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الموضوع: help ....................please

  1. #1
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    help ....................please

    peace be upon u brothers nd sisters
    our teacher of linguistics asked us to write a paragraph to this question(discuss it)
    this is the question
    discuss the extent to which a teacher can be motivating and/or inhibiting source in the learning process

    please i need your help introduction and some ideas

    i'm waiting for u

  2. #2
    مشرف الصورة الرمزية Alsqour.w
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    رد: help ....................please

    what about these a few sentences



    Introduction
    Teachers serve as the guiding force in a student's life. They are responsible for molding a student's personality and shaping his/her mental orientation. Teachers deeply impact our lives and direct the course of our future. One cannot deny the influence of teachers in one's life. In fact, it would not be an exaggeration to say that, till a certain age, out life revolves around our teachers. They are our constant companions, until we grow old enough to come out of their shadow and move ahead on our own.

    Right from the time we embark on our education trip, we come across different types of teachers. Some are friendly, some are strict, and some are the ones we idolize. We also dislike a few, who fail to impress us positively. Students begin to like teachers, according to their own individual preferences. They even classify their teachers into different categories, such as Friendly Teachers, Lenient Teachers, Perfectionist Teachers, Strict Teachers and Funny Teachers. All these classifications for teachers are based on some typical personality traits of the teachers. For ex - some teachers constantly criticize the students, some act like friends, some are fun to be with and so on

    Sources of motivation for learning and involvement of pupils/students
    Quality teaching shall be based on the pupils'/students' motivation to learn. Thus, the teacher should ask e.g. how to
    • motivate pupils to learning,
    • awake their interest in particular subject matters,
    • change the attitude of pupils in such a way that their learning will not be simply externally motivated (e.g. only because of good marks),
    • attract their attention on particular teaching situations and involve them into a learning activity,
    • recognise the motives that move the pupils towards learning and those that move them away from it.
    The teacher should be aware that each pupil/student has developed an individual motivation structure, where both the learning supporting motives and the learning inhibiting ones have their place (Petty 1993). Both groups of motives consist of contradictory pairs of items, e.g.
    • interest versus lack of interest in a discipline (is not interested, has not got prerequisites for good results);
    • to be successful and thus recognised by peers versus to be unsuccessful and consequently recognised by peers (so-called hero of the class);
    • to be always successful versus to be always failing;
    • parents take care versus parents do not take care of their children's results at school;
    • likes versus dislikes a particular teacher;
    • the teaching methods of a teacher are excellent versus the teaching methods are bad.
    Motivation is a difficult part of the teaching strategy because the motives depend on the pupil's/student's personality and are variable and hidden. The means that the teacher has at his/her disposal can result in different effects at different classes, at different teaching situations and different circumstances (e.g. parents, community). The motivation should go through the whole teaching/learning process, be reflected in all its phases and single elements. The motivation sources have got a different level dependent on
    Motivating: A teacher who will inspire you to achieve your best. They lead by example - hard work & enthusiasm. They have high expectations of you and will build your confidence in your abilities.

    Inhibiting: A teacher who does not stretch and test your abilities to their limit. They allow you to get by with less than your best.


    ωαℓєє∂ αℓ ѕqσυя

  3. #3
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    رد: help ....................please

    اقتباس المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة Alsqour.w مشاهدة المشاركة
    what about these a few sentences



    Introduction
    Teachers serve as the guiding force in a student's life. They are responsible for molding a student's personality and shaping his/her mental orientation. Teachers deeply impact our lives and direct the course of our future. One cannot deny the influence of teachers in one's life. In fact, it would not be an exaggeration to say that, till a certain age, out life revolves around our teachers. They are our constant companions, until we grow old enough to come out of their shadow and move ahead on our own.

    Right from the time we embark on our education trip, we come across different types of teachers. Some are friendly, some are strict, and some are the ones we idolize. We also dislike a few, who fail to impress us positively. Students begin to like teachers, according to their own individual preferences. They even classify their teachers into different categories, such as Friendly Teachers, Lenient Teachers, Perfectionist Teachers, Strict Teachers and Funny Teachers. All these classifications for teachers are based on some typical personality traits of the teachers. For ex - some teachers constantly criticize the students, some act like friends, some are fun to be with and so on

    Sources of motivation for learning and involvement of pupils/students
    Quality teaching shall be based on the pupils'/students' motivation to learn. Thus, the teacher should ask e.g. how to
    • motivate pupils to learning,
    • awake their interest in particular subject matters,
    • change the attitude of pupils in such a way that their learning will not be simply externally motivated (e.g. only because of good marks),
    • attract their attention on particular teaching situations and involve them into a learning activity,
    • recognise the motives that move the pupils towards learning and those that move them away from it.
    The teacher should be aware that each pupil/student has developed an individual motivation structure, where both the learning supporting motives and the learning inhibiting ones have their place (Petty 1993). Both groups of motives consist of contradictory pairs of items, e.g.
    • interest versus lack of interest in a discipline (is not interested, has not got prerequisites for good results);
    • to be successful and thus recognised by peers versus to be unsuccessful and consequently recognised by peers (so-called hero of the class);
    • to be always successful versus to be always failing;
    • parents take care versus parents do not take care of their children's results at school;
    • likes versus dislikes a particular teacher;
    • the teaching methods of a teacher are excellent versus the teaching methods are bad.
    Motivation is a difficult part of the teaching strategy because the motives depend on the pupil's/student's personality and are variable and hidden. The means that the teacher has at his/her disposal can result in different effects at different classes, at different teaching situations and different circumstances (e.g. parents, community). The motivation should go through the whole teaching/learning process, be reflected in all its phases and single elements. The motivation sources have got a different level dependent on
    Motivating: A teacher who will inspire you to achieve your best. They lead by example - hard work & enthusiasm. They have high expectations of you and will build your confidence in your abilities.

    Inhibiting: A teacher who does not stretch and test your abilities to their limit. They allow you to get by with less than your best.
    thank you so much

  4. #4
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    رد: help ....................please

    السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته ..

    i need ur help 4 this assignment N discourse analysis subject,, plzzzz it's v.imp () ...


    & How discourse analysis helps 2nd language learners to improve their writing

    speaking communicative competence.of about three pages .
    ]

  5. #5
    مشرف الصورة الرمزية Alsqour.w
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    Apr 2012
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    Al Baha
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    رد: help ....................please

    What Is Discourse Analysis?
    Discourse analysis is the examination of language use by members of a speech community. It involves looking at both language form and language function and includes the study of both spoken interaction and written texts. It identifies linguistic features that characterize different genres as well as social and cultural factors that aid in our interpretation and understanding of different texts and types of talk. A discourse analysis of written texts might include a study of topic development and cohesion across the sentences, while an analysis of spoken language might focus on these aspects plus turn-taking practices, opening and closing sequences of social encounters, or narrative structure.
    The study of discourse has developed in a variety of disciplines-sociolinguistics, anthropology, sociology, and social psychology. Thus discourse analysis takes different theoretical perspectives and analytic approaches: speech act theory, interactional sociolinguistics, ethnography of communication, pragmatics, conversation analysis, and variation analysis (Schiffrin, 1994). Although each approach emphasizes different aspects of language use, they all view language as social interaction.
    This digest focuses on the application of discourse analysis to second language teaching and learning. It provides examples of how teachers can improve their teaching practices by investigating actual language use both in and out of the classroom, and how students can learn language through exposure to different types of discourse. Detailed introductions to discourse analysis, with special attention to the needs and experiences of language teachers, can be found in Celce-Murcia and Olshtain (2000), Hatch (1992), McCarthy (1992), McCarthy and Carter (1994), and Riggenbach (1999).
    Discourse Analysis and Second Language Teaching
    Even with the most communicative approaches, the second language classroom is limited in its ability to develop learners' communicative competence in the target language. This is due to the restricted number of contact hours with the language; minimal opportunities for interacting with native speakers; and limited exposure to the variety of functions, genres, speech events, and discourse types that occur outside the classroom. Given the limited time available for students to practice the target language, teachers should maximize opportunities for student participation. Classroom research is one way for teachers to monitor both the quantity and quality of students' output. By following a four-part process of Record-View-Transcribe-Analyze, second language teachers can use discourse analytic techniques to investigate the interaction patterns in their classrooms and to see how these patterns promote or hinder opportunities for learners to practice the target language. This process allows language teachers to study their own teaching behavior—specifically, the frequency, distribution, and types of questions they use and their effect on students' responses.
    Step One: Videotape a complete lesson. Be sure to capture all of your questions and the students' responses. (Opportunities to speak the target language are often created by teachers' questions.)
    Step Two: Watch the videotape. As you watch it, think about the types of questions you asked. Look for recurring patterns in your questioning style and the impact it has on the students' responses.
    Step Three: Transcribe the lesson. A transcript will make it easier to identify the types of questions in the data and to focus on specific questions and student responses.
    Step Four: Analyze the videotape and transcript. Why did you ask each question? What type of question was it—open (e.g., "What points do you think the author was making in the chapter you read yesterday?") or closed (e.g., "Did you like the chapter?")? Was the question effective in terms of your goals for teaching and learning? What effect did your questions have on the students' opportunities to practice the target language? How did the students respond to different types of questions? Were you satisfied with their responses? Which questions elicited the most discussion from the students? Did the students ask any questions? Focusing on actual classroom interaction, teachers can investigate how one aspect of their teaching style affects students' opportunities for speaking the target language. They can then make changes that will allow students more practice with a wider variety of discourse types.
    Teachers can also use this process of Record-View-Transcribe-Analyze to study communication patterns in different classroom activities, such as student-to-student interactions during a paired role-play task and during a small-group cooperative learning activity. Communicative activities are expected to promote interaction and to provide opportunities for students to engage in talk. Teachers are likely to discover that students produce different speech patterns in response to different tasks. For example, a map activity is likely to elicit a series of questions and answers among participants, whereas a picture narration task requires a monologue developed around a narrative format. Given that teachers use communicative tasks to evaluate learners' proficiency, a better understanding of the influence of specific activities on learner discourse will likely lead teachers to use a greater variety of tasks in order to gain a more comprehensive picture of students' abilities. By recording, transcribing, and analyzing students' discourse, teachers can gain insight into the effect of specific tasks on students' language production and, over time, on their language development.
    A discourse analysis of classroom interactions can also shed light on cross-cultural linguistic patterns that may be leading to communication difficulties. For example, some speakers may engage in overlap, speaking while someone else is taking a turn-at-talk. For some linguistic groups, this discourse behavior can be interpreted as a signal of engagement and involvement; however, other speakers may view it as an interruption and imposition on their speaking rights. Teachers can use the Record-View-Transcribe-Analyze technique to study cross-cultural interactions in their classrooms, helping students identify different communication strategies and their potential for miscommunication.
    Although some variables of language learning are beyond the control of second language teachers, discourse analysis can be a useful analytic tool for making informed changes in instructional practices. Mainstream teachers, especially those with second language learners, can also use this technique to study classroom interactions in order to focus on the learning opportunities available to students with limited English proficiency. In fact, discourse analysis can be an integral part of a program of professional development for all teachers that includes classroom-based research, with the overall aim of improving teaching (Johnson, 1995).
    Discourse Analysis and Second Language Learning
    Language learners face the monumental task of acquiring not only new vocabulary, syntactic patterns, and phonology, but also discourse competence, sociolinguistic competence, strategic competence, and interactional competence. They need opportunities to investigate the systematicity of language at all linguistic levels, especially at the highest level (Riggenbach, 1999; Young and He, 1998). Without knowledge of and experience with the discourse and sociocultural patterns of the target language, second language learners are likely to rely on the strategies and expectations acquired as part of their first language development, which may be inappropriate for the second language setting and may lead to communication difficulties and misunderstandings.
    One problem for second language learners is limited experience with a variety of interactive practices in the target language. Therefore, one of the goals of second language teaching is to expose learners to different discourse patterns in different texts and interactions. One way that teachers can include the study of discourse in the second language classroom is to allow the students themselves to study language, that is, to make them discourse analysts (see Celce-Murcia & Olshtain, 2000; McCarthy & Carter, 1994; Riggenbach, 1999). By exploring natural language use in authentic environments, learners gain a greater appreciation and understanding of the discourse patterns associated with a given genre or speech event as well as the sociolinguistic factors that contribute to linguistic variation across settings and contexts. For example, students can study speech acts in a service encounter, turn-taking patterns in a conversation between friends, opening and closings of answering machine messages, or other aspects of speech events. Riggenbach (1999) suggests a wide variety of activities that can easily be adapted to suit a range of second language learning contexts.
    One discourse feature that is easy to study is listener response behavior, also known as backchannels. Backchannels are the brief verbal responses that a listener uses while another individual is talking, such as mm-hmm, ok, yeah, and oh wow. Listener response can also be non-verbal, for instance head nods. Research has identified variation among languages in the use of backchannels, which makes it an interesting feature to study. Variation has been found not only in the frequency of backchannels, but also in the type of backchannels, their placement in the ongoing talk, and their interpretation by the participants (Clancy, Thompson, Suzuki, & Tao, 1996). Students can participate in the Record-View-Transcribe-Analyze technique to study the linguistic form and function of backchannels in conversation.
    Step One: Ask to video- or audiotape a pair of native speakers engaging in conversation, perhaps over coffee or lunch.
    Step Two: Play the tape for students. Have them identify patterns in the recorded linguistic behavior. In this case, pay attention to the backchanneling behavior of the participants. Is the same backchannel token used repeatedly, or is there variation?
    Step Three: Transcribe the conversation so that students can count the number and types of backchannel tokens and examine their placement within the discourse.
    Step 4: Have students analyze specific discourse features individually, in pairs or in small groups. These are some questions to consider: How often do the participants use a backchannel token? How does backchanneling contribute to the participants' understanding of and involvement in the conversation? How can differences in backchannel frequency be explained? How does backchanneling work in the students' native language?
    Students can collect and analyze data themselves. Once collected, this set of authentic language data can be repeatedly examined for other conversational features, then later compared to discourse features found in other speech events. This discourse approach to language learning removes language from the confines of textbooks and makes it tangible, so that students can explore language as interaction rather than as grammatical units. Teachers can also use these activities to raise students' awareness of language variation, dialect differences, and cultural diversity.
    Conclusion
    In sum, teachers can use discourse analysis not only as a research method for investigating their own teaching practices but also as a tool for studying interactions among language learners. Learners can benefit from using discourse analysis to explore what language is and how it is used to achieve communicative goals in different contexts. Thus discourse analysis can help to create a second language learning environment that more accurately reflects how language is used and encourages learners toward their goal of proficiency in another language


    ωαℓєє∂ αℓ ѕqσυя

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