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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.
851

Investigating English literacy development of first grade Korean English language learners : a case study approach

Dyer, Sang-Eun K. January 2006 (has links)
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate how first grade English Language Learners (ELL) develop their English literacy skills in an English-only classroom in the U.S. This case study included two Korean English learners in an elementary school who recently came to America. Several forms of data were collected through mainly qualitative methods, and additional informal assessments of reading levels in English and Korean languages were employed to elucidate the students' raw score changes over the five month study period.There were 18 weeks of classroom observation in the first grade classroom. The two Korean students were interviewed informally several times in their native language. Formal and structured interviews with the first grade teacher were conducted twice, once at the beginning and once at end of the study. Home surveys were administered twice to discover the students' home literacy environment. Throughout the study, the students' writing samples were collected both in English and in Korean. Constant comparison method was utilized in data analysis.Results of the study indicated that the two Korean English learners showed noticeable improvement in English literacy skills in many ways. Through the analysis of data, five factors influencing the children's literacy learning emerged, including teacher, ESL support, family, peers, and student factors. These factors were interrelated and they interacted in affecting the two students' English literacy development.These results and factors indicated that the two Korean English learners were affected by each factor differently based on their social context and individual characteristics. Additionally, each student showed improvement when there was concurrent interaction between his/her social context and individual effort. Each student's individual language background, proficiency of native language, and self-motivation in learning were crucial elements in enhancing their English literacy development.The present study illustrates the important factors in English learners' literacy development in the U.S. Several implications for the practice are suggested in order to foster successful school achievement of English Language Learners, an important issue since the number of English learners has dramatically increased in many classrooms in the U.S. / Department of Elementary Education
852

The use of conjunctions in English as a second language (ESL) : students' oral narratives

Groot, Ingeborg January 2000 (has links)
This dissertation analyzes the production and functions of the conjunctions and, but, so, and then as discourse markers in English as a Second Language (ESL) students' oral narratives. Two types of narratives are analyzed: a non-guided, or spontaneous narrative, and a picture-guided-narrative. Narratives of forty three ESL students are included in the analysis as well as narratives from six native speakers.This study indicates that l) the ESL students attach a narrowly defined meaning to and, but, so, and then, 2) the ESL students use and, but, so, and then to link previous sentences or ideas. or refer back to ideas, less than for any other function, 3) the ESL students do not use a greater number of occurrences of and, but, so, and then in the picture-guided-narrative than in the non-guided-narrative, and 4) the ESL students misuse conjunctions in similar ways regardless of their native language (LI ); that is, although the influence from a student's Ll may result in specific problems of transfer, some patterns of conjunction errors are unrelated to the Ll and may be indicative of a more general problem. / Department of English
853

A linguistic study of tense shifts in Indonesian-English interlanguage autobiographical discourse

Ihsan, Diemroh January 1988 (has links)
The purpose of the study was two-fold. First, it investigated, described, and analyzed tense shifts and the roles of the present tense forms in IEIL autobiographical discourse. Second, as a contribution to the study of English interlanguage of Indonesian EFL learners it presents some pedagogical implications for the EFL teaching and learning in Indonesia and offers suggestions for further research. The data used for the study were twenty-six essays containing 1700 verb phrases in 937 sentences, which were written by twenty-six freshman EFL learners of the University of Sriwijaya in Palembang, Indonesia, in 1986.The results of the study show that tense use in IEIL is systematic, on one hand, and variable, on the other. Shifts of tense from past to present are generally predictable. The present tense usually functions to present the writer's evaluation or opinion, habitual occurrences, general truth, or factual descriptions functioning as permanent truth in relation to the writer's childhood. Occasionally, the present tense functions as the Historical Present to narrate past events. The past tense, on the other hand, usually functions to describe past truth and, at times, to narrate historical events such as the writer's date and place of birth.Variability also characterizes IEIL autobiographical discourse. That is, IEIL writers do not completely follow the present and past tense rules. For instance, they usually use the present tense to express habitual occurrences, but at other times they use past tense accompanied by such expressions as "on Sundays," "on holidays," "whenever," etc.In addition, the following conclusions have been drawn: (1) IEIL autobiographical discourse largely contains description expressed in the past tense; (2) discourses are highly recommended to be used as the first material in teaching linguistic phenomena such as tense shifts to Indonesian EFL learners; and (3) following the IL theory and principles, EFL teachers should not treat EFL learner's should treat them as a sign that they are in fact in the process of learning.deviants as a sign of improper usage and harmful but instead should treat them as a sign that they are in fact in the process of learning. / Department of English
854

Language learning strategies and tolerance of ambiguity of Korean midshipmen learning English as a foreign language

Lee, Jun-Yong January 1998 (has links)
This study explores patterns of language learning strategies and the degree of tolerance of ambiguity of Korean Naval Academy midshipmen. The subjects, 377 midshipmen, were divided into three groups according to class, major, and proficiency, and the results were analyzed by group. The study also sought to find out relationships between motivation, attitude, language learning strategies, and tolerance of ambiguity. For the study, the Strategy Inventory Language Learning (SILL for ESL/EFL) developed by Oxford (1990a) and the Second Language Tolerance of Ambiguity Scale by Ely (1995) were used, along with items about motivation and attitude toward language learning.It was found that the language learning strategy mean and tolerance of ambiguity mean were not high overall. The proficiency levels showed significant mean differences: the high proficiency level students showed a significantly higher mean use of language learning strategies and tolerance of ambiguity than did the low and mid proficiency level students. With respect to class levels, there were no significant mean differences relating to language learning strategies. The seniors' mean of tolerance of ambiguity, however, was significantly higher than that of the other class levels. For major, there were no significant differences in the use of language learning strategies and tolerance of ambiguity. Correlations between tolerance of ambiguity and language learning strategies were significant and positive, although modest.The midshipmen's means of motivation and attitude were comparatively high. It was also found that while motivation showed a strong correlation with language learning strategies, attitude showed a strong correlation with tolerance of ambiguity. Through the analysis of six open questions, in addition, it confirmed that the Korean midshipmen generally did not use active strategies in learning English, although high proficiency level students used more than the mid or low proficiency ones. / Department of English
855

Using Stroop-like tests in the study of the memory of second language learners

Nunez Cruz, Jaime G. January 1991 (has links)
This dissertation tested the usefulness of Stroop-like tests in the study of the memory of second language learners. Two Stroop-like tests (picture-word and word-word) with incongruent stimuli were administered to subjects with high and low proficiency in Spanish. Predictions on the outcome of the tests were made from the point of view of six models of bilingual memory (common store, separate stores, common store to separate stores, bilingual dual-coding, word association, and concept mediation).A 2 x 2 x 2 factorial design with repeated measures on the last two variables was used. The variables were proficiency level: high and low, task: picture-word and word-word, and language condition: within language and between language. The analysis revealed a significant main effect of task and a significant interaction of task x language condition. Two additional interactions were marginally significant at the .10 level: proficiency level x task, proficiency level x language condition.The results did not provide any support for the separate stores, common store to separate stores, and bilingual dual coding models, but did provide partial support for the other and three models. It was concluded that the Stroop-like tests are a promising tool to study the organization of memory in second language (L2) acquisition. / Department of English
856

The comprehension of conversational implicatures : a cross- cultural study

Omara, Salma January 1993 (has links)
Research shows that L2 learners' communicative problems are often pragmatic in nature. Pragmatic competence has been defined as the ability to recognize the force and the intended meaning of an utterance by making judgments about its appropriateness (Thomas 1983). Studies on interlanguage pragmatics have provided evidence that conversational strategies differ cross-linguistically and cross-culturally. Also, recent studies on the way native and nonnative speakers of English comprehend and understand conversational implicatures (Bouton 1988, 1989, 1990) have revealed that non-native speakers of English do not interpret implicatures the way native speakers do and that this is due to cultural differences.This study investigated the way native speakers of Arabic and (American) English interpret and comprehend implicatures. It was hypothesized that, as a part of their communicative competence, the Arab speakers' ability to interpret implicatures in English may be influenced by four variables: 1) overall proficiency level in English (measured by standardized ESL tests); 2) length of exposure to American culture; 3) level of motivation to learn English andattitudes toward Americans and American culture; and 4) strategic interference due to the differences in pragmatic functions between Arabic and English.136 subjects (61 Arabs and 75 Americans) participated in this study, which employed three empirical instruments: 1) an implicature questionnaire designed in the form of a multiple-choice test to test the native and nonnative subjects' comprehension of implicatures; 2) a motivation/attitudes questionnaire to measure the non-native subjects' motivational levels for learning English and their attitudes towards American culture and people; and 3) the Michigan Proficiency Test, a standardized test of grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. In addition, a post-test interview was used to gather information from non-native speakers regarding the choices made on each implicature question.Statistical analyses of the results revealed significant differences between native and nonnative speakers in their comprehension and interpretation of implicatures. In a multiple-regression, length of stay was found to be a significant predictor of non-native speakers' comprehension of implicatures. / Department of English
857

Expanding the concept of scaffolding : an ethnography in the Chinese university English classroom context

Richley, Sandra L. January 2005 (has links)
This study focuses on the nature of scaffolding used by the Chinese student and teacher in a Chinese university English classroom located in Mainland China. Using the Vygotskian theory to analyze scaffolding events which occur during three transcripted lessons, it expands the present research on scaffolding. Previous research has predominantly utilized Wood, Bruner and Ross' (1976) six criteria to characterize the building and deconstructing of the scaffold by a tutor: 1) recruitment; 2) reduction in degrees of freedom; 3) direction maintenance; 4) marking critical features; 5) frustration control; and 6) demonstration. Many of these six criteria are utilized by the teacher within a lesson for scaffolding the students. This study, however, has shown that the teacher's scaffold is not the only scaffold that is built. Indeed, this study has shown that at any given moment in a lesson, many different layers of scaffolding are being built, which intertwine and overlap each other.Within the Chinese English classroom, it is more productive to discuss scaffolding in terms of layers, rather than only analyze Wood et al.'s (1976) strategies for building a scaffold. Four separate layers of scaffolding were discovered in the Chinese context. The layer one scaffold is where the teacher sets the backdrop for the lesson. She/He has planned the lesson, aware of what the students already know and lays down the foundation for it within the students' ZPD. Carrying out the work at this level involves creating intersubjectivity with the students and using prolepsis. The layer two scaffold occurs when students attend to the teacher's layer one scaffold and become mentally involved in the teacher's scaffold. Layer three involves two or more learners building and deconstructing scaffolds for each other. Finally, layer four shows the student actually building and deconstructing a scaffold for him/herself.This study discusses the strategies utilized by both the teacher and students in building a scaffold for other students and shows how these scaffolds are inter-related. In the conclusion, suggestions are made for native-English speaking teachers who are teaching in China concerning how to incorporate the findings of this study into their own teaching strategies. / Department of English
858

A special English program for Panamanian bank employees

Oses Ortega, Ruth Del Carmen January 1982 (has links)
English plays a significant role in Panama as a language of commerce. It is the language most widely used in the banking business. And opportunities for advancement are far more common in banks than in other businesses. A good program in this field is necessary to meet the needs of bank employees in the financial world. The program will be primarily oral since bank work covers a great many different kinds of tasks. The program for Panamanian bank employees examines English-speaking bank employees' main needs for communication skills.
859

A contrastive and error analysis of tense in the written English of Arab Palestinian university students

Abu-Jarad, Hassan Ali January 1983 (has links)
This thesis has dealt with the area of tense in both Arabic and English. First, a contrastive analysis between the two languages was made. The areas of similarities and differences were discussed. Second, an error analysis was made to examine the validity of the predictions of the contrastive analysis. The errors committed by thirty Arab Palestinian students were analysed and discussed.To examine the validity of the results and to measure the frequency count and the correlations among the categories of errors, a statistical analysis was made.
860

Fossilization and defossilization in second language acquisition

Hirase, Yuka January 1996 (has links)
This study investigates the fossilization and defossilization in the developing interlanguage of ESL students. The subjects were a group of 13 Japanese SL learners who studied at a U. S. University in an exchange program during 1994-95. The students' use of copula, auxiliaries, morphemes and syntactic structures was examined to see the degree to which there were interlanguage changes during the period. A close examination of SL production in form-focused contexts indicates that fossilized errors are more likely to occur when a number of particular conditions are not satisfied, involving a relatively automatized system of conveying meaning, an easy control of topic and a high degree of understanding of the target linguistic structure. / Department of English

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