TY - JOUR
T1 - Aprendiendo de un corpus de textos académicos de alumnos
AU - Lopez-Ozieblo, Renia
N1 - Funding Information:
This study is based on the proposal won by Dr Gail Forey and funded by the Teaching and Learning Fund of the Hong Kong University Grants Committee (2017). It was supported by the Research Centre for Professional Communication in English (RCPCE) of the Department of English of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. I am grateful to all the participants who have made this study possible, in particular to students who gave us access to their writing and the colleagues who agreed to be interviewed. I am also grateful to colleagues from the ELC, Dr Julia Chen and Dr Grace Lim and Dr Josephine Csete from EDC and to the members of the project team: Dr Eric Cheung, Mary Johannes and Cyril Lim.
Funding Information:
This study is based on the proposal won by Dr Gail Forey and funded by the Teaching and Learning Fund of the Hong Kong University Grants Committee (2017). It was supported by the Research Centre for Professional Communication in English (RCPCE) of the Department of English of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 PUCV, Chile. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - This paper summarizes the results of a study based on students“ academic writings. The study is grounded on Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) theory and pedagogy, in particular the 3x3 matrix, a SFL framework successfully implemented in Australian schools (Humphrey, Martin, Dreyfus & Mahboob, 2010) and the Teaching and Learning Cycle (Callaghan & Rothery, 1988). The study took place at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, with 33 students from a Humanities content subject. This is an English medium of instruction higher education institution where, for most students, English is not their mother tongue. Samples of students' academic writing were analysed in the classroom to identify successful moves to express field, manner and tenor in the genre of argumentative essays. These samples were then used to provide specific writing instruction to students before they were asked to start constructing their texts independently. Feedback was provided in place of joint construction and finally students produced their final essays. Students' confidence levels on their writing abilities were measured, with knowledge surveys, at the beginning and end of the term, their final grades compared to those of the previous cohort and correlated with the end of term writing-ability confidence levels. Our results suggest that there was an increase in students' confidence in their writing abilities and that their grades were better than those of the previous cohort. When correlating grades with writing confidence levels we found two potential correlations, one positive for students with lower confidence levels and one negative for over-confident students.
AB - This paper summarizes the results of a study based on students“ academic writings. The study is grounded on Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) theory and pedagogy, in particular the 3x3 matrix, a SFL framework successfully implemented in Australian schools (Humphrey, Martin, Dreyfus & Mahboob, 2010) and the Teaching and Learning Cycle (Callaghan & Rothery, 1988). The study took place at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, with 33 students from a Humanities content subject. This is an English medium of instruction higher education institution where, for most students, English is not their mother tongue. Samples of students' academic writing were analysed in the classroom to identify successful moves to express field, manner and tenor in the genre of argumentative essays. These samples were then used to provide specific writing instruction to students before they were asked to start constructing their texts independently. Feedback was provided in place of joint construction and finally students produced their final essays. Students' confidence levels on their writing abilities were measured, with knowledge surveys, at the beginning and end of the term, their final grades compared to those of the previous cohort and correlated with the end of term writing-ability confidence levels. Our results suggest that there was an increase in students' confidence in their writing abilities and that their grades were better than those of the previous cohort. When correlating grades with writing confidence levels we found two potential correlations, one positive for students with lower confidence levels and one negative for over-confident students.
KW - Encuestas de Conocimiento
KW - escribir en un segundo idioma
KW - Formación en escritura
KW - Knowledge Surveys
KW - Second language writing
KW - Writing Instruction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85112822327&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4067/S0718-09342021000200645
DO - 10.4067/S0718-09342021000200645
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85112822327
SN - 0035-0451
VL - 54
SP - 645
EP - 667
JO - Revista Signos
JF - Revista Signos
IS - 106
ER -