© 2006 70791 Language Investigation for A2 What is it? How do you think of ideas?
-
Upload
rebecca-borell -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of © 2006 70791 Language Investigation for A2 What is it? How do you think of ideas?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 1
Language Investigation for A2
What is it?
How do you think of ideas?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 2
What it says on the tin Manageable - a small research
project in a chosen aspect of spoken or written English in use
Practical - 2500 words excluding data and appendices
Comparable – 2 or more pieces of data
Ethically sound – so as not to cause offence.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 3
What’s the point? to discover something
new, something you want to know about how the English language works
to create knowledge instead of consuming it
to enjoy an exciting and challenging process of creative discovery.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 4
Hasn’t everything already been discovered?
The English language is vast and constantly changing, so any individual researcher will only be focusing on a small, carefully defined area.
This means that investigations you do could well be the only research currently happening in that area.
And knowledge is not created by a small number of geniuses sitting thinking up massive new ideas. Instead…
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 5
Knowledge about language is developed through…
addition
adding a new facet or dimension to an existing body of research
an AS mini-investigation which explored whether there was a relationship between idiom use and age, adding to ideas about youth sociolect.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 6
Knowledge about language is developed through…
clarification
shedding light on ideas where the evidence seems unclear or unfocused
an A2 mini-investigation which clarified the impact of Old English lexis on contemporary everyday language use.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 7
Knowledge about language is developed through…
disputation
disputing or challenging the findings of another language investigation
an A2 project which disputed Lakoff’s finding that men use more taboo language than women.
!!***!* !!**!&(*!!
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 8
Knowledge about language is developed through…
exemplification
generating additional examples of language use to test whether the ideas hold good in another context
an AS mini-investigation which looked at parental arguments to find out if the gendered patterns of interruption identified by Zimmerman and West held good.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 9
Knowledge about language is developed through…
offering fresh perspectives on existing data or ideas
re-examining ideas or data with the benefit of new critical or methodological tools
an A2 project which took A Level textbook ideas about gendered language, and used the relatively new method of corpus linguistic analysis to examine what validity these largely anecdotal ideas had.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 10
Knowledge about language is developed through…
improving methodological design
addressing the same question with a better research method to see if new ideas emerge
an A2 project which made sophisticated improvements to a very simple online survey of male-female confidence with computer jargon, conducted by a major company, to test whether their ‘shocking’ findings had any validity.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 11
Developing your own project ideas Give yourself enough time to
experiment a bit, rather than simply jumping at the first idea.
Generate lots of lines of
enquiry then pick the two or three that you like best and explore them further.
Keep an open mind and choose the one that emerges with the most interesting possibilities.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 12
Base your topic on a question or issue…compare like with like.
Compare Radio 1 and Radio 2 – how language style of radio presenters reflect different target audiences. You must compare similar programmes e.g. Breakfast Show.
How does the presentation of the news reflect the needs and interests of different audiences?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 13
More topic ideas…
Compare the language of BBC1, ITV & Channel 4 – focus on news or sport items.
Compare language styles of tabloid and broadsheet newspapers.
How does the language of advertising vary according to target audience?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 14
More topic ideas…
Identify the differences between live commentary on T.V. and radio.
Target language used by magazines for readers of different ages.
How teachers vary their language according to the age of their class.
World English
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 15
Yet more topic ideas…
Language and social contexts - p128 Creating texts topic ideas – p129 Developing language topic ideas – p129 Accent and dialect. Text messaging Look around you for ideas. How members of your family interact in
different situations.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 16
Writing your proposal.
1. Your link to, or interest in the investigation area.
2. The sort of data you plan to collect – a sample would be good.
3. Where and how you plan to gather your data.
4. The main areas of language and features you aim to work with.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 17
Proposal…
5. The question or hypothesis at the heart of your idea.
6. Details of any related linguistic research or theories.
Proposal(s) (1 side A4) to JB first lesson back in September!
A guide is provided on p136 of textbook.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 18
How to: surfing the web
http://languagelegend.blogspot.comwww.emagazine.org.ukwww.verbatimmag.com
Use accessible English Language websites to explore what interests you most about the subject.
Also try typing language topics into the search engines of online newspapers.
Skim and scan, save things you find interesting, then see if you can develop an idea from these. Think about how you could develop a new line of enquiry from what you have read.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 19
How to: make a scrapbook, fill a photo album, keep a diary
Fill a scrapbook with everything to do with the English Language that you can find. Just cut and stick and see what you end up with once it’s full.
Go out with a camera taking pictures of everything you can find that connects to the study of language.
Keep a diary for a week, recording everything you see or hear that might need further language investigation.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 20
How to: go and talk to someone interesting
There will be people all around you who have interesting language biographies.
Ask around, find out who they are, and go and talk to them.
Think of some questions that might open up interesting discussions, and make notes of puzzles and questions that arise as you talk.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 21
How to: play around with some language gizmos
Spend some time playing around with the different search functions of the online OED, or a free digital dictionary like www.urbandictionary.com.
Explore the British National Corpus, free and online. Type in words or phrases that interest you and get 50 examples to explore. Try ‘actually’ or ‘like’…
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 22
How to: find out about other people’s research
previous students at your school
previous students around the country
students and lecturers at universities
publications such as emagazine
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 23
Next steps…
Try to think of as many initial lines of enquiry as you can.
Which ones puzzle and intrigue you the most?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 24
Devising a research question
It needs to be clearly focused and genuinely interesting.
Key issues are: Whose language use? What language use? What context?
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 25
Research design: types of data Decide what type of data
will best enable you to answer your question.
There are three key types: spoken, written, and computer mediated hybrids.
Consider carefully the advantages and disadvantages of each…
… and how you will capture it.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 26
Research design: techniques…
Corpus analysis
This means analysing a body (corpus) of written or spoken language, e.g. a collection of articles from a newspaper, or a transcription of multiple conversations.
Computer interfaces can allow analysis of large corpora, e.g. BNC.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 27
Research design: techniques…
Ethnographic study
This results in a detailed description of an individual or a group or community, with the aim of explaining some aspects of their language behaviour.
A key feature is the observation of the participants in their natural surroundings.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 28
Research design: techniques…
Experiments
Variables in people and situations are carefully controlled, through the use of a specific setting or common activity.
This is to enable the researcher to test the effect on language use of one or more other variables – such as gender or age.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 29
Research design: techniques…
Interviews
structured: a predetermined set of questions from which there is no deviation
unstructured: a broad topic but no predetermined questions
semi-structured: a set of prompts and points with the wording of the questions made up in situ.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 30
Research design: techniques
Surveys
often consist of questionnaires, in which a set of tightly controlled questions are asked of a large number of people
other types used in language research: recognition surveys, Rapid Anonymous Surveys and surveys with image or key word prompts.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 31
Research ethics
Consent
who can give consent
freedom to choose
disguise and deception
confidentiality
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 32
Analysing the data
practical issue: multiple copies
complexity of the process
TIME
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 33
Presenting the project report
the report format
appropriate academic habits of mind
attentive focus on relevant language frameworks
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 34
How to present your work. Cover page Contents Acknowledgements Introduction – 400 words Methodology – 250 words Analysis – with subsections – 1450 Conclusion and evaluation – 400 Bibliography Appendices
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 35
AOs
AO1 – 20 marksAO2 – 20 marksAO3 – 10 marks
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 36
Theories
Are very important.
© 2006 www.teachit.co.uk 7079 37
What it takes to get a top grade…
a good, perceptive and detailed linguistic knowledge ofchosen data
comments withpertinence and insight on the effectiveness of the approaches taken
sound and systematic application and exploration of relevantframeworks
insightful, clear and succinct exploration/ understanding of concepts of language in use in relation to task
sureness, judgement and flexibility in use of content, structure andstyle for audience
perceptive and accurate analysis of a range of relevant formal andcontextual factors in data