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Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature

Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature. WALT: Explore Talk in Life and theories associated with talk. WILF: Band 6 – Analyses Band 5 – Explores Band 4 – Explains Band 3 – Identifies. Review types of talk in life. Expressive Phatic

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Section B: Unseen extracts Text A – Transcript Talk in Life Text B – Extract Talk in Literature

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  1. Section B: Unseen extractsText A – Transcript Talk in LifeText B – Extract Talk in Literature WALT: Explore Talk in Life and theories associated with talk. WILF: Band 6 – Analyses Band 5 – Explores Band 4 – Explains Band 3 – Identifies

  2. Review types of talk in life • Expressive • Phatic • Transactional • Evaluative • Expository • Instructive • Persuasive • Collaborative • Performative

  3. Review the basics • Exclamative • Declarative • Interrogative • Discourse • Dialogue

  4. New terminology • Back-channel – Words, phrases and non-verbal utterances used by a listener to give feedback to a speaker to show that the message is being followed/understood ‘I see’ ‘oh’ ‘uh-huh’ • Filler – Items which do not carry conventional meaning but which are inserted in speech to allow time to think ‘er’ ‘um’ ‘ah’ • Hedge – words/phrases which soften OR weaken the force in which something is said ‘maybe’ ‘sort of’ ‘possibly’ • Idiolect – An individual and distinctive style of speaking • Sociolect– A social dialect or variety of speech is used by a particular group, such as working-class. • Utterance – A complete unit of talk, bounded by the speaker’s silence.

  5. Focus on spoken language theory Paul Kerswill’s Sociolinguistic Maturation theory • The age in which a speaker stops being influenced by external factors Howard Gile’sAccomodation theory • We change the way we speak when we are with different people to be similar or disimilar to them.

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