). Additionally, the essay highlights how the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) provides a principled framework for interpreting learner errors developmentally rather than normatively.

Errors vs. Mistakes: A Foundational Distinction

One of the most enduring contributions of SLA research is the distinction between errors and mistakes. Corder (1967) clarified this difference by emphasizing learner competence rather than surface accuracy. He stated unequivocally: “It will be useful… to refer to errors of performance as mistakes” (p. 166). Mistakes, therefore, are unsystematic lapses caused by fatigue, distraction, or pressure, and they do not reflect gaps in the learner’s underlying linguistic system. Errors, in contrast, are systematic and reveal the learner’s current stage of linguistic development. As Corder explained, “Errors are systematic, i.e. likely to occur repeatedly and not recognized by the learner” (1967, p. 167). This distinction is crucial because it determines whether correction is necessary, useful, or even possible at a given moment.

Rod Ellis reinforces this perspective by arguing that “an error takes place when the deviation arises as a result of lack of knowledge” (Ellis, 1997, p. 17). From this viewpoint, errors are not random; they are rule-governed manifestations of a learner’s internal grammar. Correcting an error prematurely, without considering whether the learner is developmentally ready, may therefore be ineffective or counterproductive. In other words, learners will continue to make the same mistake without noticing their lack of mastery in the target language.

Errors as Evidence of Interlanguage Development

Larry Selinker’s concept of interlanguage provided a theoretical explanation for why learner errors are systematic and persistent. Selinker defined interlanguage as “a separate linguistic system based on the observable output which results from a learner’s attempted production of a target language norm” (Selinker, 1972, p. 214). This system is neither the learner’s first language nor the target language but a dynamic, evolving grammar of its own.

From this perspective, errors are not deviations from a fixed standard but indicators of transitional competence. Selinker further noted that “interlanguage systems are permeable, dynamic, and systematic” (1972, p. 215), emphasizing that change occurs gradually through hypothesis testing rather than immediate correction. Ellis supports this developmental view by asserting that “learners construct their own unique linguistic systems and these systems change over time” (Ellis, 2008, p. 51). Errors, then, are not obstacles to be eliminated but data points that reveal where learners are in their developmental learning path.

Fossilization vs. Developmental Error

One of the most challenging phenomena in error correction is fossilization. Selinker described fossilization as the process whereby “linguistic items, rules, and subsystems which speakers of a particular NL tend to keep in their interlanguage” become resistant to change (Selinker, 1972, p. 215). Unlike developmental errors, fossilized forms persist despite exposure, instruction, and feedback.

Ellis distinguishes these phenomena clearly, stating that “developmental errors are those that arise because learners have not yet mastered a particular target-language form, whereas fossilized errors are errors that learners have stopped trying to eliminate” (Ellis, 1997, p. 20). This distinction has direct pedagogical consequences: developmental errors often resolve themselves over time, while fossilized errors may require targeted, explicit intervention, if they can be addressed at all since learners may unconsciously neglect to pay attention to arears in the language where they are being corrected.

Pedagogical Implications: When Correction Helps—and When It Hurts

Understanding the nature of learner error fundamentally alters the teacher’s role. If errors are developmental, excessive correction may interrupt communication and raise anxiety without accelerating acquisition. Ellis warns that “there is no guarantee that corrective feedback will result in learning” (Ellis, 2008, p. 963), particularly when learners are not developmentally ready.

Conversely, ignoring all errors is equally problematic. Corder argued that errors are valuable precisely because “they provide evidence of how language is learned” (1967, p. 161). Teachers, therefore, must learn to diagnose errors rather than react reflexively to surface inaccuracies. This diagnostic stance aligns closely with communicative methodologies such as CLT and TBLT, where meaning takes precedence over form, but form is not abandoned altogether.

Error Correction in CLT and TBLT: A Comparative View

The table below highlights how the distinction between errors and mistakes informs correction practices in Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT).

Aspect

CLT

TBLT

Primary focus

Meaningful communication

Task completion and outcome

Treatment of mistakes

Often ignored or briefly reformulated

Usually ignored during task

Treatment of errors

Selective correction post-activity

Addressed in post-task focus on form

Role of correction

Support fluency and confidence

Enhance accuracy after meaning

Teacher stance

Facilitator of communication

Analyst of task performance


Both approaches reflect Ellis’s assertion that “focus on form refers to any planned or incidental instructional activity that is intended to induce language learners to pay attention to linguistic form” (Ellis, 2001, p. 1). Crucially, such focus occurs after meaning has been negotiated, not during initial communication.

The Role of the CEFR in Interpreting Learner Error

The Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) provides an essential macro-framework for understanding learner errors developmentally. Rather than treating errors as deviations from native-speaker norms, the CEFR emphasizes progression across proficiency levels. It explicitly states that “learners at different levels show different degrees of control over linguistic resources” (Council of Europe, 2001, p. 110).

This perspective legitimizes learner error as level-appropriate behavior. An A2 learner’s misuse of past tense forms, for instance, should not be judged by B2 standards. The CEFR further acknowledges that “errors are a natural manifestation of language learning” (Council of Europe, 2001, p. 153), reinforcing the SLA view that errors are developmental rather than defective. So, by aligning correction practices with CEFR descriptors, teachers can avoid overcorrection and instead focus on errors that impede intelligibility or fall within the learner’s zone of proximal development.

Conclusion

Distinguishing between errors and mistakes is not a semantic exercise but a foundational competence for effective ELT practice. As Corder, Selinker, and Ellis have demonstrated, learner errors are systematic, meaningful, and developmentally motivated. Treating all deviations as problems to be corrected ignores decades of SLA research and risks undermining both acquisition and learner confidence.

When teachers understand errors as evidence of interlanguage development, correction becomes a strategic, principled decision rather than an instinctive reaction. Within communicative frameworks such as CLT and TBLT, and guided by the CEFR’s developmental orientation, error correction can support both fluency and accuracy without sacrificing learner agency.

Ultimately, effective error correction begins not with how to correct, but with understanding what an error truly represents.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, February 20, 2026


📚 References

Corder, S. P. (1967). The significance of learners’ errors. International Review of Applied Linguistics, 5(4), 161–170. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED019903

Council of Europe. (2001). Common European Framework of Reference for Languages: Learning, teaching, assessment. Cambridge University Press. https://rm.coe.int/common-european-framework-of-reference-for-languages-learning-teaching/16802fc1bf#:~:text=The%20aim%20of%20these%20notes,or%20as%20a%20member%20of

Ellis, R. (1997). Second language acquisition. Oxford University Press. https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3ch6f6tk

Ellis, R. (2001). Investigating form-focused instruction. Language Learning, 51(S1), 1–46. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-1770.2001.tb00013.x

Ellis, R. (2008). The study of second language acquisition (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. https://es.scribd.com/document/715674871/Rod-Ellis-the-Study-of-Second-Language-Acquisition

Selinker, L. (1972). Interlanguage. International Review of Applied Linguistics, 10(3), 209–231. https://doi.org/10.1515/iral.1972.10.1-4.209



The Nature of Learner Error in ELT by Jonathan Acuña



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Friday, February 20, 2026



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