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Writing, reading and judging academic essays in a global university : an activity system analysisFlavell, Richard, 1947- January 2001 (has links)
Abstract not available
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Responding to student writing : strategies for a distance-teaching contextSpencer, Brenda 11 1900 (has links)
Responding to Student Writing: Strategies for a Distance-Teaching Context identifies viable
response techniques for a unique discourse community. An overview of paradigmatic shifts in
writing and reading theory, 'frameworks of response' developed to classify response statements
for research purposes, and an overview of research in the field provide the theoretical basis for
the evaluation of the empirical study.
The research comprises a three-fold exploration of the response strategies adopted by Unisa
lecturers to the writing of Practical English (PENl00-3) students. In the first phase the focus falls
on the effect of intervention on the students' revised drafts of four divergent marking strategies
- coded correction, minimal marking, taped response and self assessment. All the experimental
strategies tested result in statistically-significant improvement levels in the revised draft. The
benefits of self assessment and rewriting, even without tutorial intervention, were demonstrated.
The study is unique by virtue of its distance-teaching context, its sample size of 1750 and in the
high significance levels achieved.
The second phase of the research consisted of a questionnaire that determined 2640 students'
expectations with respect to marking, the value of commentary, their perceptions of markers'
roles and their opinions of the experimental strategies tested. Their responses were also
correlated with their final Practical English examination results.
The third phase examined tutorial response. The framework of response, developed for the
purpose, revealed that present response strategies represent a regression to the traditional
product-orientated approach to writing that contradicts the cognitive and rhetorical axiological
basis of the course. There is thus a disjunction between the teaching and theoretical practices.
The final chapter bridges this gap by examining issues of audience, transparency, ownership,
timing of intervention and training. The researcher believes that she has successfully identified
practical and innovative strategies that assist lecturers in a distance-teaching context to break
away from old response blueprints. / English Studies / D.Litt. et Phil. (English)
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Responding to student writing : strategies for a distance-teaching contextSpencer, Brenda 11 1900 (has links)
Responding to Student Writing: Strategies for a Distance-Teaching Context identifies viable
response techniques for a unique discourse community. An overview of paradigmatic shifts in
writing and reading theory, 'frameworks of response' developed to classify response statements
for research purposes, and an overview of research in the field provide the theoretical basis for
the evaluation of the empirical study.
The research comprises a three-fold exploration of the response strategies adopted by Unisa
lecturers to the writing of Practical English (PENl00-3) students. In the first phase the focus falls
on the effect of intervention on the students' revised drafts of four divergent marking strategies
- coded correction, minimal marking, taped response and self assessment. All the experimental
strategies tested result in statistically-significant improvement levels in the revised draft. The
benefits of self assessment and rewriting, even without tutorial intervention, were demonstrated.
The study is unique by virtue of its distance-teaching context, its sample size of 1750 and in the
high significance levels achieved.
The second phase of the research consisted of a questionnaire that determined 2640 students'
expectations with respect to marking, the value of commentary, their perceptions of markers'
roles and their opinions of the experimental strategies tested. Their responses were also
correlated with their final Practical English examination results.
The third phase examined tutorial response. The framework of response, developed for the
purpose, revealed that present response strategies represent a regression to the traditional
product-orientated approach to writing that contradicts the cognitive and rhetorical axiological
basis of the course. There is thus a disjunction between the teaching and theoretical practices.
The final chapter bridges this gap by examining issues of audience, transparency, ownership,
timing of intervention and training. The researcher believes that she has successfully identified
practical and innovative strategies that assist lecturers in a distance-teaching context to break
away from old response blueprints. / English Studies / D.Litt. et Phil. (English)
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The Thai university student's fine-tuning of discourse in academic essays and electronic bulletin boards: performance and competenceTangpijaikul, Montri January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (DAppLing)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Dept. of Linguistics, 2009. / Bibliography: p. 208-233. / Introduction -- Conceptual frameworks: language competence and the acquisition of modality -- Generic frameworks: speech, writing and electronic communication -- Linguistic frameworks: modality and related concepts -- Research design and methodologies -- FTDs in the ACAD and BB corpora -- Learner's use of FTDs in discoursal context and their individual repertoires -- Conclusions and implications. / While natural interaction is one of the important components that lead to successful language learning (Vygotsky 1978, 1986), communication in classroom practice in Thailand is mostly teacher-centered and not genuinely interactive. Online group communication is different because it allows learners to exercise interpersonal communicative skills through interaction and meaning negotiation, as in reciprocal speech situations. At the same time it gives learners time to think and produce language without having to face the kind of pressure they feel in face-to-face classroom discussion. The language learner's competence is thus likely to be enhanced by opportunities to communicate online, and to be more visible there than in academic contexts, although there is a dearth of experimental research to show this. One way of investigating the pedagogical potential of bulletin board discussions is to focus on the interpersonal linguistic devices used in textual interactions (Biber 1988). -- The purpose of this research is to find out whether students communicating online in bulletin board writing will exercise their repertoires of linguistic fine-tuning devices (hedges, modals, and intensifiers) more extensively than when writing academic essays. This was expected because hedges, modals and intensifiers are likely to be found in interactive discussions (Holmes 1983), while academic tasks do not create such an environment. Though hedges and modal devices are also found in academic genres (Salager-Meyer 1994, Hyland 1998), those used tend to be academic in function rather than communicative. -- In order to compare the frequency and variety of the fine-tuning devices used by learners in the two mediums, data was gathered from 39 Thai students of English at Kasetsart University, from (1) their discussions in online bulletin boards and (2) their academic essays. Tasks were assigned on parallel topics in three text types (narrative, explanatory, argumentative) for both mediums. The amount of writing was normalized to create comparable text lengths. Measures used in the quantitative analysis included tallying of the types and tokens of the experimental linguistic items, with the help of the AntConc 2007 computer concordancer. Samples of written texts from the two mediums were also analyzed qualitatively and compared in terms of their discourse structure (stages, moves and speech acts), to see which functional segments support or prompt particular types of pragmatic devices. -- The findings confirm that in electronic bulletin boards the students exercise their repertoires of fine-tuning devices more frequently, and use a greater variety of pragmatic functions than in academic essays. This is probably because online discussion fosters interactions that are more typical of speech (Crystal 2006), and its structure allows for a series of interpersonal moves which have no place in academic tasks. Text-type also emerged as a significant factor: writing argumentative texts prompted greater use of modals and intensifiers than the narrative and explanatory ones. Thus students' communicative competence showed itself most fully in the argumentative online assignments, and was not so evident in academic and expository essays. Frequent use of modal and intensifying elements was also found to correlate with the students' English proficiency grades, and how regularly they wrote online. This incidentally shows the importance of exposure to L2 in language acquisition, and that lower-proficiency learners need more opportunities to exercise their L2 resources in interactive discourse, in order to develop competence in using them. -- These research findings support Long's (1996) 'Interaction Hypothesis', that learners learn best in situations that cater for interaction; and Swain's (1985) 'Output Hypothesis', that learners need the chance to exercise their language naturally in a variety of contexts -through academic tasks as well as social interactions, which are equally important for language education. Extended performance opportunities undoubtedly feed back into the learner's communicative competence. / Mode of access: World Wide Web. / xi, 389 p. ill
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