Form-meaning-use framework in grammar teaching: Research on noun clauses in writing skills
Abstract
|
Please fill up the following information accurately. (Please use Times New Roman, 12 pt. |
|
Form-meaning-use framework in grammar teaching: Research on noun clauses in writing skills
|
|
|
Based on Larsen-Freeman’s (2001) three-dimensional (form-meaning-use) framework of grammar teaching, this study aimed to investigate which type of clause (noun, adjective or adverbial) is the most challenging for second/foreign language (L2) learners in writing skills. Depending on the results of a diagnostic test prepared in accordance with the form-meaning-use triangulation, Noun Clauses (NCs) were found to be the most challenging type for students studying in the Department of English Language Teaching at a state university in Turkey. Then a NCs test grounded on the same framework was given to the students as the pretest to examine their available knowledge of NCs. After the pretest, the students went through a nine-hour intensive treatment phase consisting of three sessions to instruct NCs with regard to the form-meaning-use framework. The treatment stage was followed by the posttest to examine the progress that students had made during the treatment phase. The findings revealed a remarkable improvement in the students’ knowledge of NCs in writing skills, which showed that the form-meaning-use framework enables effective and efficient instruction in the language classroom. It was also found that the students’ L2 proficiency had a significant effect on their knowledge and performance of using NCs in writing skills. |
|
|
Information about Author(s)*
|
|
|
Author 1
|
|
|
Author (Last name, First name) |
Yılmaz, Adnan |
|
Affiliated institution (University) |
Sinop University |
Country |
Turkey |
|
Email address |
adnanyil@gmail.com |
Department & Rank |
English Language Teaching |
|
Corresponding author (Yes/No) Write only one corresponding author.
|
Yes |
|
Author 2
|
|
|
Author (Last name, First name) |
|
|
Affiliated institution (University) |
|
|
Country |
|
|
Email address |
|
|
Department & Rank |
|
|
Corresponding author (Yes/No) |
|
|
Author 3
|
|
|
Author (Last name, First name) |
|
|
Affiliated institution (University) |
|
|
Country |
|
|
Email address |
|
|
Department & Rank |
|
|
Corresponding author (Yes/No) |
|
|
Author 4
|
|
|
Author (Last name, First name) |
|
|
Affiliated institution (University) |
|
|
Country |
|
|
Email address |
|
|
Department & Rank |
|
|
Corresponding author (Yes/No) |
|
|
|
|
Keywords
Kaynakça
- Aarts, F., & Schils, E. (1995). Relative clauses, the accessibility hierarchy and the contrastive hypothesis. Intenational Review of Applied Linguistics, 33, 47–63.
- Ammar, A., & Lightbown, P. M. (2004). Teaching marked linguistic structures—More about the acquisition of relative clauses by Arab learners of English. In A. Housen & M. Pierrard (Eds.), Investigations in instructed second language learning (pp. 167–198). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
- Anderson, N. J. (2003). Active skills for reading: Book 4. Singapore: Thomson Heinle.
- Azar, B. S. (2003). Fundamentals of English grammar. NY: Longman.
- Baba, K. (2009). Aspects of lexical proficiency in writing summaries in a foreign language. Journal of Second Language Writing, 18, 191-2008.
- Berry, C., & Brizee, A. (2010, April 17). Identifying independent and dependent clauses. Purdue OWL. Retrieved from http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/598/01/.
- Byrnes, H., Maxim, H. H., & Norris, J. M. (2010). Realizing advanced foreign language writing development in collegiate education: Curricular design, pedagogy, assessment. Monograph of the Modern Language Journal, 94 (Suppl. 1).
- Cadierno, T., & Eskildsen, S. W. (Eds.). (2015). Usage-based perspectives on second language learning. Berlin: de Gruyter.
Ayrıntılar
Birincil Dil
İngilizce
Konular
-
Bölüm
Araştırma Makalesi
Yazarlar
Yayımlanma Tarihi
15 Eylül 2018
Gönderilme Tarihi
9 Ocak 2018
Kabul Tarihi
-
Yayımlandığı Sayı
Yıl 2018 Cilt: 14 Sayı: 3