Thursday, 28 November 2013
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
Punctuating
Punctuating
the text
The
Lioness
A fox was boasting to a
lioness.
“You should see my four
pretty cubs,” she said.
“I had them all at once
you know, and what about you? How many cubs do you have?”
“I have only one,”
replied the lioness gently but that one is a lion.
The
Wild Boar and the Fox
A wild boar was sharpening his tusks against a tree. One
day when a fox came by, “What are you doing that for?” asked the fox. “There
are no hunters around. Everything looks very peaceful to me quite true,” said the
boar, “but when the hunter does come with his dogs, I shall be too busy running
away to have time for this, so let me sharpen my tusks while I can”.
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Changing Direct Quotation to Direct Quotation
Changing
Direct Quotation to Direct Quotation
A.
Analyzing indirect quotation.
1. There
are four indirect quotations in the text ‘Seeking a Spouse on the Web’.
2. Reporting
verbs and phrases that are introduced indirect quotation are; said that,
estimated, and according to.
B.
There is no indirect quotation.
C.
Changing direct quotation as indirect
quotation.
1. Television
channel KSA GM Jim Burns said, “Not everyone could attend college in the
traditional way; therefore, taking course via television would offer many more
students the chance to earn a college degree.”
Television
channel KSA GM Jim Burns said that not everyone could attend college in the
traditional way; therefore, taking course via television would offer many more
students the chance to earn a college degree.
2. Pre-med
students Alam Rodriguez said, “I miss being on campus, but I have to work and
take care of my family.”
Pre-med
students Alam Rodriguez said that she missed being on campus, but she had to
work and take care of my family.”
3. Other
students said, “Last year, we spent several hours a day commuting to and from
school. Now we don’t have to do that.”
Other
students said that last year, they had spent several hours a day commuting to
and from school. Now they didn’t have to do that.
4. Computer
engineering student Amir Mehdizadeh stated, “I can choose when to study and how
to study without pressure.” He also said, “I will take two more telecourses in
the fall.”
Computer
engineering student Amir Mehdizadeh stated that he could choose when to study
and how to study without pressure. He also said that he would take two more
telecourses in the fall.
D.
Changing direct quotation into indirect
quotation.
1. In
1993, the head of international Olympic Committee’s medical commission, Prince
Alexander de Merode of Belgium stated that he believed that as many as 10% of all Olympic athletes was regular users of
performance-enhancing drugs. (qtd. in Bamberger and Yaeger 63)
2. In
a 1997 article in Sports Illistrated magazine, Dutch physician Michael Karsten
is quoted as saying that there might be some sportsmen who can win gold medals
without taking drugs, but there were very few.
3. According
to Dr. Krasten, who says he has prescribed anabolic steroids to hundreds of
world class athletes over the last twenty-five years, if you were especially
gifted, you might win once, but from my experience you couldn’t continue to win
without drugs. The field was just too filled with drug users.
Direct Quotation
Direct
Quotations
A.
Analyzing direct quotation in the text.
1. There
are three direct quotations in the text ‘Drugs and the Olympic Games’.
2. The
direct quotations use three kinds of reporting verbs and phrases. They are;
stated, according to, and quoted.
B.
Punctuating the direct quotation.
1. Dr.
Yixuan Ma, a well-known astrophysicist who has been studying black holes, said,
“It is one of the most interesting phenomena we astrophysicists have ever
studied.”
2. As
she explained in black holes, ”The laws of nature do not seem to apply.”
3. “A
black hole is a tiny point with the mass 25 times the mass of our sun,”
explained Ma’s associate, Chin-Yi Su. “Black holes are created by the death of
a very larger star,” she stated.
4. “It
is an invisible vacuum cleaner in space,” she said with tremendous
gravitational pull.
5. According
to Dr.Su, “If a person falls into a black hole, he will eventually be crushed
due to the tremendous gravitational forces.”
6. “Time
will slow down for him as he approaches the event horizon,” she said, “and when
he reaches the event horizon, time will stand still for him.”
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Second Language Acquisition (9)
INSTRUCTION
AND L2 ACQUISITION
A.
Form-Focused Instruction
1. Language
pedagogy has emphasized form-focused instruction. The Grammar Translation
Method, Audio-Lingual Method, and Communicative Language Teaching.
2.The
acquisition of at least some linguistic structures can be permanently
influenced by instruction.
3.The
effects of form-focused instruction are not restricted to careful language use
but are also evident in free communication.
B.
Learner-Instruction Matching
Learners
vary in the particular types of ability they are strong in. Learners with
differing kinds of ability may be able to achieve similar level of success
providing that the type of instruction enables them to maximize their
strengths. It is obviously important to take individual differences into
account when investigating the effects of instruction.
C.
Strategy Training
Teaching learners specific grammatical
structures constitutes an attempt to intervene directly in interlanguage
development. An alternative approach is to intervene more indirectly by
identifying strategies that are likely to promote acquisition and providing
training in them. The idea of strategy training is attractive because it
provides a way of helping learners to become autonomous (i.e. of enabling them
to take responsibility for their own learning).
Second Language Acquisition (7)
LINGUISTIC
ASPECTS OF INTERLANGUAGE
A. Typological
Universals: Relative Clauses
Languages vary in whether they have relative clause
structures. This linguistic difference influences the ease with which learners
are able to learn relative clauses. Learners whose L1 includes relative clauses
find them easier to learn than learners whose L1 does not and consequently,
they are less likely to avoid learning them.
B. Universal
Grammar
It is the Noam Chomsky’s theory that states language
is governed by a set of highly abstract principles that provide parameters
which are given particular settings in different language. English only permits
‘local binding’. ‘Long-distance binding’, where the reflexive co-refers to a
subject in another clause, is prohibited.
C. Learnability
Chomsky has claimed that children their L1 must rely
on innate knowledge of language because otherwise the task facing them is an
impossible one. The input to which children are exposed is insufficient to
enable them to discover the rules of the language they are trying to learn.
This insufficiency is referred to as the poverty of the stimulus. Children must
have prior knowledge of what is grammatically possible and impossible and this
is part of their biological endowment. This knowledge was referred to as
Language Acquisition Device.
D. The
Critical Period Hypothesis
It states that there is a period during which
language acquisition is easy and complete and beyond which it is difficult and
typically incomplete. The hypothesis was grounded in research which showed that
people who lost their linguistic capabilities, for expel as a result of an
accident, were able to regain them totally before puberty (about the age of
twelve) but were unable to do so afterwards.
E. Access
to Universal Grammar
- Complete Access : The learners begin with the parameter setting of their L1 but subsequently learn to switch to the L2 parameter settings.
- No Access : UG is not available to adult L2 learners.
- Partial Access : Learners have to access to parts of UG but not others.
- Dual Access : Adult learners make use both UG and general learning strategies.
F. Markedness
It refers to general
idea that some structures are more ‘natural’ or ‘basic’ than other structures. In
Chomskyan linguistics, unmarked structures are those that are governed by UG
and which, therefore require only minimal evidence for acquisition. Marked
structures are those that lie outside UG (for example, have arisen as a result
of historical accident).
G. Cognitive
Versus Linguistic Explanations
It allows for modularity , the existence of
different components of language that are learned in different ways, some
through universal grammar and others with the assistance of general cognitive
ability.
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