An Introduction to Applied Linguistics
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Norbert Schmitt (ed.) - An Introduction to Applied Linguistics (2010, Routledge) - libgen.li
Table 3.3 Four vocabulary learning strands
Complete the table by putting the following activities into the appropriate strand. Be prepared to justify your choices by referring to the criteria in Column 2. What strands do these activities fit into? • 10 minute writing. (The learners write for 10 minutes each day on very easy topics. The best learner is the one who writes the most.) • 4/3/2 (The learners give the same talk to three different learners one after the other having 4 minutes for the first delivery, 3 minutes for the second and 2 minutes for the third.) • Communication activities. • Communication activities with written input. • Direct learning. • Direct teaching of vocabulary. • Intensive reading. • Linked skills. (For example, read about a topic, then talk about it and then write about it.) • Listening to easy input. • Listening to stories. • Prepared writing. • Reading easy graded readers. • Reading graded readers. • Rehearsed tasks. • Repeated reading. • Speed reading. • Training in vocabulary strategies. Discourse Analysis Michael McCarthy University of Nottingham Christian Matthiessen Macquarie University Diana Slade University of Technology, Sydney What is Discourse Analysis? Life is a constant flow of discourse – of language functioning in one of the many contexts that together make up a culture. Consider an ordinary day. It will, very likely, start with discourse (for example, greeting members of the household and some item of news from the radio, TV, world wide web or printed newspaper) before individuals rush off to go to work or school. The day then continues with a variety of discourse in these institutions: discussing plans at a business meeting, writing an undergraduate psychology essay in the university library, ordering lunch at a fast food outlet. (The day may, of course, include contexts that are not part of daily life, both private ones, such as a consultation with a medical specialist, and public ones, such as the inaugural speech by a newly elected official.) As the day outside the home draws to a close, the members of the household come together again, quite possibly sitting down for a joint meal with enough time to review the day and dream about the future. If you try to document, in a ‘discourse diary’, the flow of discourse over a few days, you will get a good sense of the extent to which life is ‘made up of’ discourse, and of the extraordinary range of contexts in which you engage in communication. This will also give a good indication of the diverse demands on language faced by language learners: learning how to engage in discourse is one of the most important goals in language learning and teaching. This means that the study of discourse is absolutely central to the concerns of applied linguistics; and as a language student or language teacher it is very helpful to ‘develop an ear’ for discourse – to learn to attend to the different strands of patterning in discourse and to focus on those contexts and linguistic strategies that are most immediately relevant. Because of its pervasiveness in life, discourse is studied in a number of different disciplines (see below). In the field of applied linguistics, the most relevant body of work is that which has come to be known as ‘discourse analysis’ (or ‘text linguistics’). The discourse analyst studies texts, whether spoken or written, whether long or short, and is interested in the relationship between texts and the contexts in which they arise and operate. Discourse analysts always look at real texts – and in this they differ significantly from formal (as opposed to functional) grammarians and philosophers of language, since these scholars tend to work with invented (constructed) examples. In addition, discourse analysts study language independently of the notion of the sentence, typically studying longer passages of text, whereas grammarians traditionally do not work beyond the written sentence. In other words, discourse analysts work with ‘utterances’ 4 54 An Introduction to Applied Linguistics (sequences of words written or spoken in specific contexts), whereas grammarians tend to work with ‘sentences’ (sequences of words conforming, or not, to the rules of grammar for the construction of phrases, clauses, etc.). Discourse analysts focus on the following questions when analysing texts: • Who are the participants in the discourse, that is, the writer and reader(s), the speaker(s) and listener(s)? What is their relationship? Is it one between equals? Are there differences in power or knowledge between the participants? What are their goals? (A formal grammarian does not usually take any of these factors into account when working with out-of-context sentences.) • How do we know what writers and speakers mean? More specifically, discourse analysts ask ‘What does this piece of language mean in this context?’ and ‘What does the speaker/writer mean by this piece of language?’ What factors enable us to interpret the text? What do we need to know about the context? What clues are there in the surrounding text which will enable us to apprehend the meaning? (In contrast, a formal grammarian can ask the question ‘What does this sentence mean?’, and a lexicologist can ask ‘What does this word mean?’, independently of context.) The important position that discourse analysis occupies in applied linguistics has come about because it enables applied linguists to analyse and understand real language data, for example, texts written by first and second language learners, or recordings of the spoken output of second language learners, or of the interaction between teachers and learners or among learners themselves in classrooms. It also enables us to understand better the kinds of discourse that language learners are exposed to outside the classroom: the language of service encounters in shops, banks, restaurants, etc., the language of newspapers, the language of everyday informal conversation. In addition, such analyses can assist language teachers and materials writers to evaluate language course books in terms of how closely they approximate authentic language, or what needs to be modified when authentic texts are brought into the classroom. Language testing can also gain a great deal from looking at real language use as a source of criteria for the evaluation of test performances. Speaking and Writing Discourse analysis is the analysis of language in its social context. Discourse analysts are just as interested in the analysis of spoken discourse as they are in the analysis of written discourse. When the focus in linguistics was primarily on written language and restricted to the study of isolated sentences, spoken language was seen as formless and ungrammatical and written language as highly structured and organized. Beattie (1983) wrote: ‘Spontaneous speech is unlike written text. It contains many mistakes, sentences are unusually brief and indeed the whole fabric of verbal expression is riddled with hesitations and silences’ (Beattie, 1983: 33). However, research on the analysis of spoken discourse (Halliday, 1985; Eggins and Slade, 1997; McCarthy, 1998) shows that spoken English does have a consistent and describable structure and that in many respects the language patterning is the same as written English. Halliday (1985: 77) provides an explanation for the myth of the ‘formlessness’ of spoken language, arguing that it derives from the analysis of written transcriptions of conversation, with all their pauses, repetitions and false starts. He contends that 55 Discourse Analysis an author’s first draft, with its crossings-out and re-writings, would look just as ramshackle. Beneath its surface ‘imperfections’ (which are an essential part of its dynamic flexibility) spoken language exhibits a highly elaborate organization, and is grammatically intricate, though in a way which is quite different from the language which we read and write. One way of approaching differences between speaking and writing is to plot individual texts along scales or dimensions. Figure 4.1 maps different kinds of spoken and written texts along such a scale. At one end of the scale, we have the most informal, concrete, interactions and, at the other, the most formal and abstract interactions. Figure 4.1 The cline between spoken and written discourse. At the most formal end of the formality continuum, there are the most dense written texts, such as academic articles, which are planned, collated and redrafted many times. At the other, are the most informal, spontaneous spoken interactions, with turn-taking, constantly shifting topics, overlapping speech and frequent interruptions. It is to these informal interactions that the label ‘casual conversation’ is applied. In the middle of the scales are the informal, written texts (such as email and letters to friends) and the formal, spoken texts (such as service encounters, job interview or a public speech). Academic texts are usually written in a detached and formal style (detachment or distancing oneself from the reader may be seen in the use of impersonal pronouns and passive voices, an absence of the pronoun you and an absence of affective/emotional vocabulary). Chatting with a friend over coffee, on the other hand, is usually a highly involved activity, with the pronouns I and you much in evidence, along with affective vocabulary. We have to hedge these statements with the word usually, however, as the characteristics of all types of discourse are variable to some degree. For example, chat between strangers may be much more distant and uninvolved personally, a kind of ritual where subjects such as the weather are acceptable, but where personal and intimate topics are not. Not only is the formality of the vocabulary usually different between spoken and written discourse but the amount of content that the words carry also differs, that is, spoken and written discourse usually have different lexical densities. Lexical density in a text is the rate of occurrence of lexical items (so-called ‘content words’, such as, sun, confuse, tiny) as against grammatical items (for example, he, Download 1.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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