Warenkorb
Kostenloser Versand
Unsere Operationen sind klimaneutral

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development Philip Durrant

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development von Philip Durrant

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development Philip Durrant


€35,99
Zustand - Wie Neu
Nur noch 3

Zusammenfassung

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development provides a practical introduction to using corpora in the study of first and second language learners' written language over time and across different levels of proficiency.

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development Zusammenfassung

Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development: A Guide for Research Philip Durrant

*Combines the author's own cutting edge research in writing development with a 'how to' guidebook approach, making it the complete package for students starting out in this area of research.
*Cross-disciplinary market of students of both Education and Applied Linguistics in areas of Language Acquisition and Language and Literacy. Requires no background in Corpus Linguistics as it walks students through the basics.
*The first book to combine research in this area with an activity-based approach- none of the competition demonstrates how to put theories and methods into practice like ours does.

Über Philip Durrant

Philip Durrant is Associate Professor in Language Education at the University of Exeter, United Kingdom.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Table of Contents

Part One: Foundations

Chapter 1. Studying Writing Development with a Corpus

1. Introduction

2. Using a corpus to study writing development

3. How does writing development relate to vocabulary, grammar, formulaic language?

4. Outline of the book

Chapter 2. Learner Corpus Analysis in Practice: Some Basics

1. Introduction

2. Some housekeeping: getting your computer ready

3. Getting to know R and RStudio

3.1 Introduction: why learn R?

3.2 Entering commands: the Console and Scripts

3.3 Functions

3.4 Vectors

3.5 Getting help

4. Some fundamentals of corpus research: encoding, markup, annotation, and metadata

5. Corpora used in this book

6. Automatically annotating your corpus for part of speech and syntactic relationships

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Make sure you have the required software

6.3 Prepare the corpus for parsing

6.4 Make a list of the files you want to process

6.5 Run the CoreNLP pipeline

7. Conclusion

Part Two: Studying Vocabulary in Writing Development

Chapter 3. Understanding Vocabulary in Learner Writing

1. Introduction

2. Theorizing development in vocabulary

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Breadth, depth, and fluency

2.3 Aspects of word knowledge

3. Measures of vocabulary development

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Lexical diversity

3.3 Lexical sophistication

3.3.1 Word length

3.3.2 Word frequency

3.3.3 Register-based measures

3.3.4. Contextual distinctiveness

3.3.5 Semantic measures

3.3.6 Psycholinguistic measures

4. Complicating factors

4.1 Introduction

4.2 What is a 'word'?

4.2.1 Defining words

4.2.2 Defining word tokens

4.2.3 Defining word types

4.3 Choosing a suitable reference corpus

4.4 Relationships between measures of diversity and sophistication

4.5 Vocabulary knowledge depth

5. Conclusion

6. Taking it further

Chapter 4. Vocabulary Research in Practice: Diversity and Academic Vocabulary

1. Introduction

2. Measuring vocabulary diversity

2.1 Getting the metadata and corpus filenames

2.2: Generating CTTR scores

2.3 Recording the results

2.4 Analysing vocabulary diversity

3. Studying academic vocabulary

3.1 Preparing the list of academic vocabulary

3.2 Converting the parsed corpus to an easier-to-use format

3.3 Identifying AVL words in the learner corpus

3.4 Visualizing variation in measures

3.5 Investigating the patterns

4. Conclusion

Part Three: Studying Grammar in Writing Development

Chapter 5. Understanding Grammar in Learner Writing

1. Introduction

2. Studying development through grammar

2.1 Models of grammar

2.2 Selecting and interpreting grammatical features

3. Approaches to grammatical development

3.1 Varieties of grammatical approaches

3.2 Development in grammatical complexity

3.3 Multi-dimensional analysis

3.4 Usage-based models of development

4. Conclusion

5. Taking it further

Chapter 6. Grammar Research in Practice: Evaluating Parser Accuracy

1. Introduction

2. Reading a parsed corpus

3. Accuracy evaluation and fixtagging: an introduction

4. Accuracy evaluation and fixtagging: a worked example

4.1 Hand-annotating a sample of texts

4.2 Getting metadata and filenames

4.3 Identifying and counting adjectives

4.4 Identifying true positives, false positives, and false negatives

4.5 Calculating precision and recall

4.6 Identifying matches and differences in hand vs. computer parses

4.7 Identifying and fixing parsing errors

5. Tracing development in a grammatical feature

5.1 Counting a feature in texts

5.2 Visualizing variation across learner groups

6. Conclusion

Part Four: Studying Formulaic Language in Writing Development

Chapter 7. Understanding Formulaic Language in Learner Writing

1. Introduction

2. Defining formulaic language

3. How can we study formulaic language in a corpus?

3.1 A frequency-based approach to studying formulaic language

3.2 Lexical bundles

3.3 Collocations

4. Conclusion

5. Taking it further

Chapter 8. Formulaic Language Research in Practice: Academic Collocations

1. Introduction

2. Identifying collocations in a reference corpus

2.1 Editing the parsed corpus

2.2 Identifying lemmas and verb + noun combinations

2.3 Identifying collocations

3. Quantifying the use of academic collocations across learner groups

3.1 Preparing the learner corpus

3.2 Identifying academic collocations in the learner corpus

3.3 Understanding use of academic collocations across levels

4. Conclusion

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR012997507
9780367715786
0367715783
Corpus Linguistics for Writing Development: A Guide for Research Philip Durrant
Gebraucht - Wie Neu
Broschiert
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2022-11-30
184
N/A
Die Abbildung des Buches dient nur Illustrationszwecken, die tatsächliche Bindung, das Cover und die Auflage können sich davon unterscheiden.
Das Buch wurde gelesen, ist aber in gutem Zustand. Alle Seiten sind intakt, der Einband ist unversehrt. Leichte Gebrauchsspuren am Buchrücken. Das Buch wurde gelesen, sieht jedoch noch wie neu aus. Der Bucheinband weist keine sichtbaren Gebrauchsspuren auf. Gegebenenfalls ist auch ein Schutzumschlag verfügbar. Keine fehlenden oder beschädigten Seiten, keine Risse, eventuell minimale Knicke, keine unterstrichenen oder markierten Textstellen, keine beschrifteten Ränder.