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Evaluation in business discourse / Keoneeng [i.e. Keoneng] K. MagochaMagocha, Keoneng Know January 2010 (has links)
The aim of the thesis is to explore, from a linguistic perspective, the construction and
maintenance of interaction in documents in which directives are conveyed in business
communication correspondence, in order to input directly into the pedagogic practice in
written business communication. The focus is research into ways of scaffolding relationships
in documents for correspondence, an area that represents an important aspect of language use
in business communication practice.
The data for the study includes letters, memoranda and saving rams in which directives are
conveyed written by writers of English as a second language and following various channels
of communication. Two methods are used to extract the relevant data in which evaluative
meanings are conveyed. These are Wordsmith to extract evaluative and patterns and a
manual analysis to identify the evaluative structures of the texts.
The linguistic construal of interpersonal scaffolding is investigated drawing on the model of
APPRAISAL (Martin, 2000), which is located within the Hallidayan grammar as the
theoretical point of departure. The choice of language used in the texts is interrogated and
interpreted with reference to the theory. analysis focuses on the linguistic systems that
appropriately serve or construe the interactive function of language and addresses issues such
as kinds of semantic values that are conveyed, the patterns in which they are expressed and
their texture. The objective is not to make generalizations about how writers of documents
manage interaction and persuade their recipients to carry out the actions they desire. Rather
the aim is to develop a theoretical framework to explain the evaluative strategies that are
encoded in the texts and the implications of choosing amongst different strategies.
ii
The thesis therefore contributes a theoretically motivated and dynamic explanation of the
ways in which interaction is managed in the context of texts in which directives are
communicated especially amongst Batswana writing in the English language. From a
pedagogic perspective the explanations of managing interaction developed in the study
provide insights and resources for teachers of business communication writing to assist them
in modelling evaluative strategies in business correspondence writing and helping their
students to develop effective written communication strategies. / Thesis (Ph.D. (English)--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2010.
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Evaluation in business discourse / Keoneeng [i.e. Keoneng] K. MagochaMagocha, Keoneng Know January 2010 (has links)
The aim of the thesis is to explore, from a linguistic perspective, the construction and
maintenance of interaction in documents in which directives are conveyed in business
communication correspondence, in order to input directly into the pedagogic practice in
written business communication. The focus is research into ways of scaffolding relationships
in documents for correspondence, an area that represents an important aspect of language use
in business communication practice.
The data for the study includes letters, memoranda and saving rams in which directives are
conveyed written by writers of English as a second language and following various channels
of communication. Two methods are used to extract the relevant data in which evaluative
meanings are conveyed. These are Wordsmith to extract evaluative and patterns and a
manual analysis to identify the evaluative structures of the texts.
The linguistic construal of interpersonal scaffolding is investigated drawing on the model of
APPRAISAL (Martin, 2000), which is located within the Hallidayan grammar as the
theoretical point of departure. The choice of language used in the texts is interrogated and
interpreted with reference to the theory. analysis focuses on the linguistic systems that
appropriately serve or construe the interactive function of language and addresses issues such
as kinds of semantic values that are conveyed, the patterns in which they are expressed and
their texture. The objective is not to make generalizations about how writers of documents
manage interaction and persuade their recipients to carry out the actions they desire. Rather
the aim is to develop a theoretical framework to explain the evaluative strategies that are
encoded in the texts and the implications of choosing amongst different strategies.
ii
The thesis therefore contributes a theoretically motivated and dynamic explanation of the
ways in which interaction is managed in the context of texts in which directives are
communicated especially amongst Batswana writing in the English language. From a
pedagogic perspective the explanations of managing interaction developed in the study
provide insights and resources for teachers of business communication writing to assist them
in modelling evaluative strategies in business correspondence writing and helping their
students to develop effective written communication strategies. / Thesis (Ph.D. (English)--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2010.
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