This article reports on a study that investigated the effectiveness of direct-focused corrective feedback and metalinguistic focused feedback on EFL learners’ accuracy in using English articles. The study employed a pretest–posttest design with five treatment sessions. The design of this study was quasi-experimental design. The sample of this study were 60 of the eleventh grade science students. They were assigned into two groups, direct-focused corrective feedback group and metalinguistic-focused feedback group. The linguistic target was English articles. A fill in the blank exercise were employed to measure any development in learners’ ability to use articles. The results revealed that both direct-focused corrective feedback and metalinguistic focused feedback lead to greater learners’ accuracy of using English articles. The direct-focused feedback is found more effective than metalinguistic-focused feedback.
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