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Linguistic realizations of rhetorical structure: A corpus-based study of research articles in applied linguistics and educational technology. by Phuong Dzung Pho School of Languages, Cultures, and Linguistics Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. Background of the study (1).
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Linguistic realizations of rhetorical structure: A corpus-based study of research articles in applied linguistics and educational technology by Phuong Dzung Pho School of Languages, Cultures, and Linguistics Monash University, Melbourne, Australia
Background of the study (1) • Most studies focus on rhetorical structure / move structure rather than linguistic realizations of rhetorical moves. • Studies of linguistic features: • Voice (Martínez, 2001) • Tenses (Malcolm, 1987) • Personal pronouns (Harwood, 2005) • Hedging (Hyland, 1996)
Background of the study (2) • Previous research on linguistic features of research articles • Distribution patterns across sections rather than moves • A few studies link choices of linguistic features with rhetorical structure, but mostly on abstract moves e.g. Lores (2004) generic structure of abstract + thematic structure
The present study • Rhetorical moves of research article abstracts and introductions in applied linguistics and educational technology • Distribution patterns of various linguistic features in those moves
The corpus • 40 empirical research articles • Applied linguistics: • The Modern Language Journal (MLJ) • TESOL Quarterly (TQ) • Educational technology • Computers & Education (CE) • Journal of Computer Assisted Learning (JCAL) • From January 2006 to May 2007
Details of the 4 sub-corpora Table 1: Details of the four sub-corpora
Problems of studies of move structures following Swales’ (1990) approach • based on both top-down and bottom-up approaches • bottom-up approach based on certain linguistic signals • top-down approach based on content • e.g. Anderson and Maclean (1997): the Conclusion move of medical abstracts is signaled by present tense and certain nouns and verbs + intuitive interpretations of content circularity of the identification of rhetorical moves and linguistic realizations
Analysis of linguistic realizations of moves • Linguistic features investigated: • Modal auxiliaries and semi-modal verbs • Verb tense and aspect • Attitudinal stance adjectives, adverbs and nouns • Epistemic stance adjectives, adverbs and nouns • Self-reference words • Reporting verbs • Voice • Grammatical subjects • That-complement clauses
Analysis procedures • Corpus xml coded for moves and steps • Corpus part-of-speech tagged using CLAWS7 (Garside & Smith, 1997) parsed for syntactic structure (Schneider, 2007) • Linguistic features semi-automatically extracted using WordSmith (Scott, 2004) and PERL scripts obtain distribution patterns of each linguistic feature in each rhetorical move
Distribution pattern of modal auxiliaries and semi-modals across moves and disciplines (1) • In the introduction: • more permission/possibility/ability modal verbs in the Establishing a territory and Establishing a niche moves • More volition/prediction modal verbs in Presenting the present work move (1) <EST> Implicit feedback can also take the form of recasts, in which … [AL_MLJ2] (2) <ESN> Many experimental studies also use hypothetical scenarios as a basis for discussion, which may not be meaningful to participants [ET_JCAL2] (3) <PPW> I will distinguish four categories of the engagement … [AL_TQ8]
Distribution pattern of modal auxiliaries and semi-modals across moves and disciplines (2) • In the abstract: • no modal verbs in the Describing the methodology move • Hardly any in the Summarizing the findings move • Permission/possibility/ability modal verbs are found in the Discussing the research move in both disciplines (4) <DTR> The key conclusion of the study is that integration may be a desirable option regardless of the potential extra costs involved. [ET_CE4]
Distribution pattern of tense and aspect across moves and disciplines (2) • 4 most common combinations of tense and aspect: present simple, past simple, present perfect, past perfect • In the abstract: the most common verb forms in: • the Situating the research move present simple + present perfect • the Describing the methodology and the Summarizing the findings moves past simple • the Discussing the research move present simple • the Presenting the research move present simple / past simple (5) <PTR> This article describes the investigation into the learning outcomes that … [AL_TQ5] (6) <PTR> This study investigated the relationship between the amount of computer technology used in … [ET_CE8]
Distribution pattern of tense and aspect across moves and disciplines (3) • In the introduction: the most common verb forms in: • the Establishing a territory move present simple + past simple • the Establishing a niche move present simple + present perfect • the Presenting the present work move present simple / past simple (7) <EST> Recasts are generally less effective than other forms of feedback …[AL_MLJ2] (8) <EST> Herring (1993) found that women were more likely than men to react negatively … [ET_JCAL2] (9) <ESN> Little research has been done to investigate the usability of the mouse, … [ET_CE6]
Distribution pattern of self-reference words across moves and disciplines (2) • Self-reference words examined: I, me, my, mine, myself, we, us, our, ours, ourselves, the author(s), the researcher(s) (10) <PPW> We predicted that Powerpoint would make the courses more entertaining and interesting … [ET_CE3] (11) <PPW> I will distinguish four categories of the engagement … [AL_TQ8] (12) <DTM> We examined the validity of 2 types of assessments … [AL_MLJ10]
Distribution pattern of attitudinal and epistemic stance words across moves and disciplines (3) Examples: (13) <STF> The learners’ level of listening proficiency had a significant interaction effect … [AL_TQ6] (14) <DTR> It is possible that computerised assessment does not detect the established gender effect … [ET_JCAL7] (15) <PPW> This study tested the following hypothesis: In the primary L2 reading task … [AL_TQ3]
Distribution pattern of reporting verbs across moves and disciplines (2) Examples: (16) <STF> The findings revealed that learners made significant improvements … [AL_MLJ9] (17) <STF> The findings suggest that teachers have positive attitudes toward ICT in education … [ET_CE10] (18) <DTR> We suggest that using the keyword method […] leads to better vocabulary learning … [AL_MLJ3]
Distribution pattern of reporting verbs across moves and disciplines (3) Examples: (19) <ESN> Although authors argue that prelistening activities have positive effects, little research exists … [AL_TQ6] (20) <EST> Garrison and Anderson argue that there is a dual purpose to the educational experience. [AL_TQ6] (21) <EST> Koike also found that the learners were able to identify SAs request, … [AL_MLJ1] (22) <ESN> This review of the research shows that limited evidence has been found in assessing … [AL_TQ6] (23) <ESN> If gender is a social construct one cannot presume that it will be expressed in the same way everywhere. [ET_CE5]
Conclusion • The distribution patterns of linguistic features in the same move are quite similar across the disciplines. • There is more variation across moves than disciplines. • The identification of moves should be based on a cluster of features rather than on any single linguistic feature. • Move identification based on content or function only is supported by the analysis of linguistic realizations.
Thank you for your attention. Email address: phuong.pho@arts.monash.edu.au
References Anderson, K., & Maclean, J. (1997). A genre analysis study of 80 medical abstracts. Edinburgh Working Papers in Applied Linguistics, 8, 1-23. Garside, R., & Smith, N. (1997). A hybrid grammatical tagger: CLAWS4. In R. Garside, G. Leech & A. McEnery (Eds.), Corpus Annotation: Linguistic Information from Computer Text Corpora (pp. 102-121). London: Longman. Harwood, N. (2005). 'Nowhere has anyone attempted ... In this article I aim to do just that': A corpus-based study of self-promotional I and we in academic writing across four disciplines. Journal of Pragmatics, 37(8), 1207-1231. Hyland, K. (1996). Talking to the academy: forms of hedging in science research articles. Written Communication, 13(2), 251-281. Lores, R. (2004). On RA abstracts: From rhetorical structure to thematic organisation. English for Specific Purposes, 23(3), 280-302. Malcolm, L. (1987). What rules govern tense usage in scientific articles? English for Specific Purposes, 6(1), 31-43. Martínez, I. A. (2001). Impersonality in the research article as revealed by analysis of the transitivity structure. English for Specific Purposes, 20(3), 227-247. Schneider, G. (2007). Hybrid Long-Distance Functional Dependency Parsing. Unpublished PhD thesis, Institute of Computational Linguistics, University of Zurich Scott, M. (2004). WordSmith Tools (Version 4). Oxford: Oxford University Press.