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‘Reading’ picture stories. Explorations in Picture Story Tasks of the LESLLA Learner Susanna Strube, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands, svenemastrube@casema.nl. Introduction. Little research on the Leslla classroom Mezirow, Dakenwald, and Knox (1975) Beder and Medina (2001)
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‘Reading’ picture stories Explorations in Picture Story Tasks of the LESLLA Learner Susanna Strube, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands, svenemastrube@casema.nl
Introduction • Little research on the Leslla classroom • Mezirow, Dakenwald, and Knox (1975) • Beder and Medina (2001) • Condelli, Wrigley et al. (2003) • Kurvers and Van der Zouw (1990) • Strube
Research focus • The research project strives to find those characteristics which are specific for the Leslla learner in an educational setting. • The focus is on oral skills practice.
Method - design • Longitudinal study • Based on classroom observation (during one school year) • Pre- and post assessments
Method - Participants • Five centers of adult education • Six literacy classes • Six literacy teachers • 68 literacy students
Participants - selection Selection based on: • Type of classroom organization (oral and written skills) • Geographical location • Institution size • Classroom size
Nova College – 1 • ROC Amsterdam – 1 • Nova College – 3 • ROC Midden Nederland – 3 • ROC Rijn IJssel – 2 • ROC de Leijgraaf – 2
Classroom data Observation Classroom structure Audio recordings Classroom instructional interaction Learner data Learner background Pre- and post assessments Data collection
Assessments • Interview • Vocabulary – receptive and productive • Retention task • Picture description task • Picture story task
Analysis picture story tasks • Relevance • Coherence • Morphosyntax
Relevance • A relevant utterance is one in which the words of the speaker have a direct bearing on the picture; the relationship between what is said by the speaker and what is seen in the picture can easily be perceived.
Coherence • Coherence concerns the continuity of a text. • In this case a text is the whole picture story. • Throughout, the utterances for the picture story must in some way be connected and it must be easy to infer the relationships between them. • Explicit - cohesive elements and deictic markers • Implicit - reasoning and mutual knowledge
Explicit coherence - cohesion • Linguistic devices that connect utterances. (Halliday and Hassan, 1979) • Reference - I wash my apple before eating it. • Substitution - I like red apples, but my friend likes green ones. • Ellipsis - I bought red apples, but my friend green ones. • Conjunction - She washed her apple and ate it. Then put on her coat to go to school. • Lexical cohesion – I eat a lot of fruit. Just yesterday I ate six apples.
Implicit coherence • John can open Bill’s safe. He knows the combination. Hobbs, J. R. (1979)
Syntaxis Verb presence Verb position Agent presence Morphology Uninflected Inflected – correct Inflected - incorrect Morphosyntaxis – focus on verb
Noteworthy characteristics Telling characteristics Picture-by-picture telling Overuse of deictic elements Picture misinterpretation Dialoging Overall lack of coherence Verb use ca. 60% of the utterances contained a verb Verb position usually incorrect Agent usually absent Prominent use of uninflected verbs - little verb inflection