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Dialogue journals: Students' risk taking on content and formIventosch, Mieko Shimizu, 1956- January 1988 (has links)
This research, based on Halliday's functional concepts, examined students language use in a communicative event, dialogue journals, in a Japanese as a foreign language setting. Holistic evaluation and precise analysis of Japanese particles were used to study the relationship between students' attempts to express content, their attempts to use linguistic forms, and the success of those attempts. The main finding is that increasing attempts, both qualitatively and quantitatively, on content and form, enhanced meaning-making ability in Japanese; however, overly high risk-taking on content at first inhibited success, leading to writer's block. More accomplished students were able to adjust their content to their linguistic ability at first, but to increase their risk-taking on both factors over time. Precise analysis further revealed students' hypotheses making in using Japanese particles. The findings suggest that both teachers' linguistic and strategic guidance in their responses and their attention to content are crucial.
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Une comparaison du français parlé des enfants en immersion et des enfants francophones: étude syntaxique de plusieurs aspects de la langue parlée, dont les ratés de la communicationSanten, Marcia-Ellen 05 1900 (has links)
Following a review of the literature on French immersion, this thesis considers the
implications of the systematic transcription of oral texts for linguistic analysis. In
transcribing a corpus of spoken French by children attending a French immersion school
and a corpus of children from Quebec (both from tape recordings and included in the
appendice), the transcription conventions proposed by the Groupe Aixois de Recherche en
Syntaxe were applied.
In chapter III, some of the most common deviations from the norm that occur in
the French immersion corpus are discussed, and for the most part these aberrations reflect
the results of previous error analyses done on second language learners.
In chapters IV and V, a study of "slip-ups" is undertaken. Slip-ups are repetitions
or self-corrections, referred to as "rates" in this thesis. They occur frequently both in the
Francophone and French immersion corpus.
The purpose of this study is to analyse the intrinsic structure of these hesitations
(that were previously brushed off as un-grammatical) and to discover whether the
repetitions or self-corrections produced by the French immersion speakers share
characteristics with or differ from the slip-ups identified in the Francophone corpus.
Whereas an enumeration of grammatical errors will almost always show that the
French spoken by French immersion pupils is not as "good" as that spoken by
Francophone children, the analysis of slip-ups is a more objective endeavor. And indeed,
the study reveals some unpredicted results. On certain parts of the sentence, such as the
predicate, French native speakers surprisingly slip up more often than French immersion children, while the latter tend to hesitate more often on subjects and indirect objects.
Further analysis reveals that native French speakers almost always repeat (or
correct) entire word groups, or syntagms, although they don't always complete such
groups. The French immersion children, on the other hand, do not always repeat the
entire word group when they slip up, but they do seem to finish their construction (or
sentence), once it has started.
Finally, the situation (formal or informal) appeared to only affect the speakers in
the Francophone corpus: they hesitated slightly more often in a formal setting, whereas
the situation did not seem to affect the results for the French immersion speakers.
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The acquisition of English by non-native children and its sociocultural correlates : a study in an inner-city schoolMazurkewich, Irene January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Project-based instruction in a Canadian secondary school's ESL classes : goals and evaluationsBeckett, Gulbahar Huxur 11 1900 (has links)
Research on project-based instruction is common in mainstream education. It
conceives the activity broadly, but omits language. It is rare in English as a Second
Language (ESL) education, and Second Language Acquisition (SLA) theory conceives it
narrowly, omitting a functional view of language. The present study examines the
implementation of project-based instruction in ESL classes in a Canadian secondary school
through interviews with Canadian ESL teachers and Chinese ESL students, observations of
two projects in action, and examination of students' written work, and school, school board
and Ministry of Education documents.
Results indicate that the teachers held and implemented a broad, integrated
conception of project-based instruction that includes a functional view of language. They
have many more goals than those stressed for project-based instruction in the SLA literature,
and have goals that are not included even in the mainstream literature. The teachers evaluated
project-based instruction positively, and the researcher's observations support the teachers'
evaluations.
However, despite teacher's and students' successes, a number of students evaluated
project-based instruction negatively. This discrepancy is discussed using three explanatory
models (philosophical, cultural, and linguistic) that the participants may have been using
when interpreting project-based instruction.
The study points to the need to develop a rationale which adequately addresses
project-based instruction as a functional language learning activity in the context of academic
subject matter learning. It identifies problems of cross-cultural interpretation of and
communication about projects, and notes difficulties of resolving them. It points out the
necessity for an examination of the processes of project-based instruction, noting places of
difficulty and success, and considering promising strategies.
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International student admission to ESL programs in public and private post-secondary institutions in British ColumbiaMay, Cecily Marryat 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe and analyze policies and practices that
facilitate and hinder international student admission to English as a Second Language
(ESL) programs at public and private post-secondary institutions in British Columbia,
from the perspective of institutions themselves.
Since 1986, a proliferation of ESL programs for international students have
emerged in public and private post-secondary institutions in B.C. and numbers of
international students in the non-university sector of education in Canada have grown. The
governments of B.C. and Canada recognize that English language training is a growing
business in Canada and the world.
Admissions procedures are but one factor of many that influence a student's
decision to apply. This study assumes that streamlined admission to ESL programs will
make Canada more attractive, and therefore increase its numbers of international students,
a goal that exists for public and private institutions, for internationalization and economic
purposes.
The research question was: What facilitates and what hinders international student
admission to ESL programs in public and private post-secondary institutions in British
Columbia? Secondary questions were: How can admissions policies and procedures be
more effective and more efficient? What are the implications for change at the
institutional, provincial, and national levels?
Over a six-week period in 1999, the author interviewed admissions personnel at
forty post-secondary institutions in B.C. (sixteen public and twenty-four private),
comprising 60% of those that met the selection criteria of providing year-round ESL to
international students and having been in operation for three years. The interviews were
transcribed and the data were analyzed with data from a questionnaire and written
institutional material.
The study finds and presents some institutional factors relating to documents,
personnel, communication, fee payment and other issues that facilitate and hinder
international student admission to ESL programs. However, the study also identifies areas
beyond the control of institutions that, from the perspective of admissions personnel, may
have a greater effect on international student admission to ESL programs and therefore on
increasing the number of international students in Canada.
The author makes ten recommendations for institutions and concludes with seven
questions for future research.
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A between groups comparison of gains in English proficiency in a sheltered English immersion programCrittenden, Rose Elizabeth 05 1900 (has links)
Some second language learners are more successful than others. Students in
the University of British Columbia/Ritsumeikan Joint Academic Exchange
Programme, a sheltered English-as-a-second-language (ESL) immersion program,
have in the past exhibited varying degrees of gain in English proficiency in their
writing, reading, speech, and academic achievement during their stay in Vancouver.
The explanation of why some learners become proficient in a second language may
lie in our understanding the interactions of such individual attributes as the
learner's age, language aptitudes, autonomy and motivation, attitudes, personality,
cognitive style, learning strategies, background in language and knowledge of other
languages.
In this study the gain in English proficiency of all the students in the program
was examined first and then the gain of two different groups of students who were
categorized and "low" and "high" on the basis of their entry level scores on the Test
of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). The standardized tests used in this
program were supplemented with two additional tests to measure gain in
proficiency. A language experience questionnaire was given to all students and
interviews of selected students from each group were conducted. The results of the
standardized tests were analyzed and a significant difference in the gain of English
proficiency between these two groups was found. An evaluation of the individual
language learning histories and the interview data was conducted to further
understand the language proficiency gains found from the psychometric measures.
Implications for instruction and further research were reached.
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The collaborative role of an ESL support teacher in a secondary school : supporting ESL students and content teachers utilizing integrated language and content instructionKonnert, Michele Rand 05 1900 (has links)
This research project was conducted with social studies and English teachers
and ESL students in mainstream classes at a secondary school in Richmond, B.C. over a
seven-month period from September 1998 to March 1999. As an action researcher, I
solved problems through team work and through following a cyclical process of
1. strategic planning, 2. action, 3. observation, evaluation and self-evaluation, and
4. critical and self-critical reflection on the cycle (McNiff, Lomax, & Whitehead,
1996).
The findings included in this study are a definition of the ESL support role,
effectiveness of the ESL support program, teacher collaboration, application of the
ILC approach and the Knowledge Framework (Mohan, 1986), challenges and issues
for content teachers and ESL students, and the dual role as support teacher and
researcher. First, with regard to a definition of the ESL support role, ESL support
teachers were viewed by myself and the administration as language development
specialists who act as consultants, with a focus on co-teaching and individual
instruction. Colleagues perceived the ESL support team as ESL trained teachers who
must prove their effectiveness through action, rather than words, in content
teachers' classrooms. ESL students viewed the ESL support teachers as a welcome
support or unwelcome intruders. Second, with regard to the effectiveness of the ESL
support program, the administration and I felt that the program provided exceptional
support services to content teachers and ESL students. ESL students also felt that the
ESL support program was very helpful. Colleagues, however, were initially skeptical
of the program, but eventually valued the support.
Third, collaboration increased over time as ESL support specialists worked in
cooperative relationships with content teachers. Fourth, the ILC approach was
selectively, and at times superficially, implemented in content courses. Also, the
Knowledge Framework was the most successful teaching method for ESL support of
content teachers and ESL students. Fifth, there were many challenges for content
teachers, ESL learners, and ESL support specialists. One challenge was the lack of
English spoken by our student population. Another concern was the appearance of
passivity of ESL students. Also, assessment and evaluation of ESL students was very
difficult for content teachers. Thus, content instructors needed to learn alternate
assessment and evaluation strategies for their ESL learners. In addition, teachers
wondered about their ESL students' comprehension and exam preparation. Lastly,
tensions inevitably arose from the dual role as teacher and researcher.
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Kneading narratives, communities and culture : recipes, reflections and revelationsMichals, Lisa 05 1900 (has links)
self and other.
If reading the local papers and talking to parents is any indication, Education, it
seems, is asked to play a greater role in the upbringing of our students. The schools are
responsible for ensuring that the students are well fed and adequately supervised not just
during school hours, but before and after as well. Schools are expected to keep up with
the rigors of ensuring that the students are practiced in the almighty disciplines of
reading, writing, arithmetic and now, technology skills. This will somehow propel them
into the economic demands of the new millenium. But the impact of the culture and the
community from which the students come - the histories of their experiences as
individuals and as a group- are seldom explored. L
Intuitively, I am drawn to my own stories when trying to make sense of the stories
that swirl and swish amongst the myriad of moments that collectively comprise each
experience. The influence our narratives have on the way we understand and learn is
explored in this paper. Sandwiched in between the stories is a study of how using Drama
as an instructional technique can be used to explore our narratives and expand on our
ways of knowing and understanding, particularly how it is experienced by the English as
a Second Language (ESL) learner.
. Twenty-six grade five and six students from a multi-cultural, suburban
community were observed. The students participated in a two-month, tri-weekly unit on
basic drama methods, which culminated in a final class narrative performance. Four ways
of data collection were employed. A static camera (i.e. a video camera that remained in a
fixed position on a tripod in one of the classroom corners) was used throughout each
lesson to record the events and to supply another view to the multi-perspective data
collection. Student journals as well as a personal narrative from each participant (a video
portrait) were collected. The classroom teacher also kept a journal and made observations
about her students throughout the unit period.
This dissertation was not limited to the stories of the students in the classroom as
this journey precipitated a desire, indeed a need, to tell my own stories of daughter,
mother, sister, student, teacher and friend. Since our physical experiences, our stories and
our ways of understanding are integrally intertwined, this (re) search honored narrative as
a way of including these aspects in the dissertation.
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Exploring ESL immigrant students' perceptions of their academic and social integration successChen, Louis S. C. 05 1900 (has links)
This study introduces a different kind of collaborative research whereby two
researchers co-design and co-conduct the research and draw their own conclusions from
the shared data. The data, gathered using qualitative tools such as surveys,
questionnaires, and interviews, was further enriched as a result of having two individuals
from different backgrounds interpreting the data. The data collected from 14 university
students who were once identified as ESL students in British Columbia, Canada, were
transcribed then analyzed using NUD*IST qualitative computer software. The focus was
on their perceptions of ESL programs, immigration process, and socio-cultural factors
that contributed to their academic and social integration success.
Participants' own words centered mostly on their relationships with families,
friends, and ESL teachers as major factors contributing to their success. ESL programs
served as their safety nets as the majority suggested that their journey into social and
academic mainstreams had undesirable effects on their experiences. Three major factors
were identified as having both helped and hindered their adaptation and integration into
Canadian school and society: family influence, bicultural identities, and segregation.
Results from this study suggest a number of theoretical and practical implications.
First, this study need to be replicated in different contexts using a longitudinal approach
to document how immigrant ESL students construct their experiences within and outside
of school overtime. Secondly, research need to aim at understanding the tension between
students' home and school cultures and encourage involvement and collaboration
between ESL students, parents, and teachers. In addition, examining how ESL students interact with their mainstream counterparts may provide helpful guidelines for schools to
foster an environment whereby unity and support exist between the two groups.
This study concludes with both researchers' reflection on each other's thesis. This
step led to a critical reexamination of their interpretation. Differences and similarities
emerged from this process. The similarities both researchers shared provided a greater
degree of validity and reliability to this project. On the other hand, the differences that
emerged served to enrich the data by providing two perspectives to the same problem.
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Culture, parents, and course selection : a case study of Chinese ESL students in a British Columbia secondary schoolEspinoza, Victor Marcelo 11 1900 (has links)
The following is a case study of grade 12 English as a Second Language (ESL)
students enrolled in a British Columbia secondary school during the 2001-2002 academic
year. The principal objective of this research was to uncover the following: 1) if ESL
students made course choices at grade 12 which differed from those of non-ESL student
choice patterns at grade 12; 2) the role of familial preferences, cultural influences and
prior learning styles which predispose student choice for post secondary concentrations.
This research examined the academic transcripts of 238 (94 ESL, 144 non-ESL)
students, analyzed the responses of 145 (65 ESL, 80 non-ESL) student questionnaires,
and considered interviews with 26 ESL students and 12 school staff (4 counselors, 8
teachers). The findings suggest that a significant difference exists in the academic
courses in which ESL grade 12 students enroll compared to non-ESL students. Cultural
and familial influences were found to affect both the types of senior courses ESL students
chose and their aims about future educational and career aspirations. The findings
suggest that secondary schools examine critically their policies regarding broadening the
exposure of ESL students to more expressive courses in Arts to extend equality of
opportunity in determining their career choice directions.
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