Faculty of Education - Theses

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    Conversational or instructional discourse : the opportunity for production of language by high school age students in English conversation classes in Japan
    Pollard, William James ( 1999)
    Some recent views on English language teaching suggest that one of the goals should be to use natural or genuine conversation in the classroom in preference to more traditional classroom communication. This study set out to find if naturalistic conversation used by the teacher was able to promote more active production of language by learners in a classroom of Japanese high school learners of English in Japan than in comparison to instructional classroom discourse. The length of responses to both referential and display questions were measured in terms of the mean length of utterance of the responses of the students to teacher questions in order to gauge the relationship between the type of language used and the potential for production of language. It was assumed that referential questions were characteristic of more naturalistic language and that display were characteristic of more 'traditional' classroom language. Opportunities for the negotiation of meaning were also sought by measuring the frequency of occurrence of echoic questions, associated with negotiation of meaning for both conversational discourse and for instructional discourse. The results for this particular study initially showed that in terms of the length of response and opportunities for the negotiation of meaning, both display questions and referential questions produced longer responses in instructional discourse than in comparison to conversational discourse. This suggests that in the case of the students studied, traditional classroom language or instructional discourse showed more potential for production of language than did naturalistic conversation, regardless of the question type. The results also showed that display questions promoted longer segments of classroom talk and negotiation of meaning than did referential questions suggesting that classroom conversation, as characterised by display questions, holds more potential for the negotiation of meaning than natural conversation. The results also showed, however, that there may be difficulties in producing conversational discourse and instructional discourse in a lesson in this context suggesting that the research questions and design of this particular study may be in need of reconceptualisation.
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    Rater consistency and judgment in the direct assessment of second language writing ability within the certificates in spoken and written English
    Smith, David R ( 1998)
    The introduction of competency-based models of language and literacy education in Australia has, to a large degree, coincided with an increased emphasis on direct assessment as the most common means of evaluating second language writing ability within the Adult Migrant English Program. The key problem in directly assessing writing ability is having two or more raters arrive at a similar judgment or rating for the same piece of writing. While there is a long tradition of research on rater consistency and judgment in the holistic assessment of writing ability, similar research on the direct assessment of second language writing ability within the context of competency-based language and literacy education is almost non-existent. This study aims to determine the degree to which the performance criteria designed to assess second language writing ability within the Certificates in Spoken and Written English can ensure acceptable levels of rater consistency, and to describe the decision-making behaviours and strategies used by raters when reading for the purposes of assessment. The think-aloud verbal reports of six experienced ESL raters assessing three texts written by intermediate level adult ESL learners were transcribed and subjected to a rigorous interpretive analysis. In terms of rater consistency, analysis of raters verbal reports indicated that while there was generally a high degree of rater consistency at the overall performance or text level there was considerably tess agreement at the level of individual performance criteria. Analysis of the data revealed that raters adopted distinctive styles or approaches to reading for the purposes of assessment and that raters interpreted and applied the performance criteria statements in a range of different ways. These findings have significant implications not only for the development of competency-based assessment procedures but also for the training of raters. v11
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    The semantic structure of written narrative : an application and evaluation of the analytical framework for narrative produced by William Labov and Joshua Waletzky
    Mulcahy, Monica Dianne ( 1982)
    Narrative, as one means of processing life experience through language, is a significant human act. Its fuller understanding holds practical meaning for education too, in that teachers can structure language situations around narrative, it being acquired by children before their entry to primary school. Various perspectives on narrative have been taken, their focus of attention often being broad functional aspects of narrative, approached through the understandings of psychology, anthropology, rhetoric, literary criticism and philosophy. These perspectives have produced analytical schemes for insight into narrative as genre, with greater or lesser degrees of emphasis being placed on the internal organisation of narrative and on linguistic aspects of its structure. It is from a linguistic perspective that narrative has been studied in this work, the primary purpose of the study being to apply and evaluate a particular paradigm structure for narrative analysis. 'The framework for narrative analysis generated by Labov and Waletzky in 1967 was applied to written narratives collected from Australian-English users and evaluated for its usefulness. Chapters 4 and 5 of this work report both formal and functional analyses of these written narratives toward establishing the semantic structure of the collected stories. The patterns of meaning for the written narratives were found largely to match the categories provided by Labov and Waletzky, their framework being a useful one for the study of autobiographical written narrative. Evaluation emerged as the most significant element in the construction of effective narrative, a narrator's capacity to take a multiple perspective on the reported events being central to his evaluative ability. A secondary concern of this study was with exploring comparisons between intuitive understandings of narrative and their adequacy for its description and interpretation with the more formal tools of linguistic analysis. It was found that intuitive and formal indices of quality narrative overlap in the information they give about narrative, the only difference between them being that formal insights are more explicit.
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    How does teacher questioning influence the verbal responses of Asian background ESL learners?
    Zheng, Jia ( 1999)
    This thesis is a case-study of two English as a Second Language (ESL) teachers working with one class of tertiary level students from Asian backgrounds in a large English language centre. The thesis seeks to explore the types and frequencies of teachers' questions and the extent to which the length of student responses is affected by those questions from both a quantitative and a qualitative perspective. Teachers' and students' attitudes towards questions are examined as well. In relation to the form of questions, the study found that the two teachers asked significantly more X-questions than nexus and alternative questions, which was congruent with their preference for question types. However, in terms of the function of questions, one teacher asked more referential questions while the other teacher asked more display questions (Long and Sato, 1983). The study found that statistically, topics, in general, did not influence teachers' selection of questions and students' responses. On average student answers to either kind of questions were short, though individual differences did exist. However, through a close examination of the transcripts of these individual lessons, the conclusion was the opposite. Topics did affect the formation and function of the teachers' questions and students responses as well. When talking about topics with which students were familiar and which required less vocabulary, teachers' tended to use X- questions and they were usually referential. Those questions triggered longer student utterances. Display questions, on the other hand, were often used to check knowledge, and students' responses to these were short. This suggests that referential-like X-questions are powerful in the certain circumstances where students are familiar with the topics they are talking about. Teachers' appropriate application of such questions might trigger longer students' utterances and gradually facilitate the development of learners' oral competency.
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    The Problems of verbal interaction for victims of warfare trauma in the ESL classroom
    Santoro, Ninetta ( 1995)
    This thesis identifies and investigates the difficulties surrounding the participation in verbal interaction by victims of warfare trauma in the ESL classroom. The literature reviewed falls into three main categories; The Problems of Refugee Resettlement, Motivation and Anxiety in Language Learning and The Importance of Verbal Interaction in Second Language Learning. Case Study research methodology was chosen as the most appropriate framework on which to base this thesis and three ESL students were chosen as subjects. The findings of the research suggest that the problems associated with resettlement and prior experiences may have been contributing factors in the lack of motivation and high levels of anxiety experienced by each of the case study subjects. This in turn, may have affected their participation in verbal interaction in the classroom and ultimately, their acquisition of English.
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    The new English : an analysis of ideology in the professional literature of English-teaching, 1963-1978
    Seddon, Jennifer Marie ( 1982)
    This thesis focusses upon the professional literature of English teachers in Victoria in the period 1963-1978. Its concern is, firstly, to identify and delineate the distinctive features of the successive ideologies of English teaching which emerged in the literature during those years, focussing in particular upon 'the New English'. Secondly, it seeks to suggest reasons for their emergence, by examining contemporary socio-economic, political and institutional developments, to which the theory of English teaching has been responsive. Although writers in the professional literature presented themselves as spokesmen for classroom English teachers, their rationales and pre-occupations were not widely shared or successfully communicated. Therefore, the theories of English teaching which are identifiable in the literature do not represent the changing practices of teachers, but rather a succession of 'attempts by theorists to direct and control those practices. They also reflect the changing composition and configuration of a particular segment of the intellectual field over a period of time. Some aspects of the changing ideology of English teaching are thus the product of quasi-autonomous internal processes of self-reflection and debate within the profession. However, the major purpose of this analysis is to demonstrate how more widespread historical developments called forth a specific range of responses amongst theorists, whose role was one of intellectual management of those developments. It is claimed that the New English merits attention both because of its congruence with broader structural changes and because of the challenge it offered to existing forms of control over both teaching practice and the production of theory itself.
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    Applications of item response theory to identify and correct for suspect rater data
    Zoanetti, Nathan Paul ( 2006)
    This thesis describes a plausible values imputation approach for deriving population estimates on several language proficiency domains. The approach harnessed a multi-dimensional item response analysis combining student responses, rater judgements and student background variables. The target student population was lower grade primary school students enrolled in the Hong Kong schooling system. The raters consisted of local teachers of English employed within the sampled target schools. The primary objective of this research was to impute plausible values where no data was provided or where rater data was deemed suspect. By necessity, a secondary objective of this study was to establish rules for justly excluding particular data on the basis of questionable validity. Surveys such as TIMSS, PISA and NAEP have used such "plausible value" methodologies to account for incomplete test designs and person non-response (Beaton & Johnson, 1990; Yamamoto & Kulick, 2000; Adams & Wu, 2002). The point of difference between this study and other similar studies was the use of item response theory (in particular plausible values imputation) to identify and correct for invalid rater judgements in a large-scale educational survey. An additional research outcome included a derived index of rater data quality based upon imputation scores.
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    Vietnamese readers and English reading : a survey of students' beliefs about and attitudes towards English reading
    Nguyen, Thi Thanh Thuy ( 2000)
    This thesis deals with the beliefs about, and attitudes to, English reading of Vietnamese students in their first year at Australian universities. Data were collected using a questionnaire, based on a review of research on second language reading in relation to affective factors, and on the concept of attitudes as a multidimensional construct. Attitude in general or attitudes to English reading in particular cannot be directly observed or measured but can only be inferred from the manner in which a reader responds to questions related to beliefs, feelings and attention regarding English reading. The theoretical background on which this study was based regards second language (L2) reading as a socially situated process. Regarding the students in this study, their English may have been influenced (i) by the first language reading instruction they had received, (ii) by their own social and cultural background, (iii) by their attitudes to the target language, its culture and its native speakers, and (iv) by previous experiences of learning to read in a new language. The findings of the questionnaire reveal that most of the 27 respondents to the questionnaire chose the culture of the target language (English) as the main factor making them want to read in it. Three other hypothesized factors - Vietnamese language reading experiences, previous experiences of learning English in Vietnam, the target language and its native speakers - did not appear as important factors in their beliefs about English reading and attitudes to it. The most interesting findings were about their attention to English reading. Although on the whole they possessed positive attitudes regarding the English academic reading process, they showed only a low level of endeavor to improve their English reading. The fact that the number of participants was so small was one of the main drawbacks with the study. However, since affective factors have not gained as much attention as other areas in L2 reading, in a way this study was a first experience. From its results some recommendations have been made regarding current practices of English teaching and learning in Vietnam in the EFL context. Further research could be built on this study.
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    Investigating written English skills self-efficacy of adolescent students
    Spicer, Claire D ( 2002)
    This study examined the general perceived self-efficacy and written English self-efficacy of adolescent students classified as learning disabled, gifted and mainstream. A written English performance sample was obtained to provide a measure of the students' actual ability. A comparison was made between the performance sample and the students' perception of their ability in written English. The participants were 24 year 9 students. Three groups of 8 students each, were included in the research. Group one consisted of learning disabled students, group two consisted of gifted students, and group three consisted of students not identified as exceptional in any way (mainstream). The study used a combined quantitative and survey method design with systematic sampling. Students first completed a 10-minute essay on their 'favourite day' then a self-efficacy questionnaire. The results demonstrated that students in the learning disabled group had the lowest levels of general perceived and written English self-efficacy, with students in the mainstream group recording the highest levels of both general perceived and written English self-efficacy. The comparison between the students' scores on their written English performance sample and on their written English self-efficacy, showed no significant results.
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    Face-to-face : cross-cultural communication with Somali-speaking parents
    Spencer, Julie ( 2008)
    This research thesis reports on an investigation of cross-cultural communication at one Victorian primary school, at which the linguistic and cultural backgrounds of the staff and a sizeable proportion of the parents differ markedly. This qualitative, case study investigated the perspectives of one group of parents, all from a Somali speaking background, and school staff about the current levels of cross-cultural communication and how these key stakeholders believed home/school links could be improved. Data for this investigation were gathered from parent participants through group and individual interviews, some of which were conducted in Somali with the assistance of a bilingual research assistant. Consideration of these participants' vulnerable social status (Liamputtong, 2007), was an important aspect of this research process thus ensuring these parents, seldom heard within the school environment, had the opportunity to express their opinions and relate their experiences of cross-cultural communication with school staff. The data collection process, therefore, provides a model for excellent cross-cultural communication between an institution, such as a school, and a marginalised parent community. Written questionnaires, comprising open-ended and some ranked questions were used to investigate staff perspectives of cross-cultural communication. This was followed by a group interview with some staff members in which issues were discussed with greater depth. This research project revealed that the low-levels of cross-cultural communication noted at this school are not an indication of the level of goodwill held by Somali-speaking parents and school staff. On the contrary, all participants expressed a strong desire to learn more about the other and for communication levels to improve, recognising the importance of strong home/school links in improving educational outcomes for students. Through the suggestions, opinions and experiences of participants, a series of recommendations are made in this report, so that the momentum of improved communication, initiated by the research project, might be continued at the school, or within similar educational contexts.