An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials

In South Africa students from disadvantaged educational backgrounds enrol at institutions of higher learning underprepared for the academic work expected of them. One reason for this is that English in South Africa is primarily an urban language and both Black children and teachers, especially in ru...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi
Other Authors: Hubbard, E.H.(Ernest Hilton), 1947-
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi (2011) An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-46582018-11-19T17:14:19Z An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi Hubbard, E.H.(Ernest Hilton), 1947- Interaction Participation effectiveness Discontinuative Conjunctive cohesion Cline of initiative 418.00715 Distance education -- South Africa Language arts -- South Africa Interaction analysis in education -- South Africa Teacher-student relationships -- South Africa Tutors and tutoring -- South Africa In South Africa students from disadvantaged educational backgrounds enrol at institutions of higher learning underprepared for the academic work expected of them. One reason for this is that English in South Africa is primarily an urban language and both Black children and teachers, especially in rural areas, lack sufficient exposure to it (Lemmer 1995) and at tertiary institutions students are expected to communicate efficiently in the language of instruction. The real-world problem at issue is ultimately the need for these students studying through the medium of English to develop their ability to participate actively in tutorials to improve both their academic understanding and their spoken discourse competence, which includes the ‘highly complex task of participating in talk-in-interaction’ (Dalton-Puffer 2007:280). Underlying the present study, then, is the conviction that through frequent interaction in the language of instruction, students will not only gain competence in speaking skills, but also deepen and expand their knowledge of their subject areas. This conviction led to the introduction of tutorials on a trial basis in my department and the study sought to develop a framework for analysing patterns of interaction in the tutorials that would also address the question of how the quality of such patterns might be assessed. The main construct investigated was ‘participation effectiveness’ (the quantity of speaker discourse acts and turns and speaker initiative at discourse act and turn-taking levels) and the overall findings indicated that third-year students participated more effectively than first-years; females performed better than males; and males in male-led tutorials used more discourse acts than females; while females in female-led tutorials did better than males. The analyses of effects of tutor discourse behaviour on student participation revealed that the types of questions tutors used and how they were combined were strong determinants of students' participation effectiveness. Although the approach of the study is essentially quantitative, the operationalisation of this main construct's two key components, namely 'participation' and 'initiative', forms a basis for also deriving more qualitative insights into this academically very important genre of spoken discourse. Linguistics and Modern Languages D. Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics) 2011-07-29T06:46:23Z 2011-07-29T06:46:23Z 2011-02 Thesis Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi (2011) An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658 en 1 online resource (267 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Interaction
Participation effectiveness
Discontinuative
Conjunctive cohesion
Cline of initiative
418.00715
Distance education -- South Africa
Language arts -- South Africa
Interaction analysis in education -- South Africa
Teacher-student relationships -- South Africa
Tutors and tutoring -- South Africa
spellingShingle Interaction
Participation effectiveness
Discontinuative
Conjunctive cohesion
Cline of initiative
418.00715
Distance education -- South Africa
Language arts -- South Africa
Interaction analysis in education -- South Africa
Teacher-student relationships -- South Africa
Tutors and tutoring -- South Africa
Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi
An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
description In South Africa students from disadvantaged educational backgrounds enrol at institutions of higher learning underprepared for the academic work expected of them. One reason for this is that English in South Africa is primarily an urban language and both Black children and teachers, especially in rural areas, lack sufficient exposure to it (Lemmer 1995) and at tertiary institutions students are expected to communicate efficiently in the language of instruction. The real-world problem at issue is ultimately the need for these students studying through the medium of English to develop their ability to participate actively in tutorials to improve both their academic understanding and their spoken discourse competence, which includes the ‘highly complex task of participating in talk-in-interaction’ (Dalton-Puffer 2007:280). Underlying the present study, then, is the conviction that through frequent interaction in the language of instruction, students will not only gain competence in speaking skills, but also deepen and expand their knowledge of their subject areas. This conviction led to the introduction of tutorials on a trial basis in my department and the study sought to develop a framework for analysing patterns of interaction in the tutorials that would also address the question of how the quality of such patterns might be assessed. The main construct investigated was ‘participation effectiveness’ (the quantity of speaker discourse acts and turns and speaker initiative at discourse act and turn-taking levels) and the overall findings indicated that third-year students participated more effectively than first-years; females performed better than males; and males in male-led tutorials used more discourse acts than females; while females in female-led tutorials did better than males. The analyses of effects of tutor discourse behaviour on student participation revealed that the types of questions tutors used and how they were combined were strong determinants of students' participation effectiveness. Although the approach of the study is essentially quantitative, the operationalisation of this main construct's two key components, namely 'participation' and 'initiative', forms a basis for also deriving more qualitative insights into this academically very important genre of spoken discourse. === Linguistics and Modern Languages === D. Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics)
author2 Hubbard, E.H.(Ernest Hilton), 1947-
author_facet Hubbard, E.H.(Ernest Hilton), 1947-
Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi
author Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi
author_sort Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi
title An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
title_short An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
title_full An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
title_fullStr An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
title_full_unstemmed An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
title_sort applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials
publishDate 2011
url Hlatswayo, Abigail Hleziphi (2011) An applied linguistics investigation of patterns interaction in university tutorials, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4658
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