ITAIS Newsletter - February 2021 (Plain Text Version)
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In this issue: |
FUNCTIONAL LANGUAGE FOR CLASSROOM TEACHING Haoshan (Sally) Ren, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
With the move towards virtual instruction, international teaching assistants (ITAs) are encountering challenges related to the online teaching environment. The format of online synchronous teaching has demonstrated itself to be a challenging task for ITAs, not only for the amount of planning required before class, but also the use of instructional language in the online classroom. Unless a course is specifically designed to be highly interactive, online teaching tends to be more monologic because of the technical restraints; instructors typically find themselves talking for longer turns, filling in silence, and readdressing overlapped speech. Using research findings from corpus linguistics empirical studies, this article introduces two types of functional languages that could help ITAs communicate more effectively with their students when teaching online. Use Questions That Focus The Attention, But Do Not Require An Answer Empirical studies in corpus linguistics show that questions in monologic lectures are commonly used to draw attention from the students without needing a verbal answer. In addition to the simple yes/no "check-up" questions (e.g., "does it make sense?"), teachers also raise questions with an intention to provide definitions (e.g., What is …? It is…), explain causalities (e.g., Why is…? Because…), or describe processes (e.g., What happens next? Let's look at…). This type of question is called content-oriented questions, as discussed in Chang’s (2012) study on questions used in classroom teaching. Going beyond the conventional taxonomy of categorizing questions by their grammatical structures, Chang (2012) presents a corpus-based study of question functions in academic lectures. In general, questions in lectures are categorized into two functional types:
In addition to using content-oriented questions to focus students’ attention, ITAs may also use embedded wh-clauses to draw students’ attention and organize the class discourse. In both in-person and online teaching, it is important for students to understand what is going on in the class at a certain moment. Embedding wh-clauses provide students with metalinguistic signals to highlight what follows in the lectures. Teaching ITAs to use these metalinguistic devices helps them to better organize their lectures, so that their students are constantly reminded with "road-signs" of where they are at during a lecture. Below are some examples:
In addition to organizing discourse, wh-clefts also perform other discourse functions that help students to focus their attention on upcoming lecture content. Below is a summary of the functional framework discussed in Deroey (2012):
References Chang, Y.-Y. (2012). The use of questions by professors in lectures given in English: Influences of disciplinary cultures. English for Specific Purposes, 31(2), 103–116. Deroey, K. L. (2012). What they highlight is…: The discourse functions of basic wh-clefts in lectures. Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 11(2), 112-124.
Haoshan (Sally) Ren is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Applied Linguistics and ESL at Georgia State University. Her research interests include language assessment, corpus linguistics, sociolinguistics, and teacher education. |