Abstract:
This article is a preliminary study that analyses how 14 Students of English from the
UEM Lab interact in a controlled virtual environment doing synchronous computer-mediated
communication (SCMC) exercises. In the past decades controlled virtual environments have
increasingly gained more importance in education, especially since -as Presky defines them- the
appearance of “digital natives”: individuals who have implemented technology in their
communication processes from a very early age, mainly born in the late 80s and 90s. In order to
carry out this research, the Students were paired up and given tasks that they had to complete
using Messenger. Once the online-task was completed, they were given a satisfaction survey to
measure their degree of comfort and interest when approaching online interactions in SLA
classes. These surveys confirmed that Students feel less intimidated and exposed when doing
collaborative online tasks than when face to face interactions take place. These data or Learners
Corpora present -in line with previous studies- a great number of negotiation, confirmation and
reconfirmation strategies that could be used to modify or adapt the UEM Lab syllabus.