March 2023
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Even though teachers often provide students with answers to certain grammar exercises, it does not guarantee that learners will really remember or understand them. Most of the time, discovery exercises—that is, when students need to research a topic themselves and report back—turn out to be more effective than answer keys provided by teachers. This lesson allows students to examine an online corpus that they can use both in and outside the classroom in case they doubt the grammatical correctness of their writing. Because it does not provide direct answers to questions, students have the opportunity to practice their analytical skills by interpreting the results of their searches.
Levels: Intermediate+ Aims
Class Time: 45 minutes Preparation Time: 15 minutes (if you want to prepare your own grammar exercise) or none (if you use the Appendix) Resources Needed: Computer lab or students’ own laptops, internet access, handout |
Procedure
Divide students in groups or pairs and ask them to complete a grammar exercise. A sample grammar exercise is provided in the Appendix.
After everyone is done, instead of providing students with the correct answers in class, encourage them to find the correct answers themselves.
Invite students to visit the Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA; Davies, 2008).
Familiarize students with the corpus first (if necessary) by explaining that it is a freely available collection of English texts which currently totals more than 560 million words. The corpus is regularly updated and expanded.
Walk students through the first question on the worksheet by inviting them to enter the first target word from the exercise (i.e., grateful) into the search bar (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. COCA search for grateful. (Davies,
2008)
Figure 2. Part-of-speech drop-down menu in the
COCA. (Davies, 2008)
Figure 3. COCA search for grateful followed by a preposition. (Davies,
2008)
Figure 4. COCA results for prepositions after grateful. (Davies, 2008)
Options
The COCA could be used instead of an answer key for almost any grammar exercise: use of gerunds (eating, attending, driving, etc.), subject-verb agreement (she goes, I go, etc.), verb forms/tenses (went vs. has/have gone, etc.), and count and noncount nouns (rice vs. a bowl of rice, water vs. a cup of water, etc.) to cite a few examples.
After students have a chance to work with the COCA in class, a similar activity could be assigned as homework.
Encourage students to create an account on the COCA website. Even though it is free of charge, it allows no more than 10–15 searches without registration.
Conclusion
Data-driven answers to grammar exercises like this allow students to become more independent language learners and teach them how to use a corpus tool to improve their grammatical accuracy.
References
Davies, M. (2008). The corpus of contemporary American English (COCA). Retrieved December 26, 2021, from https://www.english-corpora.org/coca/
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Anastasiia Kryzhanivska is an ESOL program director and an English Department assistant teaching professor at Bowling Green State University, where she teaches ESOL, linguistics, first-year writing, and teacher education classes.
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Clinical Professor (Open Rank) of Teaching and Learning in TESOL; Director, MA in TESOL Program; NYU Shanghai, China
Lecturer, English as a Second Language; University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA
To browse all of TESOL's job postings, check out the TESOL Career Center.
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