Discourse Analysis
Discourse Analysis
MA (TESOL)
Lecturer Presenter
Discourse Analysis
By Michael McCarthy Christian Matthiessen Diana Slade
engage in discourse. The study of discourse is absolutely central to the concerns of applied linguistics. Both language learners and teachers learn to attend to the different strands of patterning in discourse and understand the contexts and linguistic strategies most immediately relevant.
(spoken/written, long/short) and is interested the relationship between the texts and the contexts in which they arise and operate. Discourse analysts work with utterances while grammarians work with sentences. Discourse analysts focus on:
-Who are the participants in the discourse? -How do we know what writers and speakers mean?
material writers to evaluate language course books. -How closely they approximate authentic language -what needs to be modified when authentic texts are used in the classroom -a source of test criteria
language is seen as formless and ungrammatical. Based the analysis of spoken discourse, spoken English does have a consistent and describable structure (pauses, repetitions and false starts).
Informal spoken English Formal written English
Casual conversation
Email to friends
Letter to an acquaintance
Job interview
density. Spoken discourse has a far lower lexical density . Both spoken and written language have structures and patterns. Halliday stated : talking and writing, then, are different ways of saying. They are different modes for expressing linguistic meanings.
number of different academic disciplines. The approaches that are relevant to applied linguistics and language education, according to disciplinary origins are - Sociology conversation analysis - Sociolinguistics Ethography, Interactional sociolinguistics, Variation theory
- Philosophy Speech act theory, Pragmatics - Linguistics Structuralfunctional, Social semiotic - Artificial intelligence
with the detailed organisation of everyday interaction. Key questions are: How do people take turns in conversation? How do people open and close conversations? How people launch new topics, close old ones, shift topic, etc.? How is it that conversation generally progresses satisfactorily from one utterance to the next?
interested in how speakers achieve smooth turn-taking, and what the rules are for who speaks when. Expressions used to take turn: If I may ask a question.. Can I speak?... Back-channel responses: Mmm, uhuh, yeah, sure, listeners show that they are following.
taking is the way interlocutors predict one anothers turns. Patterns in turn-taking: Adjacency pairs, solidary routines, converging pairs
sociolinguistics are concerned with studying not the isolated sentence but how language creates effective communication in the contexts of everyday life.
Ethnography
uses, the patterns and functions, of speaking as an activity in its own right. Speech events: conversation at a party, The concept of genre
Ethnography
Variation theory
Ethnography
Variation theory
Linguistic Approaches
teachers questions Discourse markers: now then, right T: How do we use a thermometer? Jennie. (Initiating move) S: Put it in your mouth. (Responding move) T: You put it in your mouth. (Follow-up move)
Ethnography
Variation theory
Linguistic Approaches Systemic Functional Linguistics
language , text, and social life Aiming at explaining the nature and organisation of language The central concern is how people use language with each other to accomplish social life and how social worlds are created in and through language.
Ethnography
Variation theory
Linguistic Approaches Systemic Functional Linguistics Critical Discourse Analysis
between language, ideology, and power; and the relationship between discourse and sociocultural change See genres as both social and textual categories
process the texts in a logical and commonsence way. The subject is not repeated. Listeners always know what is being referred. In spoken discourse, countable nouns occur without articles, statements without subjects,
writers use of lexis creates patterns over longer stretches of text beyond the sentence Listeners repeats the speakers lexis. The use of synonyms Repetition and relexicalization enable conversational participants to converge on meanings, to negotiate them in particular contexts.
contexts of use Model different types of writing Raise awareness of the nature of teacher-learner interaction Evaluate learners performance Encourage authenticity Provide guidelines for the use of language
Discussion Questions
Why do we, EFL teachers, have to analyze discourse?
Differentiate between spoken discourse and written
discourse.