Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Adjustment (Psychology) (1)
- Culture shock -- Japan (1)
- English language -- Graphemics (1)
- English language -- Study and teaching -- Chinese speakers (1)
- English language -- Study and teaching -- Japan (1)
-
- Foreign teachers -- Employment -- Japan -- Diaries (1)
- Interaction analysis in education (1)
- Language and languages -- Study and teaching (1)
- Second language acquisition (1)
- Social role (1)
- Susan Elizabeth Hemstreet -- Diaries (1)
- Teacher-student relationships -- Japan (1)
- Teacher-student relationships -- United States (1)
- Vocabulary -- Study and teaching (1)
- Word recognition -- Study and teaching (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Applied Linguistics
Effects Of Participant Roles On Input Interactions And Comprehensible Output, Larry Douglas Morgan
Effects Of Participant Roles On Input Interactions And Comprehensible Output, Larry Douglas Morgan
Dissertations and Theses
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate what effect, if any, the social roles between second language learners and their conversational partners have on the types and frequencies of the following discourse categories: (a) input interactional modifications (b) corrections of language learners' linguistic errors by others and (c) language learners' production of comprehensible output. This study also seeks to corroborate previous research findings with regards to negotiation of meaning interactions and other-corrections of language learners' linguistic errors.
Discourse Markers: Functions Of /JaʿNi/ In Educated Egyptian Arabic, Amani Elshimi
Discourse Markers: Functions Of /JaʿNi/ In Educated Egyptian Arabic, Amani Elshimi
Archived Theses and Dissertations
This is a study in conversation analysis focusing on the analysis of the discourse marker /jacni/ in Egyptian Arabic. Markers are defined as discourse deictic expressions that link together, and signal boundaries between, discourse structures. They operate on all three levels of discourse proposed by Halliday (1970) - textual, ideational and interpersonal. Using direct observation techniques, the distribution, form and function of the marker /jacni/ were examined in the language of educated Egyptian subjects on radio and television interviews. Two variables were taken into account - speaker gender and topic type. Using syntactic position and phonological form as guidelines for …
The Relationship Between The Use Of Graphophonic Strategy And The Success In English Vocabulary Learning For Chinese Students, Ching-Chih Christine Huang
The Relationship Between The Use Of Graphophonic Strategy And The Success In English Vocabulary Learning For Chinese Students, Ching-Chih Christine Huang
Dissertations and Theses
For Chinese EFL learners, the skill of vocabulary learning is one of the most essential elements in their English learning process. Many Chinese students transfer their familiar character-learning strategies, which include shape identification and rote memorization, in their English word-learning process. As a result, they may spend time and effort associating the shape, the sound, and the meaning of an English word before they learn and memorize it. Since they do not take advantage of the correspondence between the print and the sound, their vocabulary-learning process seems to be less effective.
Sojourner Adjustment : A Diary Study, Susan Elizabeth Hemstreet
Sojourner Adjustment : A Diary Study, Susan Elizabeth Hemstreet
Dissertations and Theses
The focus of the ethnographic diary study is introduced and contextualized in the opening chapter with a site description. The thesis examines the diaries written during a sojourn of over two years in Japan . and proposes to answer the question, "How did the sojourner's initial maladjustment subsequently develop into satisfactory adjustment?"
Perceptions Of Teacher And Student Roles : Views Of Japanese Businessmen, John Walter Armbrust
Perceptions Of Teacher And Student Roles : Views Of Japanese Businessmen, John Walter Armbrust
Dissertations and Theses
Research provides a vast amount of information detailing the learning styles and preferences of learners and the influence of one's culture on that individual's perceptions of the world. Little of that research, however, has been applied to studying the effects of culture on the learner's perceptions of teacher and student roles, specifically in the area of second language learning. What is available often appears in the form of anecdotal descriptions of teaching and learning experiences abroad. A possible reason for the lack of investigation of student views in this area has been the absence of an adequate measuring device with …