Lehrende/r: PD Dr. habil. Martina Lampert
Veranstaltungsart:
Seminar
Anzeige im Stundenplan:
05.008.200
Semesterwochenstunden:
2
Unterrichtssprache:
Englisch
Min. | Max. Teilnehmerzahl:
- | 30
Anmeldegruppe: ELing S 200
Prioritätsschema: Senatsrichtlinie
Zulassung gemäß Richtlinie über den Zugang zu teilnahmebeschränkten Lehrveranstaltungen vom 07. März 2007.
Nähere Informationen hierzu entnehmen Sie bitte www.info.jogustine.uni-mainz.de/senatsrichtlinie
Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
After a solid overview of the state of the art of an English ‘grammar of conversation,’ acknowledging the production circumstances of spoken language, i.e., the various performance phenomena of oral face-to-face interactions, we will, from an informed linguistic point of view, analyze and assess conversational units in selected teaching materials in an attempt to work out a more authentic suggestion.
In this class, we will basically adopt a ‘learning by doing’ method to empirical research. To obtain credit, participants are required to prepare two short (group) presentations in class: first, review a specific topic from the current linguistic research into spoken discourse; second, carry out their own small-scale (group) research on an aspect of free choice, focusing on authentic data of native speaker interaction and present their initial findings in class, which will then be their exploratory work for their term papers.
Details of organization and additional information will be available during the first meeting; study material will be available for individual download in pdf format.
Inhalt:
A brief glance at dialogs in current teaching materials will even strike the linguistic layperson as odd -- they sound artificial, lacking almost any of the major features of authentic spoken conversation: Discourse markers, back-channeling, hesitations, restarts, interruptions, repeats, pauses, co-construction -- just to name a few, ‘flooding’ any normal conversation:
Well, we went to, we went to San Francisco because I remember, uh, uh, oh, what the heck’s the name of that hotel we stayed? Big hotel. Mm. Oh, anyway, uh, but we just stayed there a couple of nights and that’s all, and then we took the bus back, of course.
This seminar will critically survey and discuss the current state and representation of spoken language in EFL text books with respect to the requirements advanced in the European Reference Frame and the Curricula, all promoting the necessity of exposing the learner to authentic language.
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