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Expression of interpersonal meaning in the writings of advanced learners of Persian: An appraisal analysis Ali R Abasi & Nahal Akbari 6th Heritage Language Research Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Ali R Abasi & Nahal Akbari 6th Heritage Language Research Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

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Expression of interpersonal meaning in the writings of advanced learners of Persian: An appraisal analysis. Ali R Abasi & Nahal Akbari 6th Heritage Language Research Institute UCLA 20 June 2012. Interpersonal meaning & proficiency scales. SUPERIOR: ( ACTFL, 2009) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Expression of interpersonal meaning in the writings of advanced learners of

Persian: An appraisal analysis

Ali R Abasi & Nahal Akbari

6th Heritage Language Research InstituteUCLA

20 June 2012

Page 2: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Interpersonal meaning & proficiency scales

SUPERIOR: ( ACTFL, 2009)

Writers at the Superior level are able to produce most kinds of formal and informal correspondence, complex summaries, precis, reports, and research papers on a variety of practical, social, academic, or professional topics treated both abstractly and concretely. They use a variety of sentence structures, syntax, and vocabulary to direct their writing to specific audiences, and they demonstrate an ability to alter style, tone, and

format according to the specific requirements of the discourse. These writers demonstrate a strong awareness of writing for the other and not for the self. Writers at the Superior level demonstrate the ability to explain complex matters, provide detailed narrations in all time frames and aspects, present and support opinions by

developing cogent arguments and hypotheses.

Page 3: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Interpersonal … (cont’d)

Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (2009):

C1:Can express him/herself with clarity and precision, relating to the addressee flexibly and effectively.

B2:Can express news and views effectively in writing, and relate to those of others.Can express him/herself with clarity and precision in personal correspondence, using language flexibly and effectively, including emotional, allusive and joking usage.

Page 4: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Interpersonal … (cont’d)

The Canadian Language Benchmarks (2006)

Benchmark 11:

Can write complex original formal text to inform, recommend, critique/evaluate ideas and information, present and debate complex arguments, or to persuade a mostly unfamiliar audience.

Benchmark 9:

Can write to offer or request information, clarification, confirmation, agreement, commitment and to express feelings and ideas to mostly familiar and sometimes unfamiliar readers.

Page 5: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Interpersonal … (cont’d)

• Too broad and acontextual • Need elaboration • Realizations in learners’ texts

Page 6: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Previous studies of interpersonal meaning in writing

• ‘Evaluation’ in professional/academic genres (e.g., Hood, 2010; Hyland 2002; Myers, 1989)

• Comparative studies of ‘evaluation’ by expert L1 writers and novice L2 writers (e.g., Coffin & Hewings, 2004; Gruber, 2004; Hyland, 2002)

• Cross-cultural/linguistic studies of ‘evaluation’ in published texts (e.g., Dufouz, 2008; Lores-Sanz, 2011; Mauranen, 1993)

• Studies on effect of instruction on learning to evaluate in L2 writing (Abuhal, 2006; Wisshnoff, 2000).

Page 7: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Gaps in the literature

• Research context: ‘learning to write in disciplines’ rather than ‘writing to learn languages’

• Lack of ‘interactional validity’ (Sarangi, 2003)

Page 8: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

This study

• What are the evaluative choices that advanced-level Persian language learners make in their writings?

• What kind of a relationship is there between students’ evaluative choices and the language instructor’s assessment of their writing?

• What is the instructor’s own view on the learners’ evaluative choices in their writings?

Page 9: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

The research context

• The course and students (PERSIAN FLAGSHIP )

• The writing task• Task guidelines/assessment criteria (TRANSLATION)

Page 10: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Methodology

• Theoretical lens for the analysis of ‘interpersonal meaning’: Appraisal framework

Martin & White (2005: 1): “how writers/speakers approve and disapprove, enthuse and abhor, applaud and criticise, and with how they position their readers/listeners to do likewise.”

EXAMPLE

Page 11: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Procedure• Quantitative stage

Corpus =150; Random sample=50Coding:

Trial: Discrepancies/relevant categoriesFinal:

Categories: EXAMPLE

Page 12: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Procedure … (cont’d)

• Qualitative stage:

– Text-based interview (Odell et al., 1983) with the instructor – Course artifacts (syllabus, handouts, packet) – Class observations

Page 13: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Results

• Distribution of evaluative choices in the sample:

Page 14: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Heritage vs. L2 differences?

Infused graduation choices: Traces of informal spoken Persian

EXAMPLES

Page 15: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Results … cont’d

• Patterns of appraisal choices and instructor’s assessment of student writing (i.e., grades assigned, M = 7.2, SD= 1.5, Min = 4, Max = 10)

Page 16: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Results … (cont’d)

• Standard multiple regression analysis:

Page 17: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Results: QualitativeUnderstanding Reasons for Associations

• Authorial voice • Perceptions• Authorial effacement • Argumentation vs. polyphonic argumentation • Modesty• ‘Considerate’ writing (Armbruster, et al., 1985; Hinds, 1992)

Page 18: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Socially powerful genres of writing

Editorials: Shaping public opinion

Page 19: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Conclusion

• What is ‘advancedness’ in a foreign language?• Curricular implications– Reading tasks– Writing tasks– Assessment: Construct elaboration

Page 20: Ali R Abasi  &   Nahal Akbari 6th  Heritage Language Research  Institute UCLA 20 June 2012

Thank you!

!ممنون