Buch, Englisch, Band 61, 362 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 780 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
Selected papers from the Sixth International Conference on Teaching and Language Corpora (TaLC 6). University of Granada, Spain, 4-7 July, 2004
Buch, Englisch, Band 61, 362 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 230 mm, Gewicht: 780 g
Reihe: Language and Computers
ISBN: 978-90-420-2142-6
Verlag: Brill | Rodopi
The book is divided into three main sections. The first section sets the scene for what this collection of essays aims to be. It deals with the issue of what corpus linguistics can do not only for the understanding of the nature of language itself but also for so fundamental and miraculous a matter such as language learning and language acquisition. The second section tackles the issues of corpus design and corpus exploitation and provides the reader with a great variety of evidence in favour of corpora exploitation for the building of a successful teaching environment. The final section deals with practical applications of corpora in the foreign language classroom. Although each of the papers here reports particular experiences in very different teaching and learning contexts, as a whole they show that corpora can be used on the spot in a language teaching context by teachers and learners without extensive training in computational tools, and studies of linguistics features can be tailored to specific pedagogic context and learning requirements.
The book represents a solid contribution to linguistic studies and language teaching and it is a good example of the diversity of the scientific lines in which corpus linguistics is involved at the present moment.
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword
Encarnación HIDALGO TENORIO, Luis QUEREDA and Juan SANTANA:
I Setting the scene
Angela CHAMBERS: Popularising corpus consultation by language learners and teachers
Stig JOHANSSON: Using corpora: from learning to research
II Theoretical issues: corpus design and exploitation in the foreign language classroom
Sabine BRAUN: Designing and exploiting small multimedia corpora for autonomous learning and teaching
Kiyomi CHUJO, Masao UTIYAMA and Chikako NISHIGAKI: Towards building a usable corpus collection for the ELT classroom
Peter Y.W. LAM: A corpus-driven lexico-grammatical analysis of English tourism industry texts and the study of its pedagogic implications in English for Specific Purposes
Xiaotian GUO: Errors or partial acquisition: a case study of a young English learner’s interlanguage
Josta VAN RIJ-HEYLIGERS: To weep perilously or W.EAP critically: the case for a corpus-based critical EAP
Fanny MEUNIER and Céline GOUVERNEUR: The treatment of phraseology in ELT textbooks
Carmen PÉREZ BASANTA and María Elena RODRÍGUEZ MARTÍN: The application of data-driven learning to a small-scale corpus: using film transcripts for teaching conversational skills
III Practical applications of corpora in the foreign language classroom
Stephen COFFEY: Investigating restricted semantic sets in a large general corpus: learning activities for students of English as a foreign language
Sara GESUATO: How (dis)similar? Telling the difference between near-synonyms in a foreign language
David MINUGH: George Bush and the Last Crusade or the fight for truth, justice and the American way
Szilvia PAPP: Inductive learning and self-correction with the use of learner and reference corpora
Nele OLIVIER, Lieselotte BREMS, Kristin DAVIDSE, Dirk SPEELMAN and Hubert CUYCKENS: Pattern-learning and pattern-description: an integrated approach to proficiency and research for students of English
Julia LAVID: Contrastive patterns of mental transitivity in English and Spanish: a student-centered corpus-based study
Agnieszka LENKO-SZYMANSKA: Past progressive or simple past? The acquisition of progressive aspect by Polish advanced learners of English
Andy CRESSWELL: Getting to ‘know’ connectors? Evaluating data-driven learning in a writing skills course
Christopher TRIBBLE: Managing relationships in professional writing
Alejandro Curado FUENTES: A corpus-based assessment of reading comprehension in English for Tourism studies
Afterword
Bill LOUW: Truth, literary worlds and devices as collocation