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    Investigating higher education seminar talk

    Citation

    Walsh, S. and O'Keeffe, A. (2010) “Investigating higher education seminar talk”. Novitas-ROYAL, 4 (2), 141-158.
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    Walsh, S. and O'Keeffe, A. (2010) Investigating higher education seminar talk (Journal Article).pdf (431.5Kb)
    Date
    2010
    Author
    O'Keeffe, Anne
    Walsh, Steve
    Peer Reviewed
    Yes
    Metadata
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    Walsh, S. and O'Keeffe, A. (2010) “Investigating higher education seminar talk”. Novitas-ROYAL, 4 (2), 141-158.
    Abstract
    In this paper, we consider how a combined corpus linguistics and conversation analysis methodology can reveal new insights into the relationship between interaction patterns, language use, and learning. The context of the paper is higher education small group teaching sessions and our data are drawn from a one million-word corpus, the Limerick-Belfast Corpus of Academic Spoken English (LI-BEL CASE). In this study, our analysis is based on 500,000 words of the corpus). Our methodology combines corpus linguistics (CL) and applied conversation analysis (CA), enabling quantitative findings to be elaborated by more close-up qualitative analysis of sequences of interaction. This CL-CA approach offers a fuller, richer description of small group teaching talk than would be found using either CA or CL alone. We suggest that awareness among practitioners of these relationships would help facilitate interactions which are more conducive to learning and in which students feel more engaged and involved.
    Keywords
    Corpus linguistics
    Conversation Analysis
    Classroom interaction
    Small-group teaching
    Language (ISO 639-3)
    eng
    Publisher
    Novitas-ROYAL
    Rights
    Copyright © Novitas-ROYAL. Full Journal can be found at www.novitasroyal.org
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10395/1727
    Collections
    • English Language and Literature (Peer-reviewed publications)

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