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The effects of task complexity & proficiency on foreigner talk discourse and communication strategies in the NS-NNS interactionShortreed, Ian McFarland January 1987 (has links)
An experiment was conducted to examine the effects of task complexity and learner proficiency in native speaker (NS)/non-native speaker (NNS) interaction. A total of 24 Japanese NSs and 12 NNSs subjects representing three levels of proficiency, low (n=4), intermediate (n=4) and advanced (n=4), were randomly assigned to dyads to complete two communication tasks, each differing in relative complexity. Three composite variables made up of 32 dependent variables were used to measure the frequency of formal reduction, communication and repair strategies across both tasks. The hypothesis that NSs would simplify their speech and use a higher frequency of interactional modifications in accordance with the level of proficiency of the NNSs and the complexity of the tasks was tested. The results for the first independent variable of proficiency, indicated there was a trend showing that NSs simplified their speech when addressing NNSs in general and in particular, when addressing lower level learners of Japanese. The results for the second independent variable of task complexity revealed that there was a significant effect on the number of reduction, communication and repair strategies used on the more complex task for all groups. These findings are discussed in relation to previous research on NS-NNS interaction and implications for second language teaching are explored. / Education, Faculty of / Language and Literacy Education (LLED), Department of / Graduate
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Computers and content-based language learningHooper, Hugh R. January 1988 (has links)
Can a computer database be used to augment a content-based approach to developing academic discourse? This document reports on the integration of these three areas in student tasks in a unit of work (biology) taught by a content teacher and a language specialist to a class of grade 7 students in a Vancouver elementary
school. The objectives of the study were 1) to investigate the connections between biology content, the academic discourse of classification and a computer database, and 2) to identify if each area was in fact related to the knowledge structures of classification and description. The research method focussed on, ethnographic observations, interviews and recordings of the students and the teachers as they worked through the unit. Analysis of the findings seems to suggest that there are connections
between biology content, academic discourse of classification
and a computer database, and that each area is related to the knowledge structure of classification and description. This finding further suggests that student tasks at the computer have the potential for developing academic discourse and the learning of content. This potential may deserve further investigation by both teachers and researchers. / Education, Faculty of / Language and Literacy Education (LLED), Department of / Graduate
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Form-function relations in student discourse contextualized by classroom language activities : a case study of an elementary Chinese as a foreign language programHuang, Jingzi 05 1900 (has links)
Recent studies in language education have advocated the integration of language
and content learning, assuming that classroom discourse will display appropriate formfunction
relations. But Swain (1988) reveals that even good content teaching may result
in classroom discourse where form-function relations are neither appropriate nor
transparent, and calls for intentional teacher planning of classroom activities. Thus major
areas for research are intentional planning for integration and functional discourse
analysis. Approaches to the form-function analysis of discourse include register
(Halliday 1985), genre (Martin 1992) and knowledge structures (Mohan 1990). All three
provide a theoretical basis for functional discourse analysis and intentional planning.
In this qualitative, eight-month study of Chinese as a foreign language and culture
class for beginning elementary anglophone students, the teachers designed student tasks
around knowledge structures, using graphic representations to mediate between language
and content. Data included lesson plans, informal interviews, field notes, and discourse
data from student interactions and written work. The discourse was analyzed
lexicogrammatically with a view to form-function relations, particularly the formal
realizations of knowledge structures. Major questions were: how were foreign language
teaching and cultural learning intentionally organized around knowledge structures at the
level of both curriculum design and classroom implementation? What systematic formfunction
relations appeared in the discourse data. How are knowledge structures formally
realized in the interactions and written work of young foreign language learners?
The results throw light on the possibilities of systematic form-function relations in
the classroom, the integration of language and content learning, and on further directions
for intentional planning. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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The effect of an extensive reading program on the reading proficiency and vocabulary knowledge of adult ESL readersLennig, Evelyn M. 11 1900 (has links)
Provincial and federal government surveys and commissions have consistently
reported that English literacy training for adults with no or limited English is urgently
needed and that access to training is limited. The effectiveness of existing literacy training
programs and instructional strategies at the adult level has not been well researched.
However, at the classroom level literacy training can be easily compromised by
instructional strategies that limit the concept of full-literacy by focusing ESL literacy
instruction on survival, functional and skill-building reading experiences. English and
second language reading research suggests that student self-selection of reading materials
and a high exposure to text are effective means of increasing vocabulary knowledge and
reading proficiency.
This study examined the effect of an Extensive Reading program on reading
proficiency and vocabulary knowledge for 2 classes (N=33) of adult low intermediate ESL
learners enrolled in a 15 week English language training program at a large Canadian
community college. This quasi-experimental treatment group participated in a reading
program supplemental to their regular classroom reading instruction. Subjects met weekly
with the researcher and self-selected reading material from a collection of graded readers.
Data on the frequency of the students' reading, their preferences in reading topics and
materials and self-evaluations of their first and second language reading abilities were
tallied for subjects in both groups. No statistical significant differences were found for the
treatment in the analysis of assessments of reading and vocabulary. However, the experimental group posted higher gains in the group mean score on reading proficiency
than the control group. Analysis of the Reading Behavior Survey suggests subjects in both
groups were low frequency readers (less than 5 hours of reading time in English per week)
who generally evaluated themselves fair to good readers in L2 but good to excellent
readers in LI. The inconclusive results for the effect of the treatment on reading
proficiency and vocabulary acquisition implies the need for future studies on the
effectiveness of extensive reading programs on literacy training in ESL programs where
literacy in English is a concern for students and educators. / Education, Faculty of / Graduate
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A longitudinal study of the effects of instruction on the development of article use by adult Japanese ESL learnersMellow, John Dean 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the effects and value of instructional activities for improving
second language use of English articles. After reviewing a number of issues concerning
pedagogical, linguistic, psycholinguistic, and internal validity, this study presents the results of
eight longitudinal time-series case studies of adult Japanese learners of English residing in
Vancouver, Canada, four of whom received grammatical explanations, input processing activities,
and output practice activities regarding English article use. Learner development was assessed on
three different narrative retelling tasks (spoken, written, and cloze) and the production was
analysed with reference to specific contexts of use, indicating the form-function mappings that
comprised the learners' interlanguage knowledge. The results indicated that the learners'
interlanguage production exhibited (a) the anticipated task variation, with greater suppliance of the
on tasks that allowed greater attention to form, and (b) the anticipated discoursal variation, with the
supplied more consistently when it was primed as a redundant element on the written task and with
the supplied less consistently when it was efficiently deleted as a redundant element on the spoken
task. The results also indicated the variable nature of individual development and the value of
assessing development longitudinally on different tasks. Importantly, the results indicated that the
learners improved or continued improving after instruction, and strongly suggested that instruction
can cause automatization of interlanguage knowledge. This finding suggests that form-focused
instruction may be valuable for second language learning, and that pedagogical positions opposing
form-focused instruction may need to be revised or abandoned. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
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Increasing cognitive functioning in science for English language learnersPowell, Deborah Sue 01 January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Increasing cognitive functioning in science for English language learnersPowell, Deborah Sue 01 January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Presence of Xitsonga linguistic features in Black South African English (BSAE): an investigation of mother-toungue transferMthethwa, Gugu Marie January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English studies) -University of Limpopo / National Research Foundation
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Diversity in the Adult ESL ClassroomTadic, Nada January 2020 (has links)
For more than half a century, education researchers have strived to understand, accommodate, and promote diversity in primary and secondary classrooms, generating a wealth of insightful research in the process. However, issues of diversity in the adult second language classroom remain under-explored. Given the recent rise in immigration around the world and the accompanying increase in xenophobia and fear, it is crucial that we closely examine how language teachers attend to issues of sociocultural diversity while working with highly diverse immigrant and international student populations. This study addresses the existing research gap by offering a microanalytic explorations of teachers’ practices for working with diversity in adult second language classrooms. Specifically, I examine how remarks that undermine diversity and discussions on issues of diversity are managed in situ. My data consist of 55 hours of video-recorded adult English as a second language (ESL) classes at a community language program in the Northeastern United States. The participants were four ESL teachers and their 39 students from 17 different countries. The data were transcribed and analyzed in minute detail within the conversation analytic and membership categorization analytic (M/CA) frameworks.
Findings show that remarks that undermine diversity are both condoned and problematized in these classrooms. Although by condoning improper remarks the teachers might have inadvertently reinforced potentially harmful stereotypes and prejudices, they also helped promote a sense of appreciation, like-mindedness, and solidarity. On the other hand, by problematizing students’ potentially improper remarks, teachers created a space for various sociocultural views and experiences to be voiced, even as they ultimately promoted their own perspectives on issues of sociocultural diversity. Teachers’ practices for managing discussions on diversity were examined in a single case of a teacher initiating, extending, and terminating a discussion on a potentially sensitive topic of gender inclusivity. The analysis shows that the teacher fostered student participation by oscillating between neutral and value-laden statements on the topic at hand, increasingly resting gender inclusivity as he reinforced gender conformity. Findings contribute to research on diversity in education and on managing “socially sensitive” talk in the (language) classroom, as well as to critically “motivated” M/CA research.
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Managing Multiple Demands in the Adult ESL Classroom: A Conversation Analytic Study of Teacher PracticesReddington, Elizabeth January 2020 (has links)
While much research on teaching has focused on what teachers know, less attention has been devoted to understanding what they actually do. This empirical absence can be felt in particular in the adult English as a Second Language (ESL) instructional context, despite the continued growth of the U.S. immigrant population. The current study addresses this gap by examining discursive practices employed by experienced teachers as they manage multiple demands in the adult ESL classroom. Data include over 25 hours of video-recordings and transcripts of interaction in four intact classes taught by four instructors at two sites: an academic ESL program, housed at a community college, and a community-based ESL program, housed at a school of education.
Microanalysis of teacher-student interaction, conducted within the framework of (multimodal) conversation analysis, uncovered three teacher practices for managing multiple demands. The first, voicing the student perspective, entails the teacher verbalizing how students (may) perceive or experience a pedagogic topic or task; the topic/task is framed in a way that acknowledges its difficulty or problematizes students’ engagement with it. By employing this practice, teachers simultaneously affiliate with the (potential) student perspective while preparing students for explanations of challenging topics or recruiting their participation. The second practice, binding student contributions, entails marking connections, verbally and/or non-verbally, between one student contribution and teacher explanation or the contributions or identities of other students. Through binding, the teacher displays responsiveness to individual contributions while promoting the engagement of (other individuals in) the class. The third practice, resource splitting, entails the use of verbal and embodied resources to simultaneously pursue different courses of action within a single turn, or the use of different embodied resources to do so. By “splitting” semiotic resources, the teacher can accomplish two actions at the same time: align as a recipient and validate one contribution while managing turn-taking or pursuing topic/task shifts. By providing empirically-grounded and fine-grained descriptions of actual teacher practices, this study contributes to explicating how the complex work of teaching is accomplished. Findings bring specificity to the conversation on what constitutes skillful teaching and may benefit teacher educators and novice (ESL) teachers.
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