Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Franken, Margaret
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1029733
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181905432018944
author Franken, Margaret
author_facet Franken, Margaret
Franken, Margaret
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Nature and Scope of Student Search Strategies in Using a Web Derived Corpus for Writing Franken, Margaret Second Language Learning Computational Linguistics Computer Software Second Language Instruction Language Fluency Grammar Linguistic Input Databases Syntax Phrase Structure Search Strategies Writing (Composition) English (Second Language) Computer Assisted Instruction Foreign Countries Search Engines Foreign Students The use of online language corpora in L2 teaching and learning is gaining momentum largely because corpora are an easily accessed source of language input that potentially provide rich and authentic lexico-grammatical data. This can be of particular use for students' writing as its incorporation can enhance the appearance of native-like fluency. We describe a particular online web-derived corpus constructed by means of digital library software, and we describe the nature of the concordancer that services it. This is a system we have named FLAX (Flexible Language Acquisition). Because the system incorporates not only a useful and authentic corpus but also linked databases, we maintain that it meets the need for an easily accessible online resource that gives explicit information about typical lexical and syntactic collocations. While online corpus-based resources are becoming more readily available, and their effective incorporation into language teaching is being documented, we seem to know little about how learners access them and make use of the results they generate. This paper reports on an exploratory investigation of the search strategies used by learners in a university general English course as they make use of FLAX, tracking the way they exploit the search results in their texts, and presenting their relevant comments about the system. In such a way, we seek to explain variation in students' use and effectiveness of search strategies to support their writing. This type of research, although exploratory, is critical if we are to acknowledge the need for students to become "research workers".
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1029733
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2014
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Nature and Scope of Student Search Strategies in Using a Web Derived Corpus for Writing
Franken, Margaret
Second Language Learning
Computational Linguistics
Computer Software
Second Language Instruction
Language Fluency
Grammar
Linguistic Input
Databases
Syntax
Phrase Structure
Search Strategies
Writing (Composition)
English (Second Language)
Computer Assisted Instruction
Foreign Countries
Search Engines
Foreign Students
The Nature and Scope of Student Search Strategies in Using a Web Derived Corpus for Writing Franken, Margaret Second Language Learning Computational Linguistics Computer Software Second Language Instruction Language Fluency Grammar Linguistic Input Databases Syntax Phrase Structure Search Strategies Writing (Composition) English (Second Language) Computer Assisted Instruction Foreign Countries Search Engines Foreign Students The use of online language corpora in L2 teaching and learning is gaining momentum largely because corpora are an easily accessed source of language input that potentially provide rich and authentic lexico-grammatical data. This can be of particular use for students' writing as its incorporation can enhance the appearance of native-like fluency. We describe a particular online web-derived corpus constructed by means of digital library software, and we describe the nature of the concordancer that services it. This is a system we have named FLAX (Flexible Language Acquisition). Because the system incorporates not only a useful and authentic corpus but also linked databases, we maintain that it meets the need for an easily accessible online resource that gives explicit information about typical lexical and syntactic collocations. While online corpus-based resources are becoming more readily available, and their effective incorporation into language teaching is being documented, we seem to know little about how learners access them and make use of the results they generate. This paper reports on an exploratory investigation of the search strategies used by learners in a university general English course as they make use of FLAX, tracking the way they exploit the search results in their texts, and presenting their relevant comments about the system. In such a way, we seek to explain variation in students' use and effectiveness of search strategies to support their writing. This type of research, although exploratory, is critical if we are to acknowledge the need for students to become "research workers".
title The Nature and Scope of Student Search Strategies in Using a Web Derived Corpus for Writing
topic Second Language Learning
Computational Linguistics
Computer Software
Second Language Instruction
Language Fluency
Grammar
Linguistic Input
Databases
Syntax
Phrase Structure
Search Strategies
Writing (Composition)
English (Second Language)
Computer Assisted Instruction
Foreign Countries
Search Engines
Foreign Students
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1029733