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Elérhetővé téve ekkor2019-12-16T08:56:24Z
Szerző Williams Thomas A.
MTMTID:
10031357
Webcímhttp://pea.lib.pte.hu/handle/pea/23333
Az értekezés nyelveAngol
Az értekezés címe az értekezés nyelvénEnglish Language Learners’ Socially Constructed Motives and Interactional Moves: an Exploratory Study
Az értekezés címe magyarulAngol nyelvtanulók társadalmilag kialakított indítékai és interakciós lépései: egy feltáró vizsgálat
Absztrakt az értekezés nyelvénThis qualitative study explores the potential for task-based language teaching (TBLT) in a particular English language teaching (ELT) context by investigating the beliefs of a group of learners about ELT and foreign language (FL) teaching generally. It also examines the nature of these same learners’ task-based interaction and seeks to understand their socioculturally determined motives in that regard. The participants in this study are students in a Bachelor’s programme at the Institute of English and American Studies, University of Szeged, Hungary. Fifty-seven students contributed their task-based speaking data. Of these, 44 responded to an open-ended questionnaire, and 18 took part in a one-on-one structured interview to provide their FL learning views and experience. Aside from the questionnaire and interview, both of which were developed by the author, the data collection instruments for this study consisted of two standard decisionmaking speaking tasks. Collected in autumn 2009, the data was processed and analysed in stages for four parts of this study. I used content analysis for the questionnaire and interview data and a narrow transcription and conversation analysis for the speaking data. The findings consist of the following: despite a great deal of learner exposure to traditional FL classroom practices, a general openness to the TBLT paradigm; a range of socioculturally determined learner contributions to speaking task implementation; a strong learner tendency toward collaborative moves in spoken interaction over negotiation for meaning; and a range of both universal and culture-specific explanations for this tendency. Based on these findings, the dissertation suggests various implications as regards ELT (and other FL) learning and teaching for researchers, practitioners and teacher educators.
EgyetemPécsi Tudományegyetem
Doktori iskolaBTK Nyelvtudományi Doktori Iskola
TémavezetőNikolov Marianne


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