The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender

A great deal of research undertaken in child language development, neurolinguistics and various branches of functional and cognitive linguistics has shown that a main source of language development is the spoken input to which learners are exposed. Despite the fact that for most adult L2 learners,...

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Main Authors: Joan Kelly Hall, Tianfang Wang, Su Yin Khor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Urmia University 2020-10-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ijltr.urmia.ac.ir/article_120932_e3b2955ceaef9c4da87c12833b599c2a.pdf
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spelling doaj-3479e068429a4e489f5bceb26aed24a82020-11-25T01:59:33ZengUrmia UniversityIranian Journal of Language Teaching Research2322-12912322-12912020-10-01832540The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They EngenderJoan Kelly Hall0Tianfang Wang1Su Yin Khor2The Pennsylvania State UniversityThe Pennsylvania State UniversityThe Pennsylvania State UniversityA great deal of research undertaken in child language development, neurolinguistics and various branches of functional and cognitive linguistics has shown that a main source of language development is the spoken input to which learners are exposed. Despite the fact that for most adult L2 learners, the greatest exposure to the L2 is the input they experience in the classroom, we still know very little of the linguistic quality of L2 classroom input and its links to L2 development. The study reported in this paper is a partial response to this gap. Drawing on research from L1 classrooms linking the linguistic quality of teacher questions to the linguistic quality of student responses and grounded in the shared theoretical and methodological framework of conversation analysis and interactional linguistics, our study examines the linguistic designs of L2 teacher questions and the links between them and the L2 student responses they engender.http://ijltr.urmia.ac.ir/article_120932_e3b2955ceaef9c4da87c12833b599c2a.pdfl2 inputclassroom interactionconversation analysisinteractional linguistics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joan Kelly Hall
Tianfang Wang
Su Yin Khor
spellingShingle Joan Kelly Hall
Tianfang Wang
Su Yin Khor
The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research
l2 input
classroom interaction
conversation analysis
interactional linguistics
author_facet Joan Kelly Hall
Tianfang Wang
Su Yin Khor
author_sort Joan Kelly Hall
title The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
title_short The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
title_full The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
title_fullStr The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
title_full_unstemmed The Links between the Linguistic Designs of L2 Teacher Questions and the Student Responses They Engender
title_sort links between the linguistic designs of l2 teacher questions and the student responses they engender
publisher Urmia University
series Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research
issn 2322-1291
2322-1291
publishDate 2020-10-01
description A great deal of research undertaken in child language development, neurolinguistics and various branches of functional and cognitive linguistics has shown that a main source of language development is the spoken input to which learners are exposed. Despite the fact that for most adult L2 learners, the greatest exposure to the L2 is the input they experience in the classroom, we still know very little of the linguistic quality of L2 classroom input and its links to L2 development. The study reported in this paper is a partial response to this gap. Drawing on research from L1 classrooms linking the linguistic quality of teacher questions to the linguistic quality of student responses and grounded in the shared theoretical and methodological framework of conversation analysis and interactional linguistics, our study examines the linguistic designs of L2 teacher questions and the links between them and the L2 student responses they engender.
topic l2 input
classroom interaction
conversation analysis
interactional linguistics
url http://ijltr.urmia.ac.ir/article_120932_e3b2955ceaef9c4da87c12833b599c2a.pdf
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