Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies

Learner corpus research seeks to describe and thereby better understand learner acquisition, thus informing better teaching practice and creating an important bond between corpus linguistics and second/foreign language (L2) research. While much research exists for the study of L2 English, there is l...

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Main Authors: Ortner, Gwyndolen Jeanie, Weber, Undine Susanne
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Stellenbosch University 2019-01-01
Series:Per Linguam : A Journal of Language Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://perlinguam.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/789
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spelling doaj-6aea12de56cb483ea14fb51c925406832020-11-25T03:33:47ZafrStellenbosch UniversityPer Linguam : A Journal of Language Learning0259-23122224-00122019-01-01342698310.5785/34-2-789Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German StudiesOrtner, Gwyndolen Jeanie 0Weber, Undine Susanne 1Rhodes UniversityRhodes UniversityLearner corpus research seeks to describe and thereby better understand learner acquisition, thus informing better teaching practice and creating an important bond between corpus linguistics and second/foreign language (L2) research. While much research exists for the study of L2 English, there is little research for the study of L2 German.This study explores the implementation of a corpus-based writing course in German studies at Rhodes University in South Africa with students at third-year level who were learning to write longer texts that present and defend an opinion. In order to evaluate the success of the writing course in teaching specific academic collocations, a diachronic collection of learner writing was undertaken. Written assignments were used to create a learner corpus, RUDaF (Rhodes University Deutsch als Fremdsprache). The creation of a learner corpus of German before and during the writing course served as a reflective tool to aid in the evaluation and improvement of corpus-based teaching materials. This is exemplified through the students’ use of three specific opinion-related everyday-academic German collocations before and after the writing course. The learner corpus revealed a marked improvement in the use of taught collocations before and during the writing course. These methods provide insights for other language educators who wish to implement corpus-based methods for improving writing in a second or foreign language, and for all educators wanting to assess improvements in student writing.http://perlinguam.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/789Academic writingGerman as a Foreign LanguageCorpus linguisticsData-driven learningFormulaic language
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ortner, Gwyndolen Jeanie
Weber, Undine Susanne
spellingShingle Ortner, Gwyndolen Jeanie
Weber, Undine Susanne
Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
Per Linguam : A Journal of Language Learning
Academic writing
German as a Foreign Language
Corpus linguistics
Data-driven learning
Formulaic language
author_facet Ortner, Gwyndolen Jeanie
Weber, Undine Susanne
author_sort Ortner, Gwyndolen Jeanie
title Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
title_short Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
title_full Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
title_fullStr Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
title_full_unstemmed Using corpora to inform teaching practice in German Studies
title_sort using corpora to inform teaching practice in german studies
publisher Stellenbosch University
series Per Linguam : A Journal of Language Learning
issn 0259-2312
2224-0012
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Learner corpus research seeks to describe and thereby better understand learner acquisition, thus informing better teaching practice and creating an important bond between corpus linguistics and second/foreign language (L2) research. While much research exists for the study of L2 English, there is little research for the study of L2 German.This study explores the implementation of a corpus-based writing course in German studies at Rhodes University in South Africa with students at third-year level who were learning to write longer texts that present and defend an opinion. In order to evaluate the success of the writing course in teaching specific academic collocations, a diachronic collection of learner writing was undertaken. Written assignments were used to create a learner corpus, RUDaF (Rhodes University Deutsch als Fremdsprache). The creation of a learner corpus of German before and during the writing course served as a reflective tool to aid in the evaluation and improvement of corpus-based teaching materials. This is exemplified through the students’ use of three specific opinion-related everyday-academic German collocations before and after the writing course. The learner corpus revealed a marked improvement in the use of taught collocations before and during the writing course. These methods provide insights for other language educators who wish to implement corpus-based methods for improving writing in a second or foreign language, and for all educators wanting to assess improvements in student writing.
topic Academic writing
German as a Foreign Language
Corpus linguistics
Data-driven learning
Formulaic language
url http://perlinguam.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/789
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