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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The acquisition of the English Complementizer Phrase by adult Persian speakers

Youhanaee, Manijeh January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
12

The Processes of Second Language Acquisition, the Benefits of the Intensive Teaching Method,and the Successful Integration of High-Ability Students in Second Language Classes.

Bibeau, Valerie, Pinilla, Lucy T. January 1900 (has links)
Note: / Intensive English programs can be highly motivating for high-ability grade 6 students in Quebec.Following the progression of learning included in the Ministry of Education’s currentcurriculum, four in-class projects were created, focusing on cultural aspects and challenging,authentic tasks to increase students’ motivation and academic achievement. These inquiry-basedprojects emphasize students’ use of communication, collaboration, and problem-solving skillsand promote effective English Second Language learning among grade 6 students in IntensiveEnglish classes of Quebec.
13

Gesture and language as a system of embodied learning

Haddon, Lori K. 07 November 2011 (has links)
This study examines the relationship between gesture and a deep understanding of a second language. The participants, including the researcher, are second-language educators who have experience drastic changes in levels of fluency after switching from traditional teaching methods, prioritizing grammar and thematic teaching, to the gesture approach. Data of this phenomenon is collected through a series of semi-structured interviews giving priority to narrative accounts of personal experiences. A phenomenological framework is employed to allow the dialogues to fuse and new understandings to emerge in the spaces in between. The findings are presented in an in-depth conversation between the participants and including well-known dynamic systems theorists to allow new insights and connections to develop. which are then creatively summarized and further explored in the final chapter through multi-lingual slam poetry. / Graduate
14

A description of a written interlanguage : institutional influences on the acquisition of English by Hong Kong Chinese students (a computational and corpus based methodology)

Milton, John January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
15

The role of learner corpora in SLA research and foreign language teaching : the multiple comparison approach

Tono, Yukio January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
16

Exploring Academic Stressors Related to Second Language Acquisition and Barriers of Turkish-International Graduate Students Studying Education in the Southeast United States

Ciloglu Cakmakci, Nermin 01 January 2020 (has links) (PDF)
Many students around the world have a strong desire to study in the United States, and in recent years international students in the United States have enrolled at an all-time high. There is a significant need to learn more about these students' needs and strategies to identify the most effective practices to improve their academic life and life quality. The demand for overcoming life challenges in a new country and achieve high academic performance with their second language creates high stress for these international students. One of the groups among these international students that has been understudied is the Turkish students. The purpose of this research is to explore the academic and second language-related stress of Turkish international students, in addition to investigating students' self-reported stress management strategies. This study uses a case study methodology to thoroughly understand the impact of the second language of participants' reported stress and how they manage their life and academic performance. The researcher collected interviews from three Turkish-International students who study in a graduate school in the US. The researcher conducted inductive coding and created themes from the qualitative data. The results of the study indicate that students experience challenges due to their second language which creates stressful situations. One of the most critical areas that participants emphasized is the difficulties that they experience while they speak. Participants indicated that the challenges of speaking tasks affect their self-confidence and they tend to speak up less. One of the other critical findings of the study that participants highlighted is that they need to spend more time studying just to be able to survive in a highly competitive academic life as it is challenging to comprehend content knowledge with a second language. The obligation of studying in long hours affects their social and family life. The researcher explored the coping mechanisms that participants found effective and a summary related to the COVID-19 pandemic and how it impacted these students' stress.
17

Analyzing the Self-reported Experiences of Japanese English as a Foreign Language Pre-service Teachers with Listening Comprehension Skills

Yamamoto, Akira 01 January 2021 (has links) (PDF)
The purpose of the study was to analyze the self-reported experiences of Japanese English as a foreign language (EFL) pre-service teachers with listening comprehension skills in their teaching classroom as university students and in their learning classroom as EFL students. Currently, Japanese EFL education is changing rapidly and focusing on developing overall English skills that include listening, speaking, reading, and writing. However, pre-service teacher EFL education in Japan does not stress the importance of listening comprehension pedagogy. Moreover, there have been few studies about listening pedagogy from the perspective of preservice teachers. Through analyzing pre-service teacher's self-reported listening learning experiences, the current study aimed to analyze the current listening pedagogy targeting elementary, junior, and high school EFL preparation. Three participants responded to an interview conducted in Japanese regarding their experiences with the EFL listening pedagogy experiences in their teaching classroom as university students and in their learning classroom as EFL students. The interview data were transcribed, translated into English, and analyzed through a qualitative research approach. The findings revealed that the pre-service teacher training track focused mostly on developing the pre-service EFL teachers' language proficiency rather than their pedagogical knowledge. Several possible explanations for this trend that were Japanese-context specific were provided, as well as directions for future research on the topic.
18

Feature reassembly of semantic and morphosyntactic pronominal features in L2 acquisition

Shimanskaya, Elena Mikhaylovna 01 July 2015 (has links)
Previous research in Second Language Acquisition (SLA) has shown that some of the systematic errors of second language (L2) learners can be attributed to the influence of the native language (L1). In fact, many hypotheses in generative SLA have focused on the role of L1 transfer ranging the spectrum from No Transfer to Full Transfer. The goal of this dissertation was to investigate L1 transfer by focusing on L1-L2 differences in terms of linguistic features; specifically, how differences in the featural and morpholexical organization of L1 and L2 pronominal paradigms affect SLA. In this work I operationalize L1 transfer in terms of the Feature Reassembly Hypothesis (FRH; Lardiere, 2009). The hypothesis pioneers conceptualization of L1 transfer as an initial attempt by L2 learners to establish a direct mapping between L1 and L2 forms. The FRH is particularly suitable to the study of L2 development because it predicts that when a one-to-one initial mapping is unsuccessful, L2 learners will gradually reorganize the L1 grammatical system until they attain (possibly complete) convergence. Empirical testing of the hypothesis is critical since determining when and why transfer occurs opens numerous possibilities to predict transfer errors and to develop pedagogical approaches to tackle negative transfer. In the current study I focus on the L2 acquisition of four 3rd person singular French object pronouns in the interlanguage of native speakers of English. Difficulties in the acquisition of Romance object pronouns have been amply documented in L2 research. However, most of the previous studies of the topic have focused on L2 acquisition of clitic pronouns and their syntactic properties. The present study takes a novel approach investigating the acquisition of strong as well as clitic pronouns. In my dissertation I test different kinds of knowledge including learners' comprehension of different kinds of pronouns. Going beyond production data, my experimental tasks include a grammaticality judgment task with correction, a picture selection task, and a self-paced reading task. The experimental tasks were administered to a group of native speakers (n=43) and L2 learners of French (n=87). The overall picture that emerges from the current study allows unveiling the initial mapping and subsequent reassembly of the semantic and morphosyntactic features implicated in the acquisition process of the four forms under investigation.
19

The Influence of the social interactional context on test performance : a sociocultural view /

Sun, Youyi, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) - Carleton University, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 103-115). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
20

Lexical networks and foreign language vocabulary acquisition /

Leung, Yau-keung. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1997. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 128-147).

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