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Published byGiles Shaw Modified over 9 years ago
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Discourse
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The study of discourse: – Involves our efforts to interpret or be interpreted…and how we accomplish it – Goes beyond just linguistic forms and structure
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Discourse Analysis The study of how language users: make sense of what they read or hear understand what speakers mean despite what they say interpret incoherent discourse successfully take part in conversations
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Cohesion The ties and connections that exist within texts The use of an appropriate pronoun to refer to a previously mentioned noun (COHESIVE DEVICE) – Give an example of another cohesive device. Think about WRITING and SPEAKING...how do we tie ideas together? General connections between common terms – MONEY: bought, sold, pay – TIME: once, sometimes, never
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Coherence Goes beyond the simple connection between words Making sense of what we read and hear – Filling in gaps of logic For instance, making sense of a sentence fragment – Create meaningful connections that are not actually expressed by words or sentences.
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Turn-taking Allowing other people in the conversation a chance to speak Rules may vary depending on culture Misunderstandings about cultural background may lead to “rude” label How might a speaker indicate that he/she wants to speak?
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Topic Shifting Verbal and non-verbal strategies to change the subject or direction of a conversation Why might this be used? Techniques?
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Completion Point Signal that you are finished speaking or that the conversation is over What are some common ways to express a completion point in Standard American English?
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The 4 Maxims of Conversation Quantity – not more, not less than the required Quality – don’t speak falsely Relation – be relevant Manner – be clear, brief, orderly
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Schema Conventional knowledge structure that exists in your memory Used to interpret information around us – House schema – University schema
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Script A script is a dynamic schema with conventional actions that take place A script is the mental action list that we have for different places or situations. – In our HOUSE schema, we have a “doing laundry” script, we have a “cooking dinner” script, etc. – What types of scripts do we have in our UNIVERSITY schema? Why are the concepts of scripts and schemas important for teaching ESL?
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