Advanced Writing in English As A Foreign Language: A Corpus-Based Study of Processes and Products Horvath Jozsef
Advanced Writing in English As A Foreign Language: A Corpus-Based Study of Processes and Products Horvath Jozsef
Advanced Writing in English As A Foreign Language: A Corpus-Based Study of Processes and Products Horvath Jozsef
IN ENGLISH AS A
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
A Corpus-Based Study of
Processes and Products
Horvath Jozsef
The publication of this book has been jointly financed by a grant from the
University of Pecs (Grant Number 23001) and by support from the English
Applied Linguistics Department of the university.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
Introduction
1.1 SLA research and writing theory
1.1.1 Theory and practice in language education
1.1.2 The Input Hypothesis
1.1.3 Writing theories
1.2 On the approach dichotomy. Process vs. product
1.2.1 Research methodology
1.2.2 Empirical studies
1.3 Writing pedagogy: From theory to practice
1.3.1 Composing for communicating
1.3.2 Group work
1.3.3 The Baseline Study
1.4 Revision: Shaping text by writer and reader
1.4.1 Revision for grammatical accuracy
1.4.2 Revision for text creation
1.4.3 Empirical studies
1.5 Responding to writing
1.5.1 Main variables
1.5.2 Positive effect of feedback
1.5.3 Student agendas
1.5.4 Responding to feedback
1.6 Concluding remarks
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3.3.4 Readings 86
3.3.5 Feedback and evaluation 88
3.3.5.1 Feedback techniques 88
3.3.5.2 Evaluation 90
3.3.6 Students' views 91
3.4 Future directions 96
CONCLUSION 145
9
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REFERENCES 151
APPENDIXES 167
INDEX 191
LIST OF TABLES
Di.
LIST OF FIGURES
LIST OF APPENDIXES
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
First and foremost, I would like to thank the following students for
contributing the electronic copy of their scripts to the JPU Corpus:
Babarci Bulcsii, Bacskay Katalin, Baditz Mihaly, Bagi Adam, Bajomi Lazar
Peter, Bajusz Judit, Bakonyi Berta, Baksa Gabor, Balassa Gabor, Balazsi Anikd,
Balazsik Eszter, Balint Anita, Balonyi Beata, Barabas Mariann, Ban Helga,
Bardi Piroska, Barkaszi Orsolya, Barna Eszter, Barsi Gizella, Bauer Katalin,
Bator Mdnika, Bels6 Adrienn, Bencze Krisztina, Benk<5 Agnes, Berecz M6nika,
Bereczki Veronika, Berke Ildiko, Bernath Orsolya, Berta Anik6, Beresnd Timar
Andrea, Bieber Laszlo, Billege Virag, Bizse Ferenc, Blasszauer Janos, Bleyer
Julia, Bodrogine Farkas Piroska, Bogdan Laszlo, Bokodi Judit, Bokori
M6nika, Bordas Paine, Borsanyi Valeria, Bradak Anna, Brunner Mdnika,
Bucsanyi Erika, Buzasi Balazs
Czegledi Edina
Csapo Angela, Csako Fruzsina, Cseke Ildiko, Cserna Gydrgy, Csiba Eszter,
Csikos Erzsebet, Csipk^ne Kocsis £va, Csongor Csilla, Csonka Gdbor, Csontos
Zsuzsanna, Csordas David
Egri Szabolcs, Elek Attila, Engert Agnes, Enyedi Szilvia, Erdelyi D6ra, Eros
Anikd, Ebel Emese, £16 Veronika
Farago Edit, Farkas Agnes, Farkas Gabriella, Farkas Roland, Feher Fatime,
Feher Gyorgyi, Fejes Istvan, Fekete Balint, Fekete Tiinde, Fodor Marton,
Fodorne Horvdth Anett, Fonai Annamdria, Foldesi Virdg, Fiiz^r Balazs
Gaalne Voros Judit, Gad6 Ldszld, Gallai Ditta, Gallen Mdnika, Gavlikne
Robotka Orsolya, Gazdag Zsuzsa, Gal Beata, Gelencser P^ter, Gellenne Kaldi
Szilvia, Geresdi Annamdria, Gergely Anikd, Gerhat Zsdfia, Gertner Brigitta,
Gombas Eva, Gregdn^ Szili Katalin, Grosch Andrea, Gutyis Judit
Haas Klara, Hadnagyn^ Kovdcs Judit, Hajdu Anett, Harmat Agota, Harmath
Virag, Hartmann Edina, Hatta Diana, Hazafy Krisztina, Hegedtfs Anita,
Hegedfls fiva, Hencsei Vilmos, Herkovits Margit, Hetesi Sandor, Hirth Markus,
XI
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Horony Bernadett, Horvai Krisztina, Horvith Eszter, H o r v i t h Gergely,
H o r v i t h Jinos, H o r v i t h Judit, H o r v i t h Milena, H o r v i t h N6ra, H o r v i t h
Sindor, H r i v n i k Orsolya, Huber Vera, Hubert Andrea, Huszanagics Melinda,
H u s z i r Zsuzsanna, Huszirne Szabo M i r i a
Nagy Agnes, Nagy Borbila, Nagy Gyorgy, Nagy Elvira, Nagy-Melykuti Luca,
Nemes D6ra, Nemeth Erika, Nemeth Piroska, N6gridi Liszlo
O l i h Marta
6116s Aniko
xii
Somorjaine" Orosz Andrea, Sods Zoltan, Srankd Nora, Stemler Kata, Siile
Brigitta
Szabados P^ter, Szabo Gabriella, Szabo Ildikd, Szabd Imre, Szab6 Soma,
Szakaly Zs6fia, Szalontai Maria, Szarka Brigitta, Szanto Gyorgyi, Szathmari
Timea, Szegedi Csilla Eszter, Szecsi Tunde, Sziklai Gabor, Szmolenszky Tiinde,
Szokol Nora, Sztanics Lidia, Szucs Mariann, Sztfcs Rita
Takacs Anita, Takacs Zsolt, Tanczikne Varga Szilvia, Tanczos Baldzs, Tarnai
D6ra, Tarnai Gabor, Tihanyi Laszlo, Timdr Zsuzsa, Tokorcsi Isva, Torma
Szilvia, T6th Andrea, Toth Agnes, Toth Boglarka, Tdth Mdnika, Tdth Tamas,
Tovishati Lilla, ToTce Orsolya, Trapl Szilvia, Triznay Zsuzsa, Trdcsanyi Balazs,
Turi Szabolcs, Turiak Tibor, Turi Andrea, Tiiu Orsolya
Vadon Balazs, Vajda Violetta, Vacine* Nyari Eszter, Vamosi Gyula, Varga
Bernadett, Varga Tamas, Vargane Uzsoki Marta, Vegh Orsolya, Viszlai Eszter,
Vizhanyo Barbara, Vlaskovits Dora
I am indebted to the reviewer of this book, Holldsy B£la, for his suggestions.
The publication of this book has been made possible by a grant from the
University of Pecs and by support from the English Applied Linguistics
Department of the university.
xm
INTRODUCTION
When clicking on the Print button of my word processor to produce the hard
copy of a university course syllabus, I initialize a period of time that will
hopefully engage students and me in the discovery of new aspects of meaning
in the writer—reader relationship. As the ink-jet chugs on, I muse on how
what is planned will be implemented in the classroom and in private consult-
ations.
The syllabuses I designed and produced between 1996 and 1998 pri-
marily targeted students who registered for mandatory pre-service under-
graduate and optional in-service postgraduate courses at the English
Department (English Applied Linguistics Department since September 1998)
of Janus Pannonius University, P£cs. The first written product a student re-
ceived from me had to be perfect in every respect: it had to address the reader
so that she or he felt the course was designed with individual needs i n mind.
It had to provide all the necessary information to set the context of explor-
ation and learning for what was to follow. A n d it had to arouse curiosity in
the content of the sessions and the content of the written assignments to com-
plete.
By 1996, when I first met such a group of students, I had been teaching at
the department for seven years. Since 1992,1 had also been collecting student
scripts by those participants i n Language Practice, Computer Assisted
Language Learning, Methodology, and Introduction to Indian Literature i n
English courses who were willing to share with me the electronic copy of their
essays and research papers.
Between 1992 and 1999,1 collected such scripts from over 300 students—
as of the end of January 1999, the corpus consisted of over 400,000 words. By
sharing with me their ideas, findings, and opinions i n print and on disk, these
students have enabled me to gather information for the study of written
learner English as a Foreign Language (EFL).
This book is concerned with the description and analysis of advanced
writing in EFL. It provides a curricular and syllabus development focus as it
takes account of writing pedagogy processes at Janus Pannonius University
(University of ?6cs since 2000). The course content of undergraduate and
postgraduate English-major students was studied. Using authentic records,
the study attempts to cover a wide spectrum of issues related to EFL students'
writing skills in a variety of text types. The description and analysis of over
300 students' scripts, i n the JPU Corpus, is presented to address the aspect of
processing products.
This is a cross-disciplinary undertaking: it is informed by writing ped-
agogy v i a classroom observations made over the years of W r i t i n g and
Research Skills courses. It is also motivated by current empirical interest i n
exploiting machine-readable collections of written and spoken texts for
language description, lexicography, discourse analysis and corpus-based
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language education techniques such as data-driven l e a r n i n g . The
fundamental question it attempts to explore and answer is how the
description of scripts written by advanced Hungarian university students of
EFL can contribute to an understanding of writing processes and products.
Why develop a learner corpus? The endeavor holds potential benefits in
at least three areas, each of which will be explored i n this book:
2
Chapter Four presents compositional details of the JPU Corpus and the
results of empirical research. It examines linguistic data drawn from the cor-
pus and a set of examples of the pedagogical exploitation of that data for
writing skills development. As will be seen, the largest Hungarian EFL learner
corpus offers opportunities to describe the lexical and text organization pat-
terns of written learner discourse. Another contribution of this chapter to the
field is the collection of concordance-based descriptions and evaluations of
learner scripts, which allow for the development of study guides for individ-
ual and group use.
The study's conclusions suggest that the JPU Corpus has the potential for
further nationwide, and possibly international, cooperation between corpus
linguists and writing professionals.
3
Chapter 1
Introduction
Writing is among the most complex human activities- It involves the develop-
ment of a design idea, the capture of mental representations of knowledge,
and of experience with subjects. The interlocking processes of writing by
novice and expert authors have been studied by such diverse disciplines as
cognitive psychology, stylistics, rhetoric, text linguistics, critical literary the-
ory, hypertext theory, second language acquisition, and writing pedagogy.
From such a wealth of approaches and themes, this book will be concerned
with what is immediately relevant to the teaching and learning of writing i n
EFL at advanced levels.
This chapter proposes to set the context of investigating written learner
English at university level. A descriptive and analytical undertaking, such a
project needs to be informed by general second language acquisition theory,
research design considerations and specifically by the results of research i n
writing pedagogy. I will present the theoretical framework of my study and
then review the literature that has shaped the present project.
The chapter is divided into six sections. In the first, a general introduc-
tion to second language acquisition (SLA) research and writing theory will
set the context of the issues considered in this book (1.1). The notions and
practice of product- and process-oriented writing instruction will feature i n
the next section (1.2). Narrowing down the scope of investigation, the fol-
lowing section aims to systematize what is known about the practice of writing
pedagogy (assignments, course goals, and writing instruction procedures, in
1.3). Focusing on the interaction between teacher and learner, and among
students, section 1.4 will elaborate on revision strategies, and the role of peer
revision. The literature review will then present the theory and practice of
feedback that students receive on their scripts (1.5). The concluding section
(1.6) will synthesize the most important strands of the literature.
5
I hope that after this discussion, the present research agenda for integrat-
ing learner writing development with the method and findings of corpus lin-
guistics will have been made explicit.
6
Freeman and Long (1991) called attention to the need to study the ways in
which instruction affects SLA. For this process to be studied, they suggested
that linguistic input sequence and frequency should be operationalized, to-
gether with those tasks that learners are exposed to i n the classroom. By
studying these variables, SLA theory can integrate action research findings
initiated by the teacher (Larsen-Freeman & Long 1991, p. 327), a proposal
similar to that made by Ellis (1995; 1998) and Dornyei (1997).
In many ways, the tasks the language educator faces in teaching and in
initiating research and the tasks in which learners perform have common fea-
tures. Both aim to integrate what is known with what is being learned about
the situation or the language item being studied. Yet there are crucial differ-
ences, too. In a discussion of the interface between language learning theory
and practice, Prabhu (1995) offered a four-component model to describe this
relationship. These are the ideational (concepts and processes of language
learning), operational (pedagogical practice), ideological (social variables),
and managerial (pedagogical decision-making). As far as the operational
module is concerned, Prabhu pointed out the contrast between teaching and
learning, saying that while teaching can be planned and sequenced, learning
follows a route based on mental processes that are difficult to observe.
7
mary of writing research (Krashen, 1984) and a recommendation for a read-
ing-based program (Krashen, 1993).
In the writing study, Krashen (1984) hypothesized that his generic SLA
hypothesis of comprehensible input held for the development of writing
skills, suggesting that extended reading was necessary for organizational and
grammatical improvement to occur. He analyzed a wealth of case studies that
confirmed the hypothesis: the acts of planning, rereading, scanning, revising
for clarification occurred significantly more often and with better results i n
good writers who also reported pleasure in reading. Also, while less able
writers were shown to have much more difficulty i n transferring what is
known as writer-based prose to reader-based prose, more apt writers had less
difficulty to consider readers' needs. Krashen concluded that although for-
mal instruction of sentence-level rules can help improvement in writing, for
significant and successful writing development to occur, this may only be a
complement to receiving comprehensible input via reading.
In the reading-focused work, Krashen (1993) presented the framework
and application of a program that allows the extensive use of what he called
"free voluntary reading." Investigating the relationship between writing i n -
struction and learning, he reported that because the rules of formal writing
are far too complicated to learn, style does not result from more writing prac-
tice but from more reading. Opposing the view that "we learn to write by actu-
ally writing" (Krashen, 1993, p. 73) he claimed that improved writing quality,
and the ensuing discovery of one's own style, is a result of frequent reading.
Bardos, in his encyclopedic survey of FL teaching (2000), also calls attention
to the integration of reading and writing, as the processes involved in both
(message identification, processing, comprehension, and expression) also
become part of an individual's overall experience (p. 160).
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reveals of LI and L2 text structures can contribute to what teachers and stu-
dents regard as successful communication (p. 137).
In the nineties, one could witness a wide variety of writing pedagogy and
research, applying and critiquing both major traditions. As noted by Raimes
(1991), the field had come to acknowledge the complexity of the composing
process, with individual research projects focusing on the central issues of
form, the writer, content, and the reader (p. 421): an ethnography of writing
was being produced (Silva, 1990; Atkinson & Ramanathan, 1995; and Leki,
1995 are among the recent examples of such endeavors). This recognition has
a number of implications for theory and practice: the field had to gather more
data on novice and expert student writers' performance, on the writing pro-
cesses applied in various classroom settings, both LI and L2, on the social
contexts of pedagogy, and on how teachers themselves may initiate research
into their practice.
Based on this review, Krapels set the following research agenda for future
studies: first and foremost, more ethnographic research could deepen the
understanding of the processes as identified by the student writers them-
selves, even though i n such studies comparability will be problematic. In
terms of research questions, Krapels proposed that writing research investi-
gate the relationship between rhetorical preferences in the first language and
the writing processes in the L2. Another area for empirical research is the role
writing has in the L I culture and its impact on L2 writing processes. Perhaps
most important, from a pedagogical point of view, will be the studies that look
into how different types of LI writing acquisition and learning affect devel-
opment in L2 writing processes.
For an in-depth understanding and evaluation of writing pedagogy
issues, Silva (1990) claimed that teachers and researchers in the field have to
evaluate approaches based on a clear set of principles and that they need to
11
conceptualize these approaches in a model that takes account of the follow-
ing factors (p. 19):
Silva (1990) proposed, on the basis of these three components, that an evalu-
ation of any writing pedagogy approach or set of procedures i n the field of
ESL composition must consider the actors and the acts of writing instruction,
including the writer, the reader, the text (read and produced), the context
(pedagogical and cultural), and the interaction (among actors and acts).
Besides, such an evaluation can result in a valid writing pedagogy theory and
reliable research instruments for assessing how effective these approaches
are. It is then, he argued, that research and practice may be able to establish
and maintain high standards in the field (Silva, 1990, p. 21).
How this realization may take place with the help of writing pedagogy can, of
course, be impacted by what views teachers hold of the processes involved i n
making meaning. For this purpose, a study aimed to elicit answers from the
teachers themselves. Caudrey (1996) conducted an electronic mail survey
12
among ESL teachers to investigate how they define and apply processes and
products i n their own teaching. He found that many came to adopt an ap-
proach that combines the two elements—one that stresses that "the writing
process is a means to an end" (p. 13). While this was a positive finding that
one could predict, the other major revelation was that a number of re-
spondents applied the process approach rather rigidly, sometimes with
whole classes of students "moved through the writing process...in step with
each other" (Caudrey, 1996, p. 13). In other words, there were a number of i n -
stances, according to the answers, of a singular process being applied as op-
posed to multiple processes encouraged to engage a more cyclical application
of writing processes. As the sample of the teachers involved in the survey was
small, however, this finding may need to be substantiated i n a follow-up
study. Obviously, the practice of integrating various types of process ap-
proaches, the classroom sequences and syllabuses of these courses need fur-
ther investigation, factors that the survey did not address.
Such concerns were emphasized by Bloor and St. John (1988), White
(1988), Tsui (1996) and Davies (1988). The authors described task types and
processes initiated by writing teachers that provide insight into the i n -
tricacies of process versus product. Using an English for Specific Purposes
(ESP) project writing task, Bloor and St. John (1988) argued that this type of
activity addresses the distinct needs of the students involved and engages
them i n learning language. In their classrooms at two British universities, EFL
students were assigned to write field-specific project reports and to prepare
oral presentations. A n advantage of the project was the integration of writing
and speaking by incorporating an oral task. Besides, the sheltered nature of
project writing was a factor that students welcomed, according to the authors
(Bloor 8c St. John, 1988, p. 90). The task set involved the following elements: a
preparatory reading to set the context and genres for the writing task; a
specific purpose for reading specialized literature; and a procedural
methodology that ensured that students were focusing on meaning. As for the
teachers, they focused students' attention on being readers and writers at the
same time, so that during each phase of producing the project they could
reflect on task achievement.
In an exceptional case study, Tsui (1996) introduced a writing ESL
teacher (Li) who claimed to be dissatisfied with the method and techniques
she had applied. A Chinese national, she had some experience i n teaching
writing but was frustrated in her efforts. She was also aware of the frustration
many of the Hong Kong students she taught had. The source: the time con-
suming and often exhausting activities that were applied i n the writing
classes. Tsui gathered multiple types of data (the teacher's reports, scripts by
students, observations of classroom and conference interactions, and student
interviews and evaluations) to track down the process and product of how
this teacher implemented a process approach to tackle the frustration and to
learn how to better teach ESL writing. The most relevant finding of the project
was that L i first introduced process-writing types of activities in her classes,
then reverted to more traditional product-type tasks, and finally she began to
13
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adopt modified versions of process-type tasks, showing a development in her
teaching skills and in her understanding of different student needs and skills.
Especially revealing is how she reasoned for the changes that occurred in her
teaching:
14
would have been much smaller if the task had called for individual effort. The
conclusion seems well founded: such experiences of writing as part of a
group can become additional vehicles of generating context and dealing with
the inherent problems of a large class. The drawback that some students
reported reluctance to participate as members of a group can be minimized if
students have the option of choosing writing tasks in which they would
prefer to work individually or as members.
For participating in a writing program that adopts the process approach,
a model was proposed by Singh (1992), who suggested that the three main
steps are not rigid but can overlap or come in a different order depending on
the nature of the writing task or individual needs. The steps are as follows:
Stage 1: planning
Stage 2: drafting
Stage 3: revising
15
necessary to establish how or whether traditional "transmission" approaches
(Warschauer, 1997, p. 478) were being modified.
In Sullivan (1998), this type of environment was introduced and studied
empirically. Using classroom transcripts as her data, Sullivan found that the
ethnically mixed class of university students engaged i n more interaction, as
the computer-assisted setting fostered collaborative learning and social inter-
action. This did not result in improvement in language accuracy, but it did
contribute to an increase i n the quantity of language performance. It was also
claimed that by interacting part of the time by computer, the minority students
had more valuable opportunities for self-exploration and expression. As the
study did not intend to add triangulation to the data, some of the claims call
for further validation; however, the application of such technologies will
probably continue to affect both writing instruction and research.
16
tion." She suggested that in many of these activities, control was paramount,
and little composition was being facilitated. To tackle the frustration that ESL
students i n the U.S. had (in her teaching experience involving tertiary-level
students of academic English) with sentence- and paragraph-level problems,
Raimes offered three recommendations, each addressing a distinct part of the
process of writing instruction. Much of what she stated in this study seems to
have been adopted, and so it is useful to review the principal recommenda-
tions.
First, the assignment for writing should not be reduced to some concrete
or abstract theme or topic—the act of assigning must contain suggestions and
guidance to complete it. Arguing that the processes of writing are not rigid
entities, Raimes encouraged a cyclical, rather than linear, application of the
processes of prewriting, writing and revising. Second, marking papers should
involve not only mere corrections of grammatical errors, but also the process
of conferencing with students, explanation and praise. Third, a combination
of writing and reading tasks enables students to predict, such as in a specially
designed cloze-test task, and in activities that aimed to develop a sense for
tone of writing and word choice, thus letting students "see that they really
know a lot about tone and textual and thematic development" (Raimes, 1983a,
p. 269). Other techniques that also aimed to turn the writing class into a com-
posing and thinking class are described i n Raimes (1983b).
The complementary processes of composing and thinking were ap-
proached from a science writing perspective by Andersen (1988), who was
concerned with how ESP students of English as a SL working in a specialized
field were able to attain success during their university years and later i n
their chosen careers. Placing this writing pedagogy issue into the British so-
cial context, he proposed that overwriting was a distinct feature of much
scholarly writing. Reviewing research that analyzed the acceptability of writ-
ing styles, complexity, content, and affiliation of scientific writing in English,
and drawing on his own experience, he found that "clear and simple writing
is produced by only a small minority of authors" (Andersen, 1988, p. 152).
(For the professional writer's views on simplicity, see Zinsser, 1988; 1998).
Although Andersen did not give a definition of the technique, "overwriting"
appears to be a process whereby the scientist writer prefers the more complex
phrase to the simpler, the longer sentence to the shorter, a frequent use of the
passive, and long nominal compounds. Although clarity and transparency of
writing is largely a subjective notion, as well as a field-specific one, Andersen
(1988) suggested that instructors working in these specialized fields need to
assist their non-native students in understanding the social and institutional
contexts i n which this register is used—the aim being to avoid using it "for
the display of status" instead of revealing knowledge (p. 157).
Andersen's paper addressed social and stylistic factors in ESP/ESL writ-
ing—the practical issues related to success in writing were taken up in more
detail by Kroll (1991), who investigated and described the chief components
of an ESL course. Her observations included insights into the general con-
cerns of curriculum development, the syllabus design of a writing class, the
role of reading, writing assignments and theoretical issues in feedback types,
covering the full spectrum of relevant factors. In each of these areas, she
looked at what may result in success, and potential pitfalls, for the parti-
cipants. She concluded that although writing is viewed as a process, it does
generate a product whose success is not easy to predict. It hinges, among
others, on how skillful a student is in controlling linguistic knowledge and
systems, and in addressing a specific audience. Her main recommendation
took the long-term View of: what ESL students will be able to achieve in the
future.
Our real goal is to gradually wean our students away from us,
providing them with strategies and tools for their continued
growth as writers and for the successful fulfillment of future
writing tasks they might face once they have completed their
writing course with us. (Kroll, 1991, p. 261)
This goal can be achieved with the continued formal and informal develop-
ment of the training of writing teachers, Kroll added. A source of such train-
ing is manifold: it includes gathering reliable information on one's own
teaching, observing classes, keeping abreast of research in the field, as well as
developing innovations that build group dynamics within a writing course so
that the community established there may be transferred to the professional
communities where these students will seek audience recognition and re-
sponse.
18
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These steps can be taken in both traditional and technology-enhanced
programs. For the former, Young-Scholten (1994) and Blue (1988) argued that
one potential classroom management innovation was to adopt a writing cen-
ter context by turning part of the contact hours into individualized reading
and writing skills development. This was done by Young-Scholten (1994) in
her U.K. and U.S. classes, in each of which upwards of 40 students between the
ages of 18 and 60 were enrolled. Blue (1988) found that U.K. ESP student re-
actions were generally positive when they had an opportunity to participate
in frequent one-to-one tuition and that this factor seemed to result in more
willingness to rewrite.
For the technology-enhanced application, Sullivan and Pratt (1996) com-
pared a traditional oral and a computer-assisted classroom i n which the
Daedalus software package was used, coming with modules for word process-
ing, topic exploration, messaging, and Interchange, a real-time discussion
program (for a review on studies in which the same package was used, see
Horvath, 1999e). In their analysis of Puerto-Rican intermediate-level ESL stu-
dents' attitudes, transcripts and tapes of classroom acts, they found that al-
though environment did not affect attitudes to writing in general, there was a
significant difference between the two classrooms: there was much less
teacher-initiated and controlled discussion, and all students in the computer
classroom participated, as opposed to a 50% rate in the oral class. Students
involved in peer response groups in the computer class tended to give more
specific suggestions (Sullivan 8c Pratt, 1996, p. 500). Whether less domination
by the teacher and more specific comments by student writers resulted in i m -
proved writing, however, was not studied.
Caudrey's (1998) and Farrell's (1989) classroom observation projects of-
fered different perspectives on computer-assisted writing programs. Farrell
was concerned with the procedures used in a high-school writing center,
whereas Caudrey reflected on how the teacher's early interventions in the
composition tasks of EFL university students shaped their views on revision.
Farrell reported (1989, p. 110) that one advantage of the project was that tu-
tors had the time and experience to observe how student writers were devel-
oping their scripts and what types of problems they had. Also, the technolo-
gical tools appeared to be an additional motivational factor.
Working with a small group of Danish university students in advanced
writing courses, Caudrey (1998) introduced the technique of monitoring each
student's progress during draft sessions. In the computer lab sessions, he had
access to each developing script and so he could intervene when he recog-
nized an organizational issue that needed prompt action. He hypothesized
that the time teachers spend on providing written feedback could be minim-
ized i f they could observe how a script was being developed. Although no
concrete qualitative or comparative analysis was done, Caudrey reported that
some students were satisfied with the teacher's on-line assistance. One parti-
cipant reported that the technique was "very good" as it allowed for revision
during the composing process. Yet there were also problems. A student
would have preferred to have dictionaries while writing, with another one
19
complaining that the lab was too noisy and thus distracting. There was no i n -
formation available on whether students could voluntarily sign up for this
course. A drawback of the approach may be that students can experience
even more serious writer's block if they know that someone is watching their
work at the keyboard. Caudrey provided a brief statistical overview of the ef-
fect of the approach by comparing the marks five raters gave on three types of
script:
Caudrey reported a small increase in the marks for scripts produced in the
lab, the mean grade for scripts written by the eleven students being 8.32 on a
13-point scale, as opposed to 7.54 i n the single draft and 7.96 i n the tradi-
tional revision class. Further research is certainly needed to validate, on a
larger population of students, the efficacy and potential drawbacks of the
approach.
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data, arranging words into sentences and sentences into paragraphs (with
paragraphs arranged into larger passages observed once). While such tasks
can complement and sometimes improve grammar and organization skills, on
their own they can hardly result in the development of a writing attitude
needed for improving mastery over the language in the written mode of ex-
pression.
The study did not aim to gather information on how written tasks were
developed as part of a syllabus, what the role of groups of students was in the
various stages of the writing process, or how students received various types
of feedback on their writing. However, the task and text type distribution i n -
formation, coupled with the results on classroom management, on language
use, and on the other skill areas, indicated that writing pedagogy was not a
high priority in these classes and that the traditional grammar-translation
method impacted this skill's treatment in the classes observed. As the sample
of schools was not representative, however, we need further studies that
could aim to investigate, on a representative national or regional sample, the
procedures, performances, and syllabuses as related to each of the four skills.
21
minology, and then went on to present four main groups of activities that aim
to assist learners in building revision skills for grammatical accuracy. The sys-
tem of these groups is summarized in Table 1.
Table 1: Activities for grammatical accuracy (based on Frodesen, 1991, pp. 266-
275)
Main group of activities Main goal Related tasks and tech-
niques
Text analysis Develop writing and Distinguishing between
reading clause types, Selecting
texts for studying article
use, Summarizing find-
ings
Guided writing practice Solve problems diag- Dictation, Text elicita-
nosed in individual tion, Text conversion,
learners Text completion
Editing Develop awareness of Error detection,
errors Correction, Read-aloud
technique, Algorithms
Teacher correction and Identify patterns of er- Keeping error logs,
feedback on errors rors Conferences
In this model, revision is seen primarily as a means that arises from a need to
eliminate error: the main goal is to assist the learner and groups of learners to
polish text so that their awareness may later be used i n the pre-composing
stages of writing. Frodesen concludes by stating that i n "selecting and devel-
oping grammar-oriented activities for the classroom, the teacher should al-
ways bear i n m i n d the students' needs and background as well as the de-
mands of the writing tasks" (1991, p. 275). The task, in this interpretation, is
obviously the end product: the error-free composition. However, task can be
interpreted such that students focus directly on revising, with or without at-
tention to grammatical accuracy. For such a definitely more innovative ap-
proach, we now turn to Lane's (1993) text.
22
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As a writer, Lane approached the theme with a revolutionary idea: when
we write the imaginary "The End" of any text, it really is just the beginning.
Implicitly arguing against the lock-step fashion which sees revision as one of
seven rigid steps in a rigid process, the author demystified the act of revising
and turned it into a flexible route to achieving goals. In particular, he offered
the following suggestion, contrasting tradition and innovation (Lane, 1993, p.
3):
1. Brainstorm 1. Revise
2. Map 2. Revise
3. Freewrite 3. Revise
4. Draft 4. Revise
5. Revise 5. Revise
6. Clarify 6. Revise
7. Edit 7. Revise
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As for the specific language and behavior outcomes of such an attitude to
revision, the recurring theme is this: a reader, who happens to be a teacher,
has to have a voice, a distinct characteristic. Writers and students are not dif-
ferent. Throughout the hundreds of techniques, Lane works on this quality
to surface i n the writing class and eventually in the text. In addressing the
teacher reader, he explains:
Lane nurtures this voice, this individuality in descriptive personal essay writ-
ing by fostering students' choice of theme and approach, by bringing them in
close contact with their own audiences, and by exposing them to what he calls
"boring, voiceless" (p. 164) research papers that students can revitalize.
This resource collection goes a long way toward enabling creative revi-
sion in the language classroom by helping students and teachers experiment.
A contrast to the discrete grammar-focused revision approach, this latter aims
to be holistic and thematic. In between these two extremes, there have been a
number of other directions summarized in Grabe and Kaplan (1996). In the
following, 1 will present the findings of their own research into revising and
show what evidence empirical research has gathered on the benefits of dif-
ferent types of revision in different communities. As the specific details of a
related issue, responding to writing, will feature in the next section, here I
will focus on what these authors noted about revision processes as observed
in peer-response and peer-revision settings.
25
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vestigate how the writing classroom can address these issues at various levels
of development, in L i s and L2s.
Already, however, evidence suggests that not all students are willing to
act on the suggestions by their peers. For example, a study conducted by
Sengupta (1998) revealed that among a class of Cantonese EFL students there
was a marked reluctance to carrying out peer evaluation. Students saw the job
of commenting on their scripts to belong primarily to the teacher, and for
these participants the reader who counted was the expert instructor. The
finding i n Huang (1995) corroborates this result: in the pilot study, 22
Chinese university students of writing were assigned to English and Chinese
discussion groups and reported little enthusiasm about providing feedback
to motivate revision in a two-draft writing task. Huang hypothesized that for
such group involvement to promote peer revision a longer experience may
be necessary.
In the ESL context, a slightly different result was obtained i n
Mangelsdorf s study (1992). Among a culturally heterogeneous mix of univer-
sity students in Arizona, it revealed that often peers were unable to provide
the type of feedback that would be helpful for them to draft a script. However,
a positive element of the process, according to the interviewees, was that
"peer reviews led [the students] to consider different ideas about their topics
and helped them to develop and clarify these ideas" (Mangelsdorf, 1992, p.
278). Once the improvement in writing quality became obvious, participating
students were more willing to share and act on suggestions in their revisions.
As for the EFL view, an Asian study aimed to establish correlation be-
tween holistic rating of EFL college writing quality and quantity of revision
(Sato, 1990). It investigated Japanese students' success in a picture descrip-
tion task. Of the ninety participants, three levels of writers were identified.
The study reported that although no significant differences could be estab-
lished in various syntactic levels, the two top groups made significantly more
successful revisions in their final drafts. The paper suggested (Sato, 1990, p.
157) that further research was needed to study the relationship between dif-
ferent tasks and levels of achievement, and that including variables of profi-
ciency in the target language and of writing expertise would enhance the val-
idity of findings.
Teacher Student
The
controlled one- controlled one- One-to-many
participants
to-one to-one
Marginal
End-of-scnpt
handwritten Audiotape
comments
notes
To provide
To assist in self-
To correct authentic
correct'ion
response
wp,—I Assessment
Continuous
• I outcomes I assessment
e The
framework
Based on
impressionistic
criteria
27
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achieved in applying tasks involving pairs and groups of students. In terms of
providing teacher feedback on student writing errors, they suggested that the
"red-pen syndrome should be avoided" (Bartram & Walton, 1991, p. 78) and
instead listed a number of areas and techniques with which to facilitate ac-
curacy and composition improvement. These included the need to react to
content, to restrict correction to specific morpho-syntactic units, to involve
students in correction, and to reformulate. They emphasized, however, the i m -
portance of communication between teachers and students not only after a
script is written but also before and during that stage.
29
1.5.4 Responding to feedback
Obviously, the practicality of any feedback type will depend on a number of
variables: educational context, type of syllabus, length of assignment, number
of students, and, maybe most importantly, what Leki (1990) called the
"persona" of the writing teacher (p. 59). Leki conceptualized the teacher as
having a set of three divergent functions in responding: the real reader self,
the teacher as the coach, and the evaluating teacher. As these functions may
conflict, and because the writing teacher will eventually need to evaluate how
content is presented in a number (and often, a high number) of scripts, Leki
claimed that the writing teacher may become schizophrenic, juggling these
roles. To help maintain a pedagogically sound balance, she recommended the
following directions for feedback.
First of all, applying a multiple-draft composition syllabus ensures that
assignments are integrated so that feedback on each draft may be usefully i n -
corporated by students. This also has the advantage that the teacher may
intervene in the writing process when it is most needed. Second, when assign-
ments form a well planned project, the writing course will facilitate long-term
development, with teacher comments applied in subsequent tasks as well.
Third, students can be given a set of questions that elicit information on what
they, the primary stakeholders, consider the best features of their writing.
This may not appear to be a teacher's feedback at first sight: after all, the
teacher provides the questions, and the students reflect on them. However, by
identifying what is valuable for them, these students enable the teacher to
better focus on those elements of writing, thus bridging the gap between
writer's intention and reader's interpretation, a significant benefit consider-
ing that student writers do not always have the skills to communicate their
goals fully.
As the final issue in teacher response to student writing, we need to con-
sider the effect it has on students' perceptions and its implications: how stu-
dents respond to response. Primarily interested in the meta-cognitive pro-
cesses activated by expert feedback, Hedgcock and Lefkowitz (1996) collected
and analyzed data from ESL and EFL students. They established that for feed-
back to be used effectively, students must be engaged in the process. They ob-
tained evidence that FL learners were in favor of feedback that helped them
formulate the content and structure of their scripts. Rather surprisingly, the
majority (82%) of the students preferred "red-pen" corrections, apparently
because this resulted in most short-term improvement in surface-level fea-
tures, with FL students being of the opinion that "form should precede, and
have priority over, expression of meaning, concepts, or original ideas"
(Hedgcock 8c Lefkowitz, 1996, p. 297). What they did not intend to measure,
however, was how teacher feedback was attended to i n revised texts.
Nevertheless, the study can be regarded as a welcome example of applying
quantitative and qualitative research methods.
30
Digitized by Google
To highlight an additional implication of feedback practice, I showed that
teachers' comments themselves may serve as resources for teaching and ex-
ploration for students (Horvdth, 1997b, 1998d). English major FL students at
Janus Pannonius University were given samples of teachers' comments on
timed essay tests and asked to read, review, and reflect on them. This was
done so that they could familiarize with the discourse the raters of the essays
produced and it broadened students' understanding of the areas that the
comments elaborated on, especially noting what the teachers marked as posi-
tive features of the scripts.
31
Chapter 2
Introduction
The previous chapter has reviewed the current theoretical and practical con-
cerns of writing pedagogy. I have made the claim that besides an ethno-
graphic description of processes and products of writing and writing peda-
gogy, we also need evidence from a larger set of language sample that FL stu-
dents produce. That claim will be refined in this chapter, which aims to pre-
sent the case for the need of corpus analytic methods in descriptive and ap-
plied linguistics.
One of the leading figures i n corpus linguistics applying machine-read-
able collections, Leech (1997a), defined a corpus as "a body of language ma-
terial which exists in electronic form, and which may be processed by com-
puter for various purposes such as linguistic research and language
engineering" (p. 1). The theoretical underpinnings, the technical de-
velopment, and the study of such corpora have gained considerable ground
in the past decades, signaling a trend away from decontextualized linguistics
toward a study of language that takes account of context based on what is
often referred to as "real" language. This chapter will review the growing
literature that has given evidence of this enterprise.
The chapter is divided into six sections. The first will offer a discussion of
the theoretical issue of performance versus competence, focusing on the con-
trasting views of Chomskyan generative linguistics and corpus-based linguis-
tic analysis (2.1). Section 2.2 will be based on a brief historical overview of
major corpora as it clarifies the types that have been established recently. The
next section (2.3) identifies the issues of representative design, and some
technical details of corpus development. Section 2.4 further narrows the
scope by identifying a link between computer-assisted language learning and
data-driven learning. Section 2.5 reviews work in the field of learner corpus
linguistics, centering on the International Corpus of Learner English project.
33
Finally, I will identify the benefits of applying corpora in language studies in
section 2.6.
The concepts, definitions, and processes reviewed in this chapter will be
central to the presentation of writing pedagogy at Janus Pannonius
University and to the description and analysis of the JPU Corpus.
34
2.1.2 Competence vs. performance
Traditional generative linguistics is concerned with the competence of an
idealized native speaker whose sociolinguistic status, age, and gender are
viewed as immaterial to the study of the generation of grammatical utterances.
By contrast, empirical linguistics, of which corpus linguistics is a representa-
tive, sets itself the agenda of investigating the variables that lead to differen-
tial performances across these spectra. It interprets competence as "tacit, i n -
ternalized knowledge of a language" (McEnery & W i l s o n , 1996). The
generative linguist, who is concerned with capturing linguistic competence,
applies a corpus of internal, closed sets of examples derived through intro-
spection (a process that, according to Labov, 1996, might introduce error into
the description of linguistic phenomena). The corpus linguist's data set de-
rives from an external, open body of actual language performance, or the ac-
tual, social and contextualized application of competence. These
performances are recorded following strict rules, with the necessary and
available biographical and sociolinguistic information tagged to it (Stubbs,
1996). As corpus linguistics opens up the database upon which description
and analysis is based, the evidence becomes available for further verification,
too, representing another advantage (McEnery & Wilson, 1996, p. 13).
As Fillmore (1992) noted, the two types of linguist should ideally "exist in
the same body" (p. 35). Contrasting the images and concerns of whom he
called an "armchair linguist" and a corpus linguist, Fillmore pointed out that
no corpora will ever offer all the evidence linguistics needs, but also that
corpora have allowed linguistic scholarship to establish new facts about lan-
guage, facts that one "couldn't imagine finding out about in any other way"
(Fillmore, 1992, p. 35). But he also called attention to the importance of intro-
spection and analysis by a native-speaker linguist. Biber (1996) also sug-
gested that both generative linguistics and variation studies looking at l i n -
guistic performance derived from corresponding aspects of linguistic compe-
tence represent valid positions.
The call for a combination of the two approaches is based on the assump-
tion that native speakers are competent decision-makers on issues of syntax.
While the claim may be a perfectly valid one, I would like to raise an issue re-
lated to the theoretical limitations of the basis of linguistic inquiry. As no
corpora can ever fully represent the language performance of a community
(see, for example, Partington, 1996, p. 146), so, too, are introspective linguists
limited in their competence (Labov, 1996). This adds further support to the
claim that theoretical linguistics and corpus linguistics can and should co-ex-
ist.
Such co-existence occurs in a social context. The notion of context (or set-
ting) in which language competences materialize (Hymes, 1974) as well as its
central importance, was further highlighted by Sinclair (1991), who claimed
that as introspective linguists do not, as a rule, require a discourse context for
their own examples, the naturalness of the evidence suffers. Defining this fea-
35
Digitized by Google
ture of an utterance as a choice of language that is appropriate to the context,
Sinclair observed that because of the difficulty of simulating context, ex-
amples are often unlikely "ever to occur in speech or writing" (1991, p. 6).
This is why, he went on to argue, linguistics should be careful not to
misrepresent what it aims to describe. In other words, what may be authentic
(in that system, possible) to the individual linguist in a particular context for
supporting a particular claim may not be authentic (in that system, probable)
to the language community.
36
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Language prescription for the inducement of learning cannot
be based on a database. They cannot be modelled on the de-
scription of externalised language, the frequency profiles of
text analysis. Such analysis provides us with facts...but they do
not of themselves carry any guarantee of pedagogic relevance.
(1991, pp. 20-21)
This evaluation of a practical concern is in line with what other experts, such
as Fillmore (1992) and Summers (1996), claimed. Biber (1996) summed up the
advantages of text-based linguistic study. He identified four features that
make the corpus linguistic endeavor particularly relevant. These were the fol-
lowing:
37
Digitized by
> automatic and interactive computer techniques can be
applied;
> they can inform both quantitative and qualitative re-
search.
The major proposition of corpus linguistics is that real examples can better
support hypotheses about language than invented ones. A number of ex-
perts have made the claim (Aston, 1995, 1997; Berry, 1991; Bullon, 1988; Hoey,
1998; Sinclair, 1987a). McEnery and Wilson (1996) also underscored the i m -
portance of the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative language study. In
fact, according to them, the recent increase in the study of corpora, a process
they call a revival (p. 16), has been due to the realization that one needs to
"redress the balance between the use of artificial data and the use of natur-
ally occurring data" (p. 16). How this revival has been made possible by the
development of influential corpora will be the subject of the next section."
> biblical and literary studies from the 18th century, based
on manually produced concordances of content words;
> lexicographic investigations to provide literary examples
for dictionaries such as the Dictionary of the English
Language and the Oxford English Dictionary
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> dialect studies in the 19th century to describe lexical vari-
ation;
> foreign language education innovations such as the work
of Thorndike in the 1920s;
> grammatical inquiries, such as the one by Fries in the U.S.,
and more recently Quirk's Survey of English Usage (SEU)
Corpus.
The size and the systematic composition of the SEU Corpus already pointed
in the direction of electronic corpora, and in fact part of it was later digitized
to allow for technologically and linguistically more advanced searches and
applications. The spoken samples of the SEU Corpus were to be transferred
to electronic media in the 70s, forming the basis of what became known as the
London-Lund Corpus (LLC, discussed in more detail later), an initiative of
Svartvik.
The development of dynamic digital corpora had its theoretical and ex-
periential foundations in the pre-electronic projects, together with a growing
awareness of the need to accumulate larger collections that can be captured
and stored on computer to facilitate faster access, more refined analyses, and
thus more reliable and valid information drawn from these studies. With the
simultaneous advance that information technology made, this was a time of
convergence of linguistic interest and technological potential.
39
2.2.3 The LOB Corpus
One rationale for the development and publication of the Brown Corpus was
to provide an impetus for similar projects elsewhere. This was later answered
in the late 1970s in the next major first-generation corpus project, the
Lancaster—Oslo/Bergen (LOB) Corpus by Johansson, Leech and Goodluck:
the British equivalent of the Brown Corpus. It was a cross-institutional effort,
with the Universities of Lancaster and Oslo, and the Bergen-based center for
Norwegian Humanities Computing participating. With minor differences,
both the sampling and the length of the LOB followed the standards of the
Brown Corpus. A more crucial difference, however, lay, interestingly, in LOB's
similarity to the Brown Corpus: it, too, contained written texts produced in
1961. But as it was compiled later, the development benefited from the new
technology that had become available by then. Most importantly, the ad-
vances made the use of a coding system possible, with storage in a variety of
media, including three different computing platforms (DOS, Macintosh and
U n i x ) . The corpus and its manual are available through I C A M E , the
International Computer Archive of Modern English (Johansson, Leech, &
Goodluck, 1978).
With these two language analysis resources, linguists had the opportu-
nity to compare and contrast written U.S. and U.K. English texts, exploiting
frequency and co-text information (for a comparison of frequency, see
Kennedy, 1998, p. 98). Besides, the careful study of hapax legomena> word
forms that occur once in a corpus, which typically represent the majority of
types of words in most large corpora, was now possible, with implications for
lexicography, collocation studies and language education.
The influence of these two first-generation corpora proved long-lasting:
not only did they set standards for representation and structuring i n sam-
pling, but they also gave rise to other corpus projects of regional varieties.
These included the Indian English Corpus published in the late 1970s and
the New Zealand and Australia Corpora of English, each of which aimed to be
modeled on the first two corpora. For the first time i n linguistics, a large col-
lection of objective data was available. But this was relative: they also con-
tributed to the realization that the upper word limit of one million words was
a restriction that had to be re-assessed and abandoned: for analysis to be
based on more representative samples, linguists needed larger sets, especially
for studying lexis that occurred less frequently i n earlier corpora, and for
contrastive analyses across the subcorpora.
40
2.2.4 The London-Lund Corpus
As noted earlier, the LLC, developed in Sweden, was formed on the basis of a
previously statically stored corpus, the SEU Corpus. It was the first collection
of spoken evidence, incorporating such descriptive codes besides the texts as
tone units, onsets, pause and stress information. Although in terms of repre-
sentativeness the LLC was not entirely satisfactory, it was a major step toward
the integration of spoken texts in corpora.
Work on corpus development sped up in the eighties, fueled partly by
the recognition that studies incorporating objective evidence made investiga-
tions more valid and reliable, and partly by the increasing facility with which
to store and manipulate data. Innovations such as optical readers and soft-
ware opened up the new vista of exploiting more spoken language. These
developments gave rise to second-generation corpora, each based on earlier
work but with different purposes and corresponding sampling principles.
Another major difference between first- and second-generation corpora lies
in the acceleration with which the results of linguistic analysis were incorpor-
ated in applied linguistics and language pedagogy. Of these new efforts, three
projects stand out as most influential: the Bank of English, the British
National Corpus, and the International Corpus of English. In each project,
the activity of a national or international team, the funding of major academic
and government organizations, and the economic viability of the results in
the publication market continued to be operational factors.
41
necessary for language learners (Fox, 1987; Renouf, 1987a): It incorporated
the results in a lexical approach to language teaching that combined form and
meaning, and it has been instrumental in setting high standards in corpus
design and encoding (Renouf, 1987b).
Directed by Sinclair, the corpus was renamed in 1991 the Bank of English,
and by now has reached a state whereby every month, some 2 million new
words (tokens) are added. The team repeatedly made "the bigger the better"
claim, meaning that for truly reliable accounts of lexis and grammar, large
collections are necessary. The current size is 500 million words of written and
spoken text, with storage on high-tech media, including the internet. To serve
the growing body of researchers and teachers, a sample of 50 million words,
together with concordance and collocation search engines, is available via
the COBUILD Direct service of the web site at <http://titania.cobuild.collins.
ac.uk> (reviewed by Horvath, 1999a).
As Sinclair noted (1991), data collection, corpus planning, annotation,
updating and application continued to challenge the team. Seeking permis-
sion of copyright holders has always been among the hurdles, but there are
signs of a changing publishing policy that may allow for automatic insertion
of a copyrighted text for corpus research purposes.
The Bank of English has continued to innovate in all the related work: i n
the way corpus evidence is incorporated in learner dictionaries, in study
guides and recently in a special series of concordance samplers, in the appli-
cation of a lexical approach to grammar (Sinclair, 1991), and in the theoretical
and technical field of marking up the corpus. Analyzing discrete meanings of
words, collocations, phraseological patterning, significant lexical collocates
and distributional anomalies makes available a set of new results that shape
our understanding of language in use. As the reference materials produced
are based on a constantly updated corpus, new revisions of these materials
sustain and generate a market, making the venture economically viable, too.
43
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2.2.8 Typology
We have seen a number of pre-electronic and electronic corpora, already not-
ing some types: static and dynamic media, annotated and unannotated, as well
as those containing written or spoken data or a combination of the two. The
corpus development effort continues, and of course this subsection could re-
view only a few of the most influential ventures. Table 2 presents a matrix of
the typology of corpora, based on McEnery and Wilson (1996) and Kennedy
(1998).
The steps of developing these corpora and the technology used to maintain
them will be reviewed i n the following section.
44
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pling frame is required so that research may be able to use data that rep-
resents the population it intends to study. For this theoretical and empirical
purpose, Biber (1994) suggested a cyclical model and a set of recommenda-
tions for testing the content validity and the reliability of the corpus. In this
section, this model will be introduced, together with other procedures i n
sampling, annotation, and technical details.
The cyclicity of corpus development is a requirement as often, either the
population to be represented or the text types generated cannot be defined
strictly i n advance. To be able to adjust preliminary concepts, a pilot study is
required that can inform the effort of the population and language variables
to account for. Theoretical analysis can confirm and refine initial decisions,
but it may also introduce new sampling procedures. When this phase has
been finished, the next step is corpus design proper. This involves the
specification of the length of each component of the text (with m i n i m u m and
maximum word counts), the number of individual texts, the range of text
types, and the identification and testing of a random selection technique that
gives each potential text an equal chance of being selected for the corpus.
During the third stage of the cycle, a subcorpus is being collected and the
specifications are tested i n it. This occurs in the fourth phase when an empiri-
cal investigation takes place with specifications studied and compared with
the samples, and statistical measurements are taken to determine the reliabil-
ity of representativeness. For any text that does not meet the requirements of
the design, the specifications need to be revised, and either new design prin-
ciples are identified or the problematic text is omitted. With each new sam-
pling of a smaller unit of the corpus, constant checks and balances are i n
place to ensure the theoretical and empirical viability of the linguistic study
that the corpus aims to serve. The Biber model is summed up in Figure 2.
- ot p a r t o t m e
investigation design ** investigation
corpus
t
Figure 2: Biber's (1994, p. 400) model of cyclical corpus design
45
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still a need to temper raw statistical information with intelli-
gence and common sense. The corpus is a massively powerful
resource to aid the lexicographer, which must be used judi-
ciously. Our aim at Longman is to be corpus-based, rather than
corpus-bound. (Summers, 1996, p. 262)
The compilation of small and large corpora was described in detail by Inkster
(1997), Krishnamurthy (1987) and Renouf (1987a). One concern after the de-
sign principles have been set is that the spoken and written texts to be col-
lected can be stored on computer; another is that what is stored there be au-
thentic. The incorporation of electronic media poses little challenge: besides
obtaining the permission of copyright holders, one needs only to ensure that
the text is in a compatible format with the program used for accessing the cor-
pus. The capture from CD-ROMs is one such relatively trouble-free area. But
the compilation of non-electronic forms of texts, such as the transcription of
spoken material and the typing in (or keying in) of manuscripts is far more
prone to introducing error into the corpus.
Errors occurring during the entry of a text into the database should be
avoided as this would defeat the purpose of representation. This is why de-
velopers need to put in place and regularly check procedures that help main-
tain an error-free corpus. The clean-text policy is one such procedure
(Sinclair, 1991): manuscripts and other texts to be input are double-checked
in the corpus.
Besides the procedural approach of designing a corpus and the need for
limiting errors, the markup of the raw corpus is the third crucial area of deal-
ing with general and specialized corpora. Most present-day corpora make ex-
tensive use of some annotation system that assigns one tag from a set of cat-
egories to units occurring in individual texts (Garside, Leech 8c McEnery,
1997). This process, the annotation of the corpus, aims to interpret the data
objectively. Annotation can be viewed as adding a metalanguage to the lan-
guage sample in the corpus, often in some form of the Standard Generalized
Markup Language (SGML), an international standard.
By adding linguistic data to the raw text, a subjective element is incorpor-
ated in an otherwise objective entity. According to Leech (1997a, p. 2), there
"is no purely objective, mechanistic way of deciding what label or labels
should be applied to a given linguistic phenomenon." Leech focused on
three purposes of corpus annotation:
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> to provide such additional values to the corpus as may be
exploited by other uses; this is the multi-functionality
purpose.
Tagging can now be done via computer algorithms employing designs of high
sophistication, making annotation of orthography, phonetics, phonemics,
prosody, word class, syntax, semantics, discourse, and even pragmatics and
stylistics possible. A n example of a grammatically tagged corpus may look like
the one reprinted in Leech (1997a, p. 13, with word-class tags emboldened for
clarity):
47
2.3.2 Concordancers: Functions and packages
When a corpus, either i n its piloted state or when the database has been
checked for representativeness is assembled, the corpus linguistic analysis
per se may begin. Typically, for this purpose a computer program is used,
which has at its core either a general-purpose concordancing module or a
dedicated software package developed to deal with specialized annotated
corpora. Of the many publicly available concordancers, I will present five
here. Each program has a set of special features (or tools, as they are often la-
beled) at their center; however, all such programs are similar i n that their
main functions can be broken down into the following four domains:
48
format, I launched the concordancer and opened the file. The window pre-
sented in Figure 3 appeared.
— m n
. :»v. v: -.f^UxJT^if^r^.:
When generating a word concordance output to screen, the user has the op-
tion of sorting identical words (types) according to the words that follow
them or according to their position in the original file. As Figure 4 shows, I se-
lected the former choice.
As users may not wish to display all words occurring i n a text, the program
lets them deselect words from the concordance. Three options are available
for this, as Figure 5 demonstrates. When none of the options are selected, the
program performs a full concordancing of the text. A combination of word
omission features, however, makes it possible to focus, for example, on hapax
legomena (by selecting the Omit words occurring more than 1 times option)
or on words that occur a number of times and which are longer than six let-
ters.
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Words Omitted from the Concordance
|OK|
# less than
Q Omit words of letters
Q more than Cancel j
# more than
Omit words occuring 100 times
Q less than
Figure 5: The dialog window where words may be omitted from the concor-
dance
Another module lets the user define the filling of the display space, given in
radio button options: all of it could be filled with the concordance lines, re-
sulting in truncated words; only full words could be shown; or the program
could compute a compromise between the two options. A typographical stan-
dard is presented in the check box to show key words in bold face (see Figure
6).
Figure 6: Part of the Display dialog box on the Options menu in Cone
When such parameters have been set, the program is ready to sort the text file
accordingly. A new window appears as a result, of which Figure 7 presents a
part.
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that besides an ethnographic description of processes and products of writing and
set of language sample that FL students produce. That claim will be refined in this
an ethnographic description of processes and products of writing and writing pedagogy, we
begin to want to understand, and it ought toprovide an experience that will continue to
it has to focus on some relevant topic that a reader will begin to want to understand, and
that FL students produce. That claim will be refined in this chapter, which aims to present
writer's own needs, it has to focus on some relevant topic that a reader will begin to
framework for this study, therefore, I will review the issues that corpus linguistics has
involvement. The previous chapter has reviewed current theoretical and practical
need evidence from a larger set of language sample that FL students produce. That claim
the language student and teacher. It needs to satisfy the individual writer's own needs, it
we also need evidence from a larger set of language sample that FL students
writer's own needs, it has to focus on some relevant topic that a reader will begin to
language poses a challenge to the language student and teacher. It needs to satisfy the
from a larger set of language sample that FL students produce. That claim will be refined
To be able to present a framework for this study, therefore, I will review the issues
poses a challenge to the language student and teacher. It needs to satisfy the individual
concerns, focusing on the issues identified in TEFL. I made the claim that besides an
needs, it has to focus on some relevant topic that a reader will begin to want to understand
It is i n the Concordance screen that the user can first study the co-texts of the
keywords, shown in bold face, and centered as key word in context (KWIC)
concordances. When a co-text does not reveal sufficient information, and
thus should be enhanced with the fuller context, one can switch between the
main window and the Concordance window. With the appropriate line of the
concordance output selected, the main window can be superimposed and the
full sentence studied. This is shown in Figure 8.
Concordance
Cone 1.7 can provide one type of index for texts: alphabetical. As this can be
saved to a text file, a database program can be used for sorting words by fre-
quency. (This procedure will be described i n Chapter 4). Figure 9 displays a
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screen shot of part of the Index window. First-occurrence word lists and fre-
quency lists can be generated directly in other programs.
[Index
practical
present
previous
processes
produce
products
provide
reader
refined
relevant
review
reviewed
sample
satisfy
set
some
student
students
study
teacher
tefl
that
the
theoretical
therefore
this
to 0)
topic
understand i
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There are several file management options that Cone 1.7 provides. New files
can be added to texts, another may be opened, a selected concordance can be
saved or printed, current parameters can be saved as default options. Of
course, the full concordance can be exported, too (see the menu selection
screen shot i n Figure 11).
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mary contribution of corpus linguistics to our knowledge of language use is
aimed at a quantifiable piece of information, such studies need to be carried
out on a solid statistical basis so that we can identify significant variables.
To achieve this aim in a comparative study that investigates a set of lin-
guistic features across texts in a corpus or between corpora, Biber, Conrad
and Reppen (1998) described the procedure whereby a so-called normaliza-
tion of linguistic variables is performed. In essence, this involves the identifi-
cation of a unit of the text that will serve as the basis of comparison. Table 3
shows one example of such a normalized comparative analysis. In this analy-
sis of three news items and three conversations (identified as text files i n the
first column and as labels i n the second), the length of each text is given in a
word count (in column 3). For each of the three observations (verbs, adjec-
tives and pronouns), the unit of analysis was one thousand words; the num-
bers indicate the occurrence of these types in each of the six texts per 1,000
words. Normalization applies a simple formula. The frequency of the observa-
tion is divided by the word count and multiplied by the unit i n which the lin-
guistic feature is analyzed. Normalization, then, refers to the process of estab-
lishing comparability among observations. According to Biber, Conrad and
Reppen (1998 p. 263), it is a "statistical process of norming raw frequency
counts of texts of different lengths/' The results of normalization (the rates)
for these observations are the quantitative data that can be compared across
the texts, using statistical methods.
One type of the frequently extracted statistical information is the mean score
of individual items. Not only can the normalized frequency information on
individual variables within a text be informative, but also the mean score, for
example, of text length within a register and across registers. Once mean aver-
ages are computed, comparisons can be made. Studying Table 3, for example,
we have evidence to suggest that news tends to have more past tense than do
conversation text types.
Statistical measures such as the mutual information score and the T-score,
the analysis of variance (ANOVA) of lexical collocation, and chi-squared
counts are used to determine whether a linguistic phenomenon occurs merely
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by chance or whether it is statistically significant. Corpus linguists have i n -
creasingly sought to establish whether any observed difference between
normalized frequency counts is the result of chance, or whether there is statis-
tically significant correlation between them. Such measurements have long
been applied i n other social sciences, and there has been growing linguistic
interest i n them (Biber, Conrad, & Reppen, 1998; Clear, 1993; Kennedy, 1998;
Koster, 1996; McEnery 8c Wilson, 1996).
55
effectiveness of C A L L in the 70s and early 80s (reviewed by Chapelle 8c
Jamieson, 1989), anecdotal evidence and the enthusiasm of scores of lan-
guage educators and of students continued to attract financial and
pedagogical investment. Stevens (1989), however, remarked that much CALL
experience in the U.S. and elsewhere failed to revitalize the behaviorist
orientation that assumed that learning will take place when discrete steps are
planned properly. This is somewhat surprising, considering the amount of
work put in this enterprise, and the expansion of the approach supported by
such organizations as TESOL and IATEFL. Arguing for a shift i n this
paradigm, Stevens called for computers and software in language education
to be viewed and applied as facilitators of what he called humanistic learning.
This call for a pedagogical change meant that CALL software and its appli-
cation had to be based on much more concrete applied linguistic principles.
Although attention to sound methodological grounding was called for as
early as 1986 by Jones, much CALL business remained within the confines of
the grammar-translation tradition. Stevens (1989), aiming to synthesize SLA
theory, specifically the hypotheses of Krashen (1985), summed up the fea-
tures that were worth exploiting as follows. First of all, CALL software had to
be able to create intrinsic motivation for the learner. In other words, such
courseware would need to be relevant to student needs, offer authentic tasks,
and create a no-risk environment, resulting in a low affective filter. Second, he
proposed that CALL applications develop more fully the interactive potential
of the technology. For example, programs can do this by adjusting their rou-
tines based on the input of the individual student, a principle gaining
ground in computer-adaptive testing much more effectively than in teaching.
Finally, Stevens made a call for non-CALL programs; the value of eclecticism
lay, he argued, in that software "designed for other audiences and purposes"
(1989, p. 35) could and should be adopted in the language class.
Wolff (1993) shared this view of applicable technologies i n language
learning. Also concerned with more direct integration of SLA research, he
identified four principles for exploiting information technology in language
education (p. 27):
How this takes place in specific educational contexts, however, needs more
research. In the Hungarian secondary-school system, Nikolov's (1999) study
found no evidence of information technology being applied. Teachers re-
ported lack of access to high technology that schools did possess, but it was
unclear who owned them and how they were to be used for what purposes.
According to Sanko (1997) much more administrative, pre-service and in-ser-
vice training is necessary for any large-scale integration of information tech-
nology i n Hungarian education. It remains to be seen how the current re-
evaluation of the promising educational project of the Sulinet Program
(Gad6, 1998) can facilitate the further dissemination of the technology.
Where C A L L has been introduced either in an isolated project (Horvdth,
1994a, 1997a; Turi, 1997; Rosa, 1995) or as a school-wide undertaking, it has
helped provide a pedago-technological innovation that has facilitated the
acquisition of computer skills, thus providing a practical spin-off to language
education. In this regard, CALL has been instrumental in connecting genera-
tions of students and teachers in the community of computer literate people.
FORM FUNCTION
t realisation
Figure 12: Johns's model of data-driven learning (1991a, p. 27)
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Grammar of English," 1997; Hunston & Francis, 1998). Also, research investi-
gates how what is presented i n traditional language coursebooks may or may
not be supported by the evidence of the corpus (Sinclair, 1997; Mindt, 1996,
1997). As DDL and corpus evidence in general become mainstream, as was
suggested by Svartvik (1996), new FL materials, too, will benefit from the ap-
proach.
60
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error analysis, and interlanguage (Selinker, 1992), the ICLE-based project
enables researchers and educators to directly analyze and compare the writ-
ten output of students from such countries as France, Germany, the
Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Finland, Poland, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria,
Russia, Italy, Israel, Japan and China.
Part of the ICE project, the developers of ICLE identify the origins of
interest i n the analysis of learner language in early error analysis SLA
studies. Granger pointed out (1998a) that although the investigations and
theoretical explanations made about learner errors were grounded in data
observation, the corpora for those studies did not take full account of the
variables that affected the samples. For example, the number of students, their
learning experience and often non-comparable test elicitation techniques
raised doubts about the reliability of some of those observations. By contrast,
the ICLE project has worked out a system of sampling scripts that allows for
more reliable studies in the description phase as well as in contrasting
individual subcorpora and a subcorpus with an LI corpus.
With each script, detailed information is recorded in the contributor's
profile. This not only ensures that the data comes from a valid source, but
also allows for specific analyses of types of language use in clearly defined
subcorpora. The descriptors include, according to Granger (1996, p. 16):
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may be regarded of the suggested ones as the most authentic: it does define a
clear enough focus, allowing students to develop an argument which is truly
their own, yet specific for any lexical or rhetorical analysis when the text be-
comes part of the corpus.
As for the pedagogical implications of the preferred mode of submitting a
student's "own" essay with "no help...sought from third parties," the authen-
ticity of the task may be lessened. With so much written production viewed
and undertaken as a collaborative process effort in the LI field, it is somewhat
surprising that no peer or teacher involvement is allowed. The specification
also raises the issue of audience: the themes appear to favor the production
of writer-based prose; yet the task is defined as an argumentative one where
awareness of the position of the audience is crucial. Furthermore, why deny
the opportunity of consulting a reader before the script is finalized if one
were to follow, even for such a basically product-oriented enterprise as cor-
pus development, a process syllabus? Considering the role that editors, col-
leagues and publishers play in the finalization of the written work of LI au-
thors (represented in L I corpora), it stands to reason that such restriction in
the development of L2 corpora may bias the comparative analyses.
These constraints notwithstanding, the ICLE has ushered in the time of
interest in more specific analyses of learner language. Each of the national
subcorpora will be about 200,000 words, allowing for grammatical and lexical
investigations, but small for research into words and phrases of lower fre-
quencies (Granger, 1996, p. 16). However, the project has been instrumental
in helping an international team of researchers and teachers to join forces in
the field (Ringbom, 1998; Lorenz, 1998; Virtanen, 1998; Petch-Tyson, 1998;
Kaszubski, 1998, among others), and i n leading the way to new inquiries: for
the development of more specialized ESL and ESP corpora. Another area
where the ICLE has motivated research is the advanced spoken learner cor-
pus and the intermediate corpus, both under development. Work on L2 cor-
pora is gaining recognition, and the practical implications of these efforts may
be seen shortly in the new reference and teaching materials that take account
of L2 learners' language use (Gillard & Gadsby, 1998; Granger, 1998a, 1998b;
Granger 8c Tribble, 1998; Kaszubski, 1997, 1998).
63
Chapter 3
Introduction
A teacher undertaking to help students of FLs develop a language skill needs
to have clear concepts of their needs, the requirements of the discourse com-
munity, and the variety of procedures whereby they can be met. The ability to
place a skill and its many subskills in the wider context of language learning
and use is an additional prerequisite. As with any skill at any level, the de-
velopment of EFL writing skills at university also has repercussions for con-
tinued growth and motivation. Clearly, the stakes are high: students may be-
come more or much less motivated to study and perform, depending partly on
the opportunities they have had in preparatory courses.
I have been teaching EFL at the English Department of JPU since 1989.
Originally hired to run first- and second-year Language Practice classes in the
undergraduate program, I have also participated i n the development and
teaching of language development courses in the Russian retraining and the
postgraduate in-service programs. Besides, my responsibilities have included
the design, administration, piloting and analysis of two types of language
proficiency test.
In all of these activities, the contribution I have attempted to make to the
quality of education at the institution has been in the development of the
personal narrative and academic expository writing skills of students. To be
able to present a coherent analysis of relevant factors and procedures in the
space available I have had to make a concession: This chapter will focus on
undergraduate writing courses, even though the JPU Corpus comprises
scripts by other students. This means that I have had to exclude lessons
learned i n Language Practice courses for undergraduate and Russian re-
trainee students, as well as writing courses for in-service postgraduate stu-
dents, from whom I have received contribution to the corpus. However, as
65
Chapter 4 will show, the majority of scripts do come from the student popula-
tion discussed here.
This chapter will introduce the development of writing skills at the ED of
JPU. To be able to appreciate the work students have done to develop per-
sonal and academic writing skills and to see the context of their scripts pre-
sented and analyzed in Chapter 4, we need to identify the curricular and
pedagogical factors that have shaped this performance. After listing the types
of data used for the discussion of these factors (in Section 3.1), the chapter
will focus on the major components of writing pedagogy. The description and
evaluation of pedagogical concerns and of the curricular status of academic
writing (3.2) will be followed by a detailed evaluation of the process of de-
veloping the syllabus for recent writing skills courses (3.3). Finally, in Section
3.4, future directions will be drawn on the basis of this discussion.
With the exception of the first source of data, the curriculum, these materials
and documents have been prepared continuously as I have participated in
various teaching and testing activities. A l l are authentic records of the indi-
vidual activities they represented at the time—applying them for research
analytical purposes will enhance the validity of the ethnographic objective of
this discussion. The enterprise is unique: to my knowledge, no other
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Hungarian writing tutors have attempted to evaluate their pedagogy i n writ-
ing. It is hoped that the results of this endeavor will motivate further empiri-
cal research i n the field, for the benefit of all concerned.
A total of 336 students have participated i n the writing courses I have
taught i n the past three years, representing the majority of students who have
gained admission to JPU since 1996. Of these participants, 204 took under-
graduate WRS courses, with the remaining 132 pursuing postgraduate stud-
ies.
In terms of the specific content of the eight divisions, two set prerequisites for
students for taking courses. The others also have prerequisites, but these are
set from within. The majority of courses in the core can be taken independ-
ently of courses in the other divisions, with students making up their own
timetables based on the information they receive from the curriculum and the
separate list of courses issued each semester. There are no external
prerequisites for Language Development courses either. As can be seen, this
first division is one of two strands that are given most weight in the core
curriculum. Together, Language Development and Linguistics contribute over
half to the core. This is illustrated by the pie chart (see Figure 13).
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I Linguistics
I Language Development
ED British Literature
I British Culture
I American Culture
I American Literature
ID Anglophone Studies
I Applied Linguistics
Credits
Figure 13: The respective weight of each of the eight divisions in the core cur-
riculum
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However, an analysis of such content and requirements is beyond the scope
of the current study—future department-wide longitudinal action research
could reveal the role of such requirements and text types.
71
receive from the tutor—the content, style, and even typography of such a
document communicates much about what students can, cannot, and should
not expect.
The Writing and Research Skills course had its origins i n the Formal
Writing course established at the ED of JPU in 1986. The development of the
syllabus of this course in its early stages relied on product-based approaches
to writing. It was after such beginnings that I embarked on my own writing
teaching career. Throughout my activities I aimed to incorporate those find-
ings of the field and my own experience that appeared to better contribute to
success.
The following, mainly qualitative, study is based on the records I have
kept of five undergraduate courses run between the Fall of 1996 and the Fall
of 1998. In the description and analysis of the course syllabuses, I will com-
pare and contrast the courses in terms of objectives, tasks, techniques, text
types, readings, feedback, evaluation and students' views.
3.3.1 Objectives
The first writing course inherited the name Formal Writing. I did have doubts
about the appropriateness of this designation, yet it was not possible in the
transition period to change it. The objectives that the Fall 1996 syllabus
communicated (see "Course Description" in Appendix B) included the
development of skills in "university formal writing assignments," with three
distinct text types identified: in-class expository writing, "longer" take-home
assignments, and the thesis. Two of these text types are fairly concrete
examples of the academic writing tradition, whereas the "take-home
assignment" is a less distinct genre.
Specific writing subskills were also identified: of the five listed in the syl-
labus, the one that appears the most relevant in terms of syllabus develop-
ment was the last set of subskills—appreciating, analyzing and commenting
on other students' writing in "a professional manner." Unless students were
given opportunities to share their scripts, the writing teacher would run the
risk of creating a vacuum, instead of creating a forum. By accommodating peer
reviews of scripts, I aimed to develop a sense of community in the two groups
of students.
The tone is formal, with students addressed in the third person plural.
The variety of additional information, such as time and place of office hours,
the telephone number, and the internet address of selected course materials,
however, added a personal dimension to the document.
One seemingly immaterial syllabus-writing decision merits reference, be-
fore we move on to the next document—the position or role that the writing
teacher identifies with. This can be detected in how the name of the teacher is
introduced in the appropriate heading of the syllabus. Hungarian university
tradition seems to prefer the position of the "instructor," partly perhaps as an
effect of Anglo-Saxon academic preferences. Of the many conscious decisions
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I made in designing my first WRS syllabus, the change in denomination was
one. Instead of referring to my role as that of an instructor, I took the posi-
tion of "tutor."
There were two reasons for this. For one, this was the term I had used in
earlier courses, and I saw no reason to want to change. For another, and this
is the more important aspect, I never viewed the act of helping students to
learn to write better as an activity that can be achieved by instructing. That
approach seemed to offer little in the way of negotiating meaning, allowing
for personal differences in learning style and strategy, and I saw it as ser-
iously limited in its potential of establishing a learning environment that
would engage sustainable development. Opting instead to act as the "tutor"
of students, I argued, told the students that I considered myself an expert in
the field but that I was primarily concerned with individuals and teams of stu-
dents to be motivated in discovering the power of writing for their own bene-
The term "tutor" is about the only detail that is common between the first
and the Spring 1997 syllabuses. Reflections of the positive results and short-
comings of the earlier course, and the application of the theory and empirical
research with which I had become more familiar by the time I was producing
plans for the new course, enabled me to introduce innovations that were far-
reaching. One of these was the decision to officially change the name of the
course. It was no longer a "Formal Writing" course of study, but one that fo-
cused on "Writing and Research Skills." As we will see in a later section
(3.3.3.2), the first WRS course also included a research element, even if at that
time it was far from being integrated into the texture of the course. The
change in name reflected a change in approach and content. For the first time
in the history of JPU ED writing pedagogy, there was a course that operated
with reasonably specific academic terms. (See the Spring 1997 syllabus in
Appendix C.)
These terms were used in the "Aims" section of the syllabus: the course,
offered to three sections of students, proposed to address and improve writ-
ing and research skills that were to be developed during the seminars. It em-
phasized success: the course would "empower [students] to achieve" it in
such discourse types as were seen as essential in the design, planning and
execution of descriptive and review essays and research papers. In terms of
writing processes, the stages of conceiving, structuring, editing, drafting and
presenting were outlined.
The communication of the syllabus was still relatively formal, with the tu-
tor referring to himself in the third person singular, and to the students in the
third person plural. But the classes were now termed as "meetings," which oc-
curred in two of the three sections in the Arizona Room of the university, a
computer network facility that promotes dynamic and effective group work
made possible by the GroupSystems courseware. In terms of content, another
innovation was the introduction of the concept of plain English. As can be
seen in the syllabus, the reference to this quality of writing appeared in the
"Course themes" section. In later courses, the concept gained central position.
73
By the Fall semester of 1997, eighty-five students had taken these courses.
The goals of motivating students to experiment and of establishing a firm
base on which future development was possible had been established. In de-
signing the new syllabus (see i n Appendix D), I aimed to emphasize the need
for both extensive reading and writing. Another syllabus design element that
can be considered new was the use of the concept of a "center" which would
provide a framework for the study during the semester.
The course was identified as "The Fitness Center," a place where the three
groups of students would be assisted in "putting [their] writing skills into
good shape by allowing [them] to work out and get the right amount of nutri-
tion and protein." These metaphors were meant to communicate to the par-
ticipant that writing economical, clearly structured texts could be achieved. As
will be shown in the next sections on task and text types, although goal set-
ting used terms that may have confused some students, the texts to be pro-
duced were the most concrete to date.
This syllabus was the first to break away from the formal tone tradition:
the tutor welcomed participants to the course, spoke to them directly, and at
the end expressed the hope that students would have a "useful and mem-
orable experience."
The lessons learned in the fall of 1997 further motivated development.
The Spring 1998 course can be seen as a stage that had established what ap-
peared most effective approaches and content, including the continued cen-
trality of aiming to assist students in producing plain and transparent text in
English for personal and academic purposes. M y dual role of teacher and edi-
tor, as well as my exploration of the theory and practice of writing pedagogy,
had by now confirmed that this was a feature of writing I aspired to cultivate
in students' writing.
Specifically, the syllabus made reference to the development of fluent, ac-
curate, and plain written English. It also communicated the goal that the sem-
inars would encourage experimentation with "topics, genres, audiences, and
purposes." The output of the course was identified in proficiency in writing
four types of text, of which the personal descriptive essay was the new ex-
ample. (See the syllabus in Appendix E.)
The tone is similar to that of the syllabus in the preceding semester: it ad-
dresses the student as a stakeholder, a participant, using simple and clear
language. It also continues with the metaphor of the "center," but this time it
is a "writing center," as opposed to the "fitness" center a semester earlier. The
reason for the change was that, although the WRS course continued to focus
on "low-fat" English and energetic text, the term "fitness center" was regarded
as politically incorrect. By the time I was preparing the syllabus, I received
word that at least one student with a limited physical condition had become
an English major.
Another notable feature of the text of the syllabus is that this was an ex-
ample of paying attention to layout and packaging: icons and symbols pro-
vided visual information and aimed to facilitate cross-referencing between
the weekly program of the sessions and the requirements. The titles of the
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sessions, quotations from one of the required readings, aimed to further raise
students' curiosity.
It was after such work that the most recent WRS course I designed
opened, in two sections, in September, 1998. In the first session, students re-
ceived the syllabus presented in Appendix F. The "Description" section re-
tained the elements that had become the staple of the course, but was
complemented by a focus on "opinions, observations i n personal narrative
and descriptive essays" as the text types that the course aimed to help
students develop. Experimentation, writing processes, and the research
elements were included as the other building blocks.
A procedural innovation was the employment of student assistants.
Students from the previous course were asked to consider volunteering to
team-teach a session with me. Eight students expressed such willingness, a
relatively high number, given the fact that this was not widely practiced at the
university and that the offer was made when students were working on the
revision of their research papers.
The closure of the syllabus is an example of how a teacher can frame a
document of this type: if the audience is greeted at the beginning, a final per-
sonal remark seems to be relevant. In this instance, I expressly made the point
that I was looking forward to the "time we will be spending together, and to
your ideas and texts. I wish you a memorable and exciting time i n the writing
center." The syllabus, for the first time in the history of its development, oper-
ated with the first person plural pronoun, placing the students and the tutor
in the context of a shared community.
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paragraph with indentation, what its topic is, in what tense the ideas are pre-
sented, how the tone of the writer exposes the topic, and how one paragraph
may contribute to the unity of the text. These basics were incorporated in the
Spring 1998 course, and then a semester later they appeared as the tips. They
specifically aimed to provide students with a technique that was easy to re-
member and which could inform revision. The tips are a simple checklist of
five questions the writer can ask in developing or revising a text:
Three of the tips are relatively simple to follow: spotting one tab, identifying
one topic, and checking tenses require little effort, yet they can make a differ-
ence i n organization and reader appeal. The tips on tone and target are more
subjective matters, but in the long run, they can become part of how a student
reflects on writing.
These processes materialized in classroom and take-home assignments.
Although the 90-minute session format did not allow for much in-class writ-
ing, all projects were discussed in the classes, either in small groups or by the
whole class. A few sessions, however, experimented with group writing i n
class. A n activity of this type was done i n the Spring 1997 semester. One of the
three groups had the sessions in a regular classroom, whereas the other two
in the Arizona Room. The task aimed to provide students with practice i n writ-
ing unified paragraphs based on topic sentence prompts that they were re-
quired to discuss. In the traditional classroom, pairs and small groups of
students negotiated content and development and then produced subse-
quent drafts. The individual paragraphs were collected, with the full text
typed up for next class for revision. In the Arizona Room, the GroupSystems
software allowed for pairs to work concurrently on individual paragraphs,
by using the Group Writer tool of the facility.
Group Writer is one of several options of GroupSystems that facilitates
negotiation. Originally developed for conducting business meetings, it pro-
motes dynamic and effective meetings. Divided into the facilitator's server and
the participants' workstations, the system connects anonymous users who can
work individually or i n small groups, responding to questions and partici-
pating i n other tasks. Responses are typed in and sent to the server, which
collects participant input and displays it for all. They can then be applied for
small group face-to-face discussion, a process that lowers anxiety and can re-
sult in settling an agenda more efficiently than by using traditional methods
only. As I had used this network tool earlier i n Language Practice and other
courses, I had an opportunity to evaluate its usefulness i n education.
Especially suitable for such a purpose are the modules of Brainstorming,
Categorizer, Questionnaire, Group Dictionary, and Group Writer.
77
After students learned to use the workstations, I sent them the topic sen-
tences and asked pairs to discuss and write their paragraphs. With five topic
sentences sent to the participants, they could choose their own. Once a pair
began writing a paragraph, the rest of the group worked on other segments of
the text. When a draft paragraph was prepared, it was sent to the server,
which in turn channeled the text back to all participants. In this way, every-
one was able to contribute to the effort, it was instantaneous, and pairs were
also able to comment and change the texts by other pairs.
The key advantage of this type of use of the Group Writing tool is its re-
liance on teams. Also, the text can be printed when the drafts are sent to the
server, which students can take home and work on individually.
Other tasks that relied on cooperation belonged to two types: comment-
ing on students' writing and co-authoring texts by students and by a student
and the teacher. The former task gained increasing weight as the syllabus of
the course was modified; as the section on Readings will show, a marked em-
phasis was laid on students' opportunities to read their peers' scripts. The lat-
ter was first attempted in the Fall of 1997.
Reflection on peers' text was part of the test given i n the Fall 1998
semester. Students were instructed to select one of the portfolios from the
previous semester, which were part of the reading set, and discuss a positive
feature in it. These reflective scripts showed different foci of attention: styles
and opinions, emotions and facts received evaluation, enabling the teacher
to assess students' coverage of reading and to incorporate insights i n
modifying readings for future courses. They also represented cooperation on
the receptive pane. The productive aspect of this process was practiced in the
other type of cooperation: co-authoring essays.
Writing is often conceived of as a solitary activity: the author commits to
paper thoughts, ideas, and opinions that seek expression. But writing in aca-
demic and other fields often takes place as an effort by more than one person;
in fact, writing intended for a public always involves at least two people: the
author and the editor.
Working on a theme by sharing an experience will result i n growing con-
sciousness of reader-based prose: contributing writers, when such partner-
ships are formed voluntarily, can provide insights that the solitary writer may
not possess. For this purpose, the WRS course introduced the task of co-au-
thoring essays as one of the many options. Beginning with the Spring of 1998,
this meant either a script written by two students, or by a student and the
teacher. The next section and the one on text types will present more details
on this task.
79
ing for the novice writer—in fact, even academics, I realized as editor of
books and Novelty, with a long publication experience tend to ignore or be
unaware of this requirement.
Several worksheets and activities were designed to help students with
this task. Multiple copies of the publication manuals of the A P A and M L A
were ordered for the library. The updated version of the department's thesis
writing guidelines (Horvath, Nikolov, & Turner, 1997) incorporated sections
and illustrative examples on the issue. To help students even more, I de-
signed a set of two simple computer programs to generate APA- and MLA-type
reference lists (Horvath, 1999c, 1999d).
Finally, office hours set aside time for students to familiarize themselves
with the spelling and grammar check modules of the word processor.
This text, and the corresponding task, aimed to build skills in narrative and
descriptive writing, focusing on relevant learning content. In introducing
students' dictionaries, the theme would enable writers to share their views on
a writer's tool that the authors knew well, and even to get to know them bet-
ter.
81
3.33.1.3 Expository, argumentative, and personal narrative or
descriptive essays based on the theme selection table
The proficiency testing of writing skills at the ED of JPU was conducted by us-
ing a theme selection table that incorporated over a hundred themes (see the
1999 example in Appendix I). As most students participating i n the WRS
courses were to take the Filter test that included such a component, I dis-
tributed previous tests so that students could familiarize themeselves with the
instrument and the evaluation scheme, locate themes they wanted to write
about, and even generate their own tables. Part of the course, then, aimed to
help students in preparing for this high-stakes exam (Horvath, 1996b; Szabo,
1996).
Sessions that dealt with the issues of presenting a theme effectively i n intro-
ductions and arriving at a closure were supplemented by the task of writing a
text on a topic chosen by the student, and then writing one more introduc-
tory and one more concluding paragraph. This option was particularly well
received by students, as they were given an opportunity to experiment with
different approaches—with those that were practiced i n the sessions, and
with their own techniques.
This text type was first introduced in the Fall of 1997. M y main purpose was to
edit and publish a book of short essays by students for students. I aimed to
help students focus on economy of expression: the total number of words set
at 100, it invited authors to describe a concrete event, phenomenon, idea i n
concrete terms, using specific vocabulary. Students' response was not over-
whelming, but I d i d receive over thirty such essays, which w i l l be
incorporated i n a new writing textbook (Take-off, i n preparation). One ad-
vantage of producing such a text is that it requires observation, a skill
transferable to other text types, both personal and academic.
Writing coursebooks were part of the reading element of the courses, but
their relative value diminished over time. However, students were shown, and
encouraged to consult, a large number of such material so they could address
their own needs i n their own time and in consultations. For this purpose, one
of the text types was to either complete a drill or a composition task in any of
the textbook the students found relevant. The advantage of the option was
seen in its contribution to students' learning strategies. Scanning and skim-
82
ming also played a role i n the completion of this task. Besides, familiarity with
a freely chosen book can be regarded as a potentially effective m i x of free
voluntary reading and conscious learning.
83
the Fall of 1996, to provide a transition between personal and academic writ-
ing, and between the course and the rest of the university studies.
With language, organization, and revision skills practiced and improved,
the next task was to conduct a small-scale authentic research project. The
small scale of the project meant that students had to have enough time, about
five weeks, to decide on a research question, formulate a plan and produce a
first draft. The authenticity of the project was concerned with its coherence
within the course; this being a WRS course, its research options had to do
with the subject matters of its syllabus.
Four of the five semesters offered several choices for this component; the
exception being the first one, when students had to write about one topic: the
analysis of newspaper articles published on the day they were born. The task
involved the location of a relevant source in an accessible library, the selec-
tion of the data based on the research question, and the use of reference ma-
terial about journalism.
In each of the other courses, at least five options were presented, with the
ones listed in Table 6 becoming constant elements by the fall of 1998. As the
table shows (the same as what students received as one of the handouts in the
course), there were six specific themes with corresponding data and sug-
gested reference material. A n open choice was also provided for students
who wished to explore other opportunities.
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The research paper length requirement varied between 2,000 and 1,200
words—initially it was longer but was reduced in later courses. Students were
to follow a standard structure: Introduction, Method, Results and Discussion,
and Conclusion (IMRSC), supplemented by a list of their references either in
A P A or M L A format. In each course, relevant aspects of the department guide-
lines were to be followed.
As can be seen from this brief description of the research paper, the task
and the text type aimed to plug the gap between the WRS course and future
courses. The reference conventions it introduced and explained were prac-
ticed extensively. Separate task sheets and class forums were used to initiate
students to academic modes of delivery.
What this component inherited from the earlier phase of the course was a
continued emphasis on clarity and simplicity of language and ideas, and the
multiple-draft process approach. Although the course officially ended by the
time students submitted their first drafts, the majority welcomed the
opportunity of revision and continued to submit second, third, and, in rare
instances, fourth versions.
In terms of research design and data applied, the courses aimed to intro-
duce students to two basic types: presenting quantitative and qualitative re-
sults. This component of the course functioned as initiation into basic
decisions researchers have to make when they embark on a project.
As Chapter 4 will show, this was the single most popular choice throughout
the five semesters. A n option in each course, this task invited students to con-
sider a specific aspect of the newspaper issue published when they were
born. Applying the IMRDC structure, students were to present the results of
their library research based on the analysis of text that was relevant to their
chosen focus.
As students were writers and readers in the WRS courses, and as reading
peers' texts was a priority, this task made it possible for students to explore
others' portfolios when they had been finalized. This option allowed stu-
dents to familiarize even more with various types of writing, so that their
repertoire of approaches and strategies may be enriched.
Issues like validity and reliability of the research effort were highlighted in
those sessions that aimed to provide help for students who chose to conduct
questionnaire and interview surveys among students and teachers. The op-
tion was incorporated in the research paper task pool so as to enable stu-
85
dents to gather information relevant to their studies and to experience the
need for searching for and presenting such information based on a reliable
study.
3.3.4 Readings
Research has shown that one factor that greatly contributes to proficiency in
writing is the amount of reading successful writers do (Krashen, 1984). This
can include reading activities for pleasure, as in free voluntary reading, or
reading dedicated to a specific learning goal. The complementary processes
of reconstructing meaning i n reading and constructing meaning in writing
continued to be central in the WRS courses in the past three years. Most syl-
labuses comprised reading materials of three types: coursebooks selected be-
cause they appeared to contain well-designed texts and tasks, publication
manuals, and authentic essays and studies.
A total of thirty-eight titles were employed in the past three years. As we
have seen in earlier sections, some of these became the basis of classroom pair
and group activities, with a number of them also featured i n various tests.
One innovation in this regard was the increasing emphasis accorded to
students' writing. As early as the Fall 1996 semester, an essay by Schubert
Gabor (1996) was featured in the syllabus; the essay, the first student contri-
bution published in Novelty, was included to introduce students to the idea
of analyzing a course syllabus, and to serve as a possible model for student
writing in which the voice of the author was clear, supported by the semi-fic-
tional nature of the experience described i n the narrative part of the text.
Schubert's article was the first of many student scripts used in WRS
courses. Not all of these appeared in the Readings lists—as the course devel-
oped, students themselves began to share their own essays as well, which was
facilitated by the course folders placed in the department library.
To provide an overview of the types of texts used as reading materials in
the courses, I have prepared the following table (Table 7). It structures the
readings according to the three types and presents them chronologically.
Note that I had omitted years of publication to economize on space for titles
where such information is not necessary for identification—I indicate read-
ings by authors, editors, or titles. The full publication information is pro-
vided in the References.
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Table 7; The three types of reading materials in the five semesters
Semester Coursebooks Manuals Authentic essays
and studies
Fall 1996 Hubbard; Marius Nikolov 8c Turner JPU essays;
7 titles 8c Weiner; Schubert;
McCrimmon peers' scripts
Spring 1997 Arnaudet 8c Mary; Nikolov 8c Turner Horvath (1996b);
10 titles Berry (1994); H u n t 8c Boylan;
Gray 8c Melis; Pinker; Schubert
Hubbard; Marius
8c Weiner
Fall 1997 Gray 8c Melis; APA; Gibaldi Hurtt 8c Boylan;
10 titles Hubbard; Kurdi 8c Horvath;
Strunk 8c White; Novelty (1997);
1
students own Zinsser (1988)
choice
Spring 1998 Smalzer; APA; Gibaldi; Eco; Geresdi;
11 titles students' own Horvath, Nikolov portfolios;
choice 8c Turner Salamon 8c
Zalotay;
Schubert; Zinsser
(1988)
Fall 1998 Smalzer Gibaldi; Horvath, Babarci; Bacskay
15 titles Nikolov 8c Turner Demeter; Foldesi
Hurtt 8c Boylan
Grundy 8c Li
Horvath (1998b);
Racz
Research papers
Vadon; Zinsser
(1998)
The courses also introduced students to the use of an important writer's tool,
the thesaurus, which the majority of students had never used before.
Besides these resources, several other texts were reviewed in designing
courses and made available for interested students in office hours. These ex-
tra materials included one of the first descriptions of plain English for educa-
tional purposes, by Gowers (1953). Study-skills handbooks such as those by
Smith and Smith (1990) and Sotiriou (1984) complemented composition texts
from the U.S. and U.K.: Arnold and Harmer (1978), Clouse (1986), Crews
(1987), Elsbree, Bracher and Alitzer (1977), Evans (1998), Gere (1985), Gould,
DiYanni and Smith (1989), Hall (1988), Hamp-Lyons and Heasley (1987),
Hansen (1987), Hult (1986), Legett, Mead, Kramer and Beal (1988), Leki (1989),
Madden and Rholck (1997), M c M a h a n and Day (1984), Rackham and
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Bertagnolli (1988), Raimes (1983b; 1996), Rankin (1972), Schenk (1988), and
Weiner (1973).
Of the textbooks published i n Hungary, the most recently used were
Csomay and Szerdahelyi's (1997) process-syllabus resource for advanced
students and Kiszely's (1998) collection of texts and tasks. Besides, the chap-
ters of my own developing course material, Take-off (Horvath, i n prepara-
tion), were made available to students.
The combination of spoken and the two types of written comments, although
a most time consuming effort, appeared to contribute to students' willingness
to participate in classes and to revise. Also, by setting an example with my
own motivation to respond promptly, with most written feedback provided
within days of receiving a script, I aimed to communicate my own motivation
to students. Further empirical research, however, is necessary in the field:
both qualitative and quantitative data should be gathered to establish fac-
tors that most effectively contribute to improved writing. Also, as will be ex-
plained in the next chapter, the use of teachers' typed feedback can be
extended to form part of the annotation of a learner script, thus facilitating a
systematic study of the nature, typology, validity, and reliability of such com-
mentary.
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3.3.5.2 Evaluation
In any course of study, teachers assess the progress and achievement of the
students. The basis of the assessment is some sample of skills or knowledge
covered in the course, whereas the results can serve evaluative and diagnos-
tic purposes. Informal assessment of participation was done on a continuous
basis in all of the WRS courses; this was based on data on students' attend-
ance and holistic assessment of their work in the sessions. In awarding a final
grade to students, the achievement was tested in the texts student submitted.
A major decision to be made in such assessment is concerned with its ba-
sis; the two distinct types are holistic and analytic. I chose the latter option to
enhance the transparency of the course: as all scripts were scored by me, stu-
dents had to know the constituent categories I evaluated.
In the past five semesters, four types of assessment categories were ap-
plied i n the courses. As Figure 14 illustrates, their relative weight changed
across the five courses, with participation being modified least, and the test
the most. The Spring 1998 course was an example of the four categories re-
ceiving equal weight.
Fall 1996 Spring 1997 Fall 1997 Spring 1998 Fall 1998
Figure 14: The relative weight of assessment categories across the five courses
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these students, I was glad to see a marked agreement between the two scores.
But to be able to add to the reliability of this part of the study, further inves-
tigation is necessary. In discussing preliminary findings of this project, sev-
eral students suggested that i n reporting a score to me, some participants may
not have given the true score of their work. In a future project, student re-
search assistants may need to elicit this information. Also, interviewing stu-
dents could provide insights into the process of students* self-evaluation.
Another aspect of assessment is how levels of performance are compared.
Most university courses appear to apply criterion referencing: i n the syllabus
the teacher specifies a grading scheme with percentages representing levels.
This may be a valid approach in lecture courses involving a large number of
students. However, i n seminar courses norm referencing may be more valid
from the point of view of the construct of seminar work. Comparing students'
results with each other informs teachers of the work they have been able to
do. Also, fine-tuning level setting may carry higher face validity.
For these two reasons, I applied norm referencing throughout the five
semesters, deciding on required levels of performance for each of the four
passing levels by consulting the graph of final scores.
Figure 15: Number of students selecting values for the fairness of evaluation
query (N = 28)
The second item asked students to rate how much assistance they received
from other students in the group. A l l 30 students who took the questionnaire
answered the question. With three students giving this criterion a value of 3,
nine students a value of 4, ten students a value of 5, three a value of 3, and
five a value of 7, the assistance students reported they received from others
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appeared to be somewhat lower than I expected. Figure 16 shows the distri-
bution of values for the Assistance from Students criterion.
I 10 Students
Figure 16: Number of students selecting values for the assistance from stu-
dents query (N = 30)
The third category was Assistance from the Tutor. A l l 30 students who re-
turned the questionnaire responded to this query. One student assessed the
tutor's assistance by giving it a 3, two by giving it 5, seven by giving it 6, and
twenty-one by giving it the top value, 7. Figure 17 demonstrates the distribu-
tion of values for the assistance from the tutor criterion.
I Tutor
Figure 17: Number of students selecting values for the assistance from the tu-
tor query (N = 30)
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the value of 7. Figure 18 shows the distribution of values for the usefulness
criterion.
H Usefulness
Figure 18: Number of students selecting values for the usefulness of the
course query (N=30)
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Another way of looking at the results is by calculating the mean figures of the
category values. To be able to form an overall image of students' evaluation
of these criteria, I conducted this calculation and found the following: The
lowest mean was obtained for assistance from students (4,93). While this was
the lowest value, it was still in the positive range of the scale. Students ranked
the usefulness of the course criterion higher, as the mean figure for that cat-
egory was 5.83. For the fairness of evaluation and assistance from the tutor
categories the mean figures were 6.14 and 6.53, respectively. Figure 20 shows
the rating of the four factors.
Mean Figures
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was found between the usefulness of the course and the composite of the
other three factorial means.
Figure 21: Comparison of the mean score for the usefulness criterion and the
averages of the fairness, assistance from students and assistance from the tu-
tor criteria
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opinions have continued to shape the focus of the course. Their continued
interest in participating i n voluntary conferences in office hours provided
further evidence that a teacher's motivation was a significant factor in main-
taining and raising student involvement. Most importantly, their personal de-
scriptive essays and research papers have helped me understand more clearly
their views of the world, themselves, and the educational and linguistic issues
they identified as essential. In so doing, they have also helped me want to be-
come a better teacher writer.
The opportunities I have had as a writing teacher have gone beyond the
classroom and the office hour. Several students have begun to pursue writing
activities for their own pleasure and for various purposes. A n increasing
number of fiction and non-fiction writers have emerged. Over twenty students
have published their articles, essays, and reviews in Hungarian and interna-
tional newsletters and journals. To have been able to motivate and assist
them has been another source of satisfaction.
The invigorating effect of reading a first draft, of discussing its merits and
problems in class and privately, of reading a revised version of the script: the
opportunity to be part of the development of an idea that a student is willing
to share with peers and the tutor is among the greatest benefits a writing
course can offer. Besides, the use of earlier groups' essay and research paper
collections in new courses establishes a link between students, and thus
helps maintain an authentic and relevant discourse community.
How this community is being developed throughout university was be-
yond the scope of this study. This area may be well worth the investigation in
future action research, involving a representative sample of courses. Another
type of follow-up study could investigate how what is acquired and learned
in the WRS courses is applied in students' theses. For wider institutional ap-
peal, and for encouraging cross-institutional cooperation, Hungarian col-
leges and universities could set up research and pedagogical projects.
97
Chapter 4
Introduction
The previous chapter has placed writing pedagogy i n the JPU ED core cur-
riculum and described and evaluated the procedures developed i n the past
semesters, focusing on undergraduate WRS courses. It has applied a balance
of quantitative and qualitative data. In this chapter, I aim to provide a de-
tailed description of written learner English by investigating quantitative
data, the JPU Corpus. As indicated in Chapter 3, the majority of contributions
have come from WRS course participants—the corpus, however, provides ev-
idence of five main types of learner groups. Three of these have been under-
graduate pre-service students i n the last six years: those attending Language
Practice, WRS and miscellaneous elective courses. The remaining two groups
of participants have taken part i n in-service language education: a few
Russian Retraining students, and a larger group of postgraduate students.
A solid set of data was collected between 1992 and 1998, facilitating a
quantitative analysis of the language produced. The approach followed i n
this chapter is based on the corpus linguistic assumption that the per-
formance of a language community has to be investigated to capture probable
features of language behavior, whose statistical and pedagogical significance
can then be tested and validated.
Why and how the corpus was first conceived will be discussed i n section
4.1, which also explains design principles, data input procedures, text types,
and the three types of methods used for the empirical study. Section 4.2 then
goes on to present the current composition of the main corpus, followed by
the specific compositional details of the five subcorpora. After this book, sec-
tion 4.3 identifies ten hypotheses of this part of the book. Descriptive and
contrastive analyses were carried out, involving the full JPU Corpus, its
subcorpora, and contrastive analyses based on the results of ICLE investiga-
tions.
The chapter then follows up to address the pedagogical uses of the cor-
pus: section 4.4 introduces an application of data-driven learning, whereby
students are assisted i n submitting their own scripts to analysis. Specific ex-
amples will illustrate how this has been done i n Language Practice, Elective
99
and WRS courses for group activities and for individual study. The section
briefly discusses miscellaneous other applications of the corpus.
I hope this presentation will serve as a valid basis on which to draw con-
clusions, in section 4.5, on the applications and limitations of a corpus-based
study of written learner English—besides, I intend to suggest future direc-
tions where such endeavors may lead.
100
The current status of the development of the JPU Corpus may be re-
garded as satisfactory for a linguistic and language educational study. It is the
first to employ a large database of Hungarian learner English for descriptive
and analytic purposes, which represent the ultimate rationale for corpus de-
velopment.
Specifically, collecting students' scripts enables applied linguists to do
the following:
For the first option, a corpus can contain all the scripts students have written,
and requires the cooperation of a team. The second, third, and fourth fields
can be explored individually, as they have been in the DDL tradition (Johns,
1991a, 1991b; Horvath, 1994a, 1994b, 1995a). The fifth and sixth areas often
necessitate team work nationally and internationally (Granger, 1998b).
In the rest of this chapter, I will restrict the investigation to demonstrating
what I considered relevant analyses given the individual undertaking of the
project.
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> be based on such submissions as are voluntarily con-
tributed.
I set the size of the intended corpus at 500,000 words to collect at least half the
size of first-generation corpora. Although that target has not yet been
reached, the current size is rather close. Also, other learner corpus projects
indicate that a smaller size is sufficient (Granger, 1993, 1996, 1998a; Kaszubski,
1997; Mark, 1998). As will be shown shortly, the current size of the JPU Corpus
is twice as large as a subcorpus of the ICLE. In terms of the second criterion,
all components come from courses I taught between 1992 and 1998. The rea-
son for arguing that this sample may allow for generalizations on other writ-
ing by other students at the institution is that the majority of scripts come
from students in WRS courses and from those participating in in-service post-
graduate education. Combined, these contributors represent the majority of
learner population at JPU in the past three academic years.
As for the third criterion referring to text types, a representative sample
of different genres has been collected, with corpus linguistic and pedagogical
aims in what can be regarded as sufficient balance. None of the students have
been asked to allow me to reveal their authorship of any examples to be
shown i n this chapter—the names that appear in the Acknowledgments can-
not be linked to the scripts. Finally, all text samples that appear in the current
version of the JPU Corpus are voluntary contributions—most solicited by
asking students to sign a permission form. Details on these six considerations
will follow in the rest of the section.
102
up for the present lack of the tagging component. (However, as Labov, 1996,
suggested, when intuition and introspection are employed, the following
principles should be observed: the consensus, the experimenter, the clear
case, and the validity principles.)
Course Syllabus
defines written
assignments
E
T
Student
submits
assignment
f Tutor
evaluates
draft
e
new to incorporate
versions it in corpus
File cannot
be used
File checked Student
I
for problems submits Student
E
such as electronic disinclines
File can be incompatibility scripts
used
Information on author,
assignment type and date V Corpus
development
entered in database
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4.1.4 Seeking permission
At the end of courses students were asked to submit the electronic copy of
their essays and research papers. I explained to them my purposes, saying
that I aimed to analyze their scripts in relation to other students' contribu-
tions. In most instances, students were willing to do so.
In the early stages of the development, only oral permissions were
sought. In each instance, submissions were sought after the students had re-
ceived their grades for the course, so that their decisions may not affect eval-
uation. By letting me save a copy of a script, the students would consent to the
act of incorporating the text in the collection. To enhance the reliability of
the process, however, I introduced an authorization form i n 1996, which was
the time of bulk additions to a relatively small learner corpus. A copy of such
a form appears in Appendix J.
Not only was the change a result of making the project fully legal, but it
was also based on a socialization consideration. I made the move to ask for
official permits so as to contribute to the sense of professional community
among students and teachers. Familiarizing onself with the concept and
practice of copyright was seen as an additional element of language
education at the department. Further, the decision was supplemented by
suggesting to students that they submit their printed assignments with a ©
notice. For one thing, not many students knew what exactly the symbol
represented and how this related to academic standards of free expression
and of text ownership. Some may even have found the proposal superfluous,
thinking that the teacher was making too much fuss. But when one considers
the problems of copyright infringement in many subcultures, and specifically
the occurrence of plagiarism at Hungarian universities, my approach
arguably promoted an authentic experience of being initiated into the
scholarly community.
104
However, incompatibility of proprietary word processing software code
in the text file was harder to overcome. For the first two years, before word
processing software became widely available in educational institutions, I
had had to exclude texts that could not be converted properly. More recently,
I have been using shareware programs for any text file that my word process-
ing programs could not extract.
When the technicalities are taken care of, real work on text preparation
for corpus inclusion can begin. This process serves three functions: recording
contributor data in the corpus database, ensuring that the content of the file
is compatible with the concordancing application, and editing the text for au-
thenticity.
The first function presents no hurdles: I have used the computer's file sys-
tem hierarchy to maintain the database. Figure 23 illustrates, via a screen shot
of a window on the Macintosh desktop, the file hierarchy concept.
As will be detailed in section 4.2.1, the corpus is divided into five subcor-
pora. The screen shot shows one of the folders highlighted, and the con-
tained folders listed, storing files by semester, then by gender, and finally by
text type.
The second function is also relatively straightforward once the file is
saved locally: Cone, as most other concordancing software, can process data
saved as ASCII, or text-only files.
The third function, however, is much more time-consuming, given the
short experience most students have had with word processing. Much as one
of the requirements for most submissions in the past five semesters has been
for students to check their texts for typing and spelling errors, some have con-
tinued to submit files that needed careful editing. Deciding whether an error
was a typing or a spelling mistake has not always been easy. Yet, I have
worked out a procedure that may be regarded as reliable.
I decided to take action and change text only if the error was clearly a typ-
ing mistake. This meant changing words like "langauge" to "language" or
"teh" to "the." That is, transposed characters were always amended. The clean
text policy of the JPU Corpus project meant that no other mistakes were cor-
rected so that the data would remain as authentic as possible (a similar ap-
proach was employed for text handling in the ICLE project; see Granger,
1998a).
Finally, texts were edited by removing any author identification from the
header, such as bylines, and components such as course codes, any graphics,
tables and references.
105
JPU Corpus
14 items 110.9 MB in disk 140.9 MB available
Name Si:
ES
LPS
PGS
^7 WRSS
1. 1996 Fall
2. 1997 Spring
3. 1997 Fall
4. 1998 Spring
C% Female
Figure 23: A window of part of the corpus in the Macintosh file system
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data and analysis to answer it. It is typically supplemented by reference ma-
terials to be collected on the basis of the readings section of a syllabus and as
the writer's own initiative. In most regards, the research paper can be viewed
as a small-scale thesis, or as one of the body chapters in a thesis. (Figure 24 i l -
lustrates the curricular composition of the scripts.)
JPU Corpus
Q Q
Pre-service
In-service language education
language education
2
1
Language
Practice
Writing and
e 1
Russian
Retraining
£L-9
Language i Research
Cm
Research 1 and Writing
Practice
Skills Skills
3 Elective
courses
2 Elective
courses
2 Cultural
Studies
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In terms of actual procedures used, I have employed two corpus linguistic
techniques, two statistical models, and one language educational approach.
As for the corpus linguistic techniques, I distinguished between operations
on the complete corpus and on various samples. Data processing was carried
out via Con 1.7:1 opened each of the 332 files in the program, sorted the text
alphabetically right to the keyword, and saved the KWIC concordance. This
stage provided the raw material for concordance analyses and other tech-
niques. To collect information on the composition of the full corpus, I also
saved the alphabetical index that the program can provide, together with i n -
formation on tokens and types. The same procedure was performed on each
of the subcorpora.
A limitation of Cone is that it cannot automatically produce a frequency
list. This, however, posed no difficulty as a database application, FileMaker
Pro, has this tool. I opened each of the alphabetical index files for the main
corpus and the subcorpora and sorted the contents by the frequency of
words.
With these operations done, I printed KWIC and frequency list pages to
study their content. Online searches were also carried out.
It was at this stage that common corpus linguistic techniques were per-
formed: KWIC analyses, calculating normalized frequencies, comparing most
frequent word forms, and drawing up the statistics for lemmatized words in
the main corpus and the subcorpora.
These steps were taken to have a large set of materials on which to test
hypotheses—of which those that required statistical verification were loaded
into a spreadsheet program to obtain significance information via the chi-
squared test and A N O V A . The former model, used for observations i n the
JPU Corpus and between the PGS and the WRSS, makes no assumption about
the normal distribution of data and can be applied for frequency compar-
isons based on different size corpora (McEnery 8c Wilson, 1996, p. 70). The
latter is suitable for studying the effect of variables across three or more
populations, using interval scales (Koster, 1996).
Finally, the third type of method used for this study comprised the pro-
duction and evaluation of classroom worksheets that have been piloted in
earlier courses, as well as the development of material to illustrate how such
an approach can be exploited for guiding individual study.
W i t h these methodological considerations, we can now move onto the
specific details of the current state of the corpus.
108
4.2 The JPU Corpus
4.2.1 The current composition of the corpus
The 1999 version of the JPU Corpus contained 412,280 words in 332 scripts,
each from a different student. This volume represents over twice the size of
the individual national subcorpora contained in the ICLE, making the JPU
Corpus one of the largest written learner English data sets. Earlier, some
ninety students were represented by multiple scripts, but extra contributions
were removed so as to avoid bias. Two courses of action were taken for this
purpose. When a student submitted multiple versions of a script, the last one
was incorporated. Alternatively, for students who participated in more than
one course, the scripts for which they received the higher marks were i n -
cluded. As Figure 25 shows, each text is stored in one of five subcorpora, ac-
cording to type of course the authors attended.
I Scripts
Russian Retraining
Electives
Language Practice
Postgraduate
0 100 200
The Russian Retraining subcorpus (RRS) is the smallest unit, with two types of
text: Language Practice personal descriptive and argumentative essays by
twelve female students and one male, and semi-research paper essays by three
female students of elective courses. I consider this component of the corpus
valuable even though its size is small: it records the performance of students
who participated in a study program that has been discontinued since.
Somewhat larger than the RRS is the Electives subcorpus (ES), comprising
30 scripts. Most were submitted by females: 21 academic essays on C A L L ,
Indian Literature, the application of the internet in language learning, and
DDL. The other nine texts, by male students, are of similar types.
A significantly more representative sample is structured in the Language
Practice subcorpus (LPS): the texts are personal descriptive, narrative or ar-
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gumentative essays. This is also the subcorpus with the most significant male
student population: 31 male and 43 female authors are represented.
The two most sizable subcorpora are the Postgraduate (PGS) and the
Writing and Research Skills (WRSS) collections. In terms of number of scripts
and types of words, the WRSS is more representative, with its 130 texts (by 106
female and 24 male contributors). The text types represented by the WRSS are
personal essays (23), with the rest of the collection (107 scripts) made up by
research papers. (For more details on types of research paper in the subcor-
pus, see the sections on hypotheses 9 and 10.) However, in terms of tokens,
the PGS is larger: with 82 students (68 female, 14 male) contributing to this
subcorpus, it is made up by 123,459 words. The relative significance of each of
the five subcorpora is demonstrated in Figure 26: it charts the JPU Corpus by
the number of scripts in them.
H Postgraduate 24.7%
I Writing and Research 39.2%
C3 Language Practice 22.3%
Electives 9.0%
Russian Retraining 4.8%
Scripts
Figure 27 also illustrates the distribution of texts in the five subcorpora, this
time calculated by tokens of words in them.
110
• Postgraduate 29.9%
I Writing and Research 26.1%
n Language Practice 21.7%
• Electives 16.3%
I Russian Retraining 6%
Tokens
Figure 27: Distribution of the texts according to number of tokens in the sub-
corpora
Altogether, the five subcorpora are made up by 17,535 types of words (that is,
distinct graphic word forms), a relatively high number. The PGS is ranked
number one for both number of tokens and ratio (see Table 10); it already
appears that the papers in that subcorpus contain relatively more homoge-
neous texts than the second largest, the WRSS.
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Table 11: Gender representation in the JPU Corpus
Subcorpus Female Male
PGG 68 14
WRSS 106 24
LPS 43 31
ES 21 9
RRS 15 1
Total 253 79
Table 12: The 20 most frequent Table 13: The 20 most frequent
words in the JPU Corpus content words in the JPU Corpus
Rank Word Frequency Rank Word Frequency
1 the 32231 1 students 2164
2 of 14757 2 writing 1552
3 to 11602 3 essay 945
4 and 10835 4 language 898
5 in 9102 5 people 773
6 a 8526 6 english 747
7 is 6409 7 different 746
8 it 4149 8 time 729
9 that 4123 9 use 680
10 I 3695 10 words 660
11 are 3265 11 like* 651
12 they 3195 12 paper 606
13 not 3041 13 introduction 587
14 for 2981 14 make 554
15 be 2916 15 write 553
16 this 2759 16 work 549
17 with 2755 17 way 539
18 as 2732 18 used 531
19 was 2566 19 text 524
20 on 2521 20 reading 506
Note: Like appears as a preposition
and subordinating conjunction
371 times.
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The twenty most frequent words total 15,494, or 3.76% of all tokens. In terms
of content words, we can see that several words in Table 13 belong to the se-
mantic field of writing; this indicates a marked use of such vocabulary, not
surprisingly, in the WRSS and PGS (see also sub-sections on these two sub-
corpora later).
As attested by all corpus analyses, the most frequent word forms are rep-
resented by function words—this can be seen in Table 14, which lists the ten
most frequently occurring types across the five subcorpora. The number one
position of the definite article and the frequency of prepositions are not sur-
prising; what is worth noting is the high rank of the first person singular pro-
noun i n the PGS and the WRSS; the sections that describe the composition of
those units will provide a reason for this occurrence.
Table 14: The ten most frequent words in the five subcorpora
Rank Postgraduate Writing Language P || Electives Russian
1 the (9615) the (8912) the (6640) the (5352) the (1679)
2 of(4357) of (3980) of (3178) of(2561) and (770)
3 to (3636) to (2941) to (2461) to (1868) to (691)
4 and (3297) and (2835) and (2174) and (1758) of(691)
5 in (2758) in (2323) a (1908) in (1569) in (569)
6 a (2596) a (2165) in (1852) a (1389) a (468)
7 is (1930) is (1318) is (1615) is (1127) is (418)
8 I (1761) that (1165) that (1051) it (681) his (273)
9 are (1180) I (1127) it (1018) that (648) he (272)
10 it (1124) it (1110) are (835) be (549) they (244)
In developing the JPU Corpus, one of my early aims was to test the accuracy of
the use of the definite article, the most frequent word in any corpus; also, the
word that appears to be least taught, relative to its importance and frequency.
However, the sheer size of the corpus has made it a daunting task to conduct
such an analysis on the present untagged corpus—still, as will be shown later
in this chapter, such information was obtained on the RRS.
Over seven thousand of the word forms (7,522) occur only once i n the
JPU Corpus. As Table 15 illustrates, the most significant representation of
such lexis can be seen i n the Russian Retraining subcorpus—this adds sup-
port to the observation that the shorter the text, the most likely it is to be
made up by such word forms.
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Table 15: Rank order of the five subcorpora according to ratio of hapax
legomena
Subcorpus Number of Ratio of hapax
hapax legomena legomena
RRS 2070 8.41%
ES 3580 5.33%
LPS 3814 4.26%
WRSS 4163 3.86%
PGS 2854 2.31%
This tendency can be further highlighted by comparing the rank order of the
subcorpora according to ratio of hapax legomena and number of tokens: see
Table 16.
Table 16: Contrasting the rank orders of the subcorpora by hapax legomena
(HL) and tokens (T)
Subcorpus Rank by HL Rank by T
RRS 1 5
ES 2 4
LPS 3 3
WRSS 4 2
PGS 5 1
Although my study cannot be concerned with comparing the lexis of the JPU
Corpus with any large non-specialized NS corpus, I submitted the frequency
list of the JPU Corpus to a rank-order analysis, based on Kennedy's (1998, pp.
98-99) table of the top fifty words in six corpora. Of these, I selected the rank-
order lists for the Birmingham (Bank of English) Corpus, the Brown Corpus,
and the LOB Corpus. Then I rank ordered the words that are common to the
Birmingham and the JPU Corpus, to identify the word forms whose ranks
showed similarity and differences. The two parts of Table 17 list the rank or-
ders for the four corpora.
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Table 17, Part 1: The rank orders of the most frequent words i n three large
corpora and the JPU Corpus: Ranking from 1 to 25 (Based on Kennedy, 1998,
P- 98)
Word || Birmingham | Brown | LOB JPU |
the 1 1 1 1
of 2 2 2 2
and 3 3 3 4
to 4 4 4 3
a 5 5 5 6
in 6 6 6 5
that 7 7 7 9
I 8 20 17 10
it 9 12 10 8
was 10 9 9 19
is 11 8 8 7
he 12 10 12 40
for 13 11 11 14
you 14 33 32 58
on 15 16 16 20
with 16 13 14 17
as 17 14 13 18
be 18 17 15 15
had 19 22 21 47
but 20 25 24 26
they 21 30 33 12
at 22 18 19 34
his 23 15 18 44
have 24 28 26 25
not 25 23 23 13
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Table 17, Part 2: The rank orders of the most frequent words i n three large
corpora and the JPU Corpus: Ranking from 26 to 50 (Based on Kennedy, 1998,
pp. 98-99)
Word Birmingham | Brown LOB JPU |
this 26 21 22 16
are 27 24 27 11
or 28 27 31 22
by 29 19 20 33
we 30 41 40 42
she 31 37 30 70
from 32 26 25 29
one 33 32 38 28
all 34 36 39 45
there 35 38 36 36
her 36 35 29 93
were 37 34 35 39
which 38 31 28 27
an 39 29 34 31
so 40 52 46 65
what 41 54 58 49
their 42 40 41 24
if 43 50 45 60
would 44 39 43 74
about 45 57 54 30
no 46 49 47 84
said 47 53 48 317
up 48 55 52 81
when 49 45 44 54
been 50 43 37 107
After this introduction of major features of the corpus, I will present specific
information on each of the five units. (The most frequent word forms occur-
ring at least 100 times in the JPUC appear in Appendix K.)
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4.2.2 The five subcorpora
4.2.2.1.2 LPS
The LPS is the second largest of the three undergraduate subcorpora. The 74
students contributing to it submitted their scripts over the longest period,
compared with those in the other subcorpora: scripts from as early as 1992
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and as late as 1996 appear in the LPS. Two types of learner English are i n -
cluded: scripts written as part of Language Practice courses in the core cur-
riculum, and those by students i n an advanced Language Practice course
offered in the Spring of 1996. The table listing the most frequent word forms
(Table 19) indicates a more heterogeneous topic base than that of the ES.
Table 19: Word forms occurring 100 times or more in the LPSS
the (6640) all (300) could (153)
of (3178) an (300) well (151)
to (2461) other (281) coffee (147)
and (2174) she (281) than (143)
a (1908) students (278) its (142)
in (1852) them (278) up (141)
is (1615) his (264) my (138)
that (1051) so (255) use (131)
it (1018) only (250) many (130)
are (835) these (248) should (129)
not (779) some (244) been (128)
they (749) who (243) first (126)
for (742) group (242) out (126)
be (729) also (241) different (125)
as (655) has (238) two (124)
this (645) do (237) language (123)
with (620) if (233) how (119)
on (558) were (231) any (118)
can (516) will (226) always (115)
have (515) would (223) get (114)
or (474) because (205) news (114)
but (457) what (205) cards (112)
i (457) most (200) much (HI)
their (457) time (196) new (109)
was (457) her (194) children (107)
one (377) course (187) good (107)
we (361) had (187) important (107)
he (357) like (187) those (105)
from (351) when (181) world (104)
people (346) very (164) every (103)
which (337) dallas (163) such (102)
about (331) our (163) your (102)
by (327) life (162) family (101)
you (327) no (161) make (101)
at (323) even (156) after (100)
more (318) student (155)
there (302) way (154)
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4.2.2.1.3 W R S S
Table 20: Word forms occurring 100 times or more in the WRSS
the (8912) at (439) three (194)
of (3980) can (427) well (190)
to (2941) but (416) so (188)
and (2835) them (397) did (187)
in (2323) b y (381) words (187)
a (2165) o n l y (373) people (184)
is (1318) these (355) student (182)
that (1165) essays (349) english (181)
i (1127) how (341) use (181)
it (1110) had (339) we (181)
they (880) more (335) paper (179)
was (848) there (332) articles (177)
on (764) first (324) time (176)
not (761) my (320) different (168)
this (695) two (316) research (168)
for (687) all (301) hungarian (165)
students (682) he (270) between (164)
with (650) also (261) has (163)
as (638) who (252) his (163)
be (620) most (248) she (163)
are (584) other (248) write (162)
one (584) out (234) than (161)
essay (555) because (229) introduction (157)
or (547) news (225) used (156)
about (523) what (222) would (156)
their (503) some (214) make (154)
writing (497) you (208) topic (151)
were (489) when (205) word (147)
an (455) do (200) up (146)
from (449) if (197) verbs (146)
which (444) could (196) year (144)
have (443) will (195) many (143)
119
course (142) same (124) text (110)
paragraph (140) four (122) events (109)
work (139) no (120) sentences (108)
university (138) made (119) after (107)
those (130) question (119) conclusion (106)
found (129) article (115) each (106)
should (128) its (115) papers (105)
find (127) second (115) results (104)
like (127) day (114) such (103)
into (126) any (HI) last (102)
number (125) five (111) reader (101)
page (125) way (HI) sentence (101)
information (124) writer (HI) according (100)
Table 21: Word forms occurring 100 times or more in the RRS
the (1680) their (203) i (139)
and (770) for (199) be (138)
to (691) that (199) which (126)
of (680) not (195) or (122)
in (569) are (191) from (119)
a (468) as (191) on (111)
is (418) this (181) about (110)
his (273) was (168) have (106)
he (272) with (168) by (105)
they (244) can (167)
it (210) but (144)
4.2.2.2.2 P G S
Finally, the PGS is the largest i n terms of tokens of all the five subcorpora. The
82 students submitting research papers participated i n postgraduate
Research and Writing Skills and Cultural Studies courses i n 1997 and 1998.
There is considerable variety of vocabulary i n the most frequent types of
words, as attested by Table 22, the majority of content words indicating a
preference of such themes as writing and language education.
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Table 22: Word forms c 100 times or more in the PGS
the (9615) how (341 you (177
of (4357) some (341 items (176
to (3636) english (335 up (176
and (3297) words (335 very (176
in (2758) text (332 part (175
a (2596) different (331 time (175
is (1930) were (328 paragraph (170
i (1761) book (322 writer (170
are (1180) write (316 between (168
it (1124) reading (311 well (168
that (1059) when (309 new (167
they (942) two (299 way (165
be (869) other (289 skills (164
for (864) tasks (282 unit (164
writing (857) only (281 written (164
with (837) will (254 papers (158
not (823) sentences (253 conclusion (157
this (795) do (252 could (157
my (769) had (250 same (157
as (757) essay (246 teaching (157
or (731) use (246 information (155
on (694) if (244 after (153
can (692) because (243 vocabulary (153
students (680) all (241 did (151
was (662) style (234 into (150
have (660) most (232 three (149
which (584) also (230 found (147
their (569) sentence (224 listening (147
about (498) topic (223 any (143
but (479) so (218 no (143
an (476) has (215 our (143
them (451) work (205 know (140
from (448) used (203 questions (140
we (448) research (202 word (140
one (443) texts (202 he (139
these (443) make (197 read (139
there (442) grammar (196 teacher (139
introduction (396) should (196 question (135
more (393) out (193 content (134
paper (379) exercises (189 ideas (134
language (375) reader (188 essays (132
by (373) task (186 its (132
what (371) find (185 results (131
first (359) like (183 too (131
at (352) each (181 activities (129
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category (129) teachers (117) four (108)
good (128) number (116) another (107)
help (128) aim (115) parts (107)
letter (128) many (115) according (106)
subject (128) does (114) course (105)
main (126) order (114) general (105)
who (126) she (114) level (105)
important (125) analysis (113) following (104)
would (125) attention (113) types (104)
people (124) knowledge (113) both (103)
your (124) type (113) may (103)
me (123) get (112) exercise (101)
method (122) form (111) made (101)
then (122) give (111) mistakes (101)
his (121) school (111) point (101)
than (119) given (110) been (100)
thesis (119) speaking (110) paragraphs (100)
intermediate (118) story (110) units (100)
second (118) readers (109) where (100)
present (117) categories (108)
4.3.1 Hypothesis 1
The first hypothesis suggested that the RRS will contain a number of i n -
accurate uses of the definite article. There were three reasons for this
hypothesis. Of the sixteen students in the RR Language Practice course, fifteen
used to be teachers of Russian, a language that employs no article. As
Hungarian definite article usage is governed differently, there was a
probability of marked negative transfer in the second foreign language,
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English. The second reason for such a hypothesis was that these students had
a relatively short time to prepare for their university education, a condition
that may not have been counterbalanced by the increased amount of
Language Development tuition they received. The third reason was that this
group did not enjoy the opportunity of submitting multiple drafts, and thus
the chance of error was assumed to be higher.
To test this hypothesis, I generated the KWIC concordance of the RRS
and analyzed the citations for the definite article. Of the 1,680 occurrences,
103 were eliminated, as these were quotations from various sources. Of the
remaining 1577 citations, I hypothesized erroneous uses would reach about
100, or about every sixth in one hundred co-texts.
The hypothesis was rejected: the total number of errors in the use of the
definite article was 43. The result shows the effectiveness of students' learning
and applying the rules of using the definite article. However, as the study
could not investigate the frequency of error of not using a definite article, the
finding cannot be regarded as conclusive. Also, as co-texts cannot always
provide sufficient information on context, the 1,577 samples may have con-
tained more erroneous uses, which could not be determined on the basis of
subjective parsing.
4.3.2 Hypothesis 2
In the second phase of the analysis of the corpus, transitional phrases were
investigated—involving the full corpus and by comparing observations in
the PGS and the WRSS. Hypothesis 2 was concerned with the distribution of
frequencies of the following discourse markers: but, however, still, yet, on the
other hand, and nevertheless. In particular, the hypothesis suggested that of
these phrases the coordinating conjunction but would be most frequent, and
that in sentence initial position this frequency would remain. For emphatic
change of focus or argument, students were encouraged to employ the con-
junction, besides opting for what appear to be more preferred choices i n
academic writing, such as however, and on the other hand. Rather than using
such wordy transitions as "however, it should be pointed out that" or "yet, it
is important to note that," the simplicity of but often results in effective sign
posting, as confirmed by such authors as Strunk and White (1979) and
Zinsser (1998).
To test the hypothesis, the frequencies of these phrases were tabulated
for the main corpus and the three subcorpora. The results are shown in Table
123
Table 23: The frequencies of contrasting transitional phrases i n the JPU
Corpus and two subcorpora in sentence-initial position
Phrase JPU | | WRSS PGS
But 308 75 61
However 138 23 47
Still 21 7 3
Yet 24 3 2
On the other hand 35 3 13
Nevertheless 25 5 7
4.3.3 Hypothesis 3
Clarity of written expression, in whatever genre, is enhanced by the use of
concrete verbal phrases that accurately identify the reader's intentions and
adequately cross-reference an earlier segment of the text. This is especially
true of academic writing, which needs to operate with valid reporting verbs.
However, this area appears to be a source of problems for the non-native
writer, whose vocabulary may not be wide enough and who has not had ex-
tensive reading experience in the target language.
One early insight I gained as a writing tutor into both native speaker and
non-native speaker academic texts was the frequent use of the phrase
"mentioned above/' and its many active and passive variants. I identified
three potential problems with this usage. First, on many occasions, the act of
mentioning appeared to be a form of hedging, referring to an important point
in the argument made earlier. Instead of finding a "mention" of these points, I
would often locate a discussion, a definition, an illustration. The first prob-
lem, then, was that of validity. The second reason I became interested in the
phrase was related to the adverbial component. Referring to the antecedent
as being "above" appeared to characterize most formal text types, such as
those i n the legal profession, and in instructions. Its use in academic writing
may contain the intentional or unintentional desire to make the text more
formal than one may consider necessary. The writing courses aimed to sensi-
tize students to this issue so they could look for alternative expressions. The
third problem area was maybe the most relevant from a linguistic and peda-
gogical point of view: what many authors referred to this way appeared in the
previous sentence. While another frequent use of the phrase appears to be in
concluding sections of papers, with the adverb being an all-purpose filler for
"in this paper," the frequency of the phrase was also high in sentences making
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an anaphoric reference to a point in the previous sentence. In these contexts,
simple deictic phrases would suffice.
Hypothesis 3 suggested that there would be a relatively high frequency of
"above" i n anaphoric verbal phrases, and that a significant verbal collocate
would be mention. Further, the hypothesis claimed that in the PGS and WRSS
these frequencies would drop, as a result of the practice students had i n
those courses. To verify or reject it, the hypothesis was submitted to the fol-
lowing analysis. First, I obtained the KWIC concordances for the variants
mentioned above, above mentioned and above-mentioned. The frequencies
of these expressions were recorded for the main corpus and the two
subcorpora, as shown in Table 24.
1 I
JPU Corpus and two subcorpora
JPU WRSS | PGS
24 1 1 o |
The hypothesis has been confirmed by the test, as shown i n the table. To de-
termine the level of statistical significance of the finding, however, I ran the
chi-square test on the data. As is clear from Table 25, over 23 occurrences of
the phrase were observed i n the non-writing subcorpora (Rest of JPU). I
tabulated this data, as shown in Table 4.16.
Table 25: Frequencies of the phrase in the non-writing subcorpora (RRS, ES,
LPS) and the two writing subcorpora
WRSS | PGS | Rest of
JPU
1 | 0 | 23
The chi-square value of 46.45 (df = 2) was significant (p < 0.001), lending sup-
port for the hypothesis that students in the non-writing courses used signifi-
cantly more such phrases than i n the writing courses. In this instance, it ap-
pears that both pedagogical and statistical significances were present.
In noting these occurrences I located a number of similar variants i n the
main corpus. These included two main types of phrase: past participle +
above and definite article + above + noun phrase (such as listed above, de-
scribed above, detailed above and the above facts, the above criteria, the
above writers, and even, occurring twice, the above paragraph).
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4.3.4 Hypothesis 4
Related to the previous area of investigation is the fourth hypothesis, con-
cerned with the performative collocates of I. The study of this issue was ne-
cessitated by a potential pedagogical outcome: I wished to gather data on
what the 332 writers of these texts identified as their aims and methods i n
their texts, either in explicit thesis sentences and statements of method or in
topic sentences referring to a particular point made in the main body of the
text. This information is necessary to form an overall view of the types of aims
students identified for their scripts, and can serve as the basis of evaluating
writing strategies in students' texts.
This hypothesis was a broad one: it suggested that aims would be primar-
ily identified by the would like + to infinitive structure (Type 1). For state-
ments of method and topic sentences, the J will construction would be more
frequent (Type 2). To test this claim, I ran the KWIC concordance on the full
corpus and analyzed the keyword J, identifying patterns that suggested sig-
nificant collocates in the two types. Then I recorded the frequencies of the
individual patterns and rank ordered the frequency of collocates. The results
are shown in Table 26, with the frequency of the performative in parentheses.
There were a total of 44 occurrences of Type 1, whereas 93 of Type 2 pat-
terns. Hypothesis 4 was confirmed: Type 2 expressions were more frequently
associated with the modal auxiliary will. These were not only more frequent
than Type 1 patters, but also showed a wider variety and more explicitness.
(The pedagogical application of the finding will be discussed later i n this
chapter.)
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Table 26: Thesis statements, topic sentences and statements of method ex-
pressed by the I would like to structure and / will i n the JPU Corpus
I would like to I will J
analyse / ze (11)
examine (10)
present (7)
attempt (6)
show (5)
(4) examine, focus on, point out point at / out (4)
(3) analyse / ze, present (3) discuss, focus on, give
analysis/classification/tips,
introduce, show, use
(2) emphasise / ze, find out, get (2) check, concentrate on, deal
answer with, demonstrate, describe,
evaluate, investigate, provide
data/view
(1) answer question, call reader's (1) address, argue, compare,
attention, clarify deal with, delineate, devote space for,
describe, explore, get to know, emphasize, draw conclusion, have
give suggestions, highlight, prove, a look, highlight, list, make
stress, suggest, touch upon, try, analysis, make attempt to find,
write monitor, report, shed light, study,
sum up, summarize, survey, take
the mean, tell, try, turn to
4.3.5 Hypothesis 5
Learners of EFL were found to overuse the pattern of the epistemic stem "I
think [that]" in writing in a contrastive study of a sample of the ICLE L2 and
an LI student corpus (Granger, in press). The study found 72 occurrences of
the phrase i n the learner corpus, compared to only 3 in the native corpus.
Granger hypothesized that the reason for this difference (termed "overuse")
lay i n students' differential concepts of spoken and written registers.
Hypothesis 5 investigated JPU students' use of the stem. The two corpora
used i n Granger's study (in press) were made up by 251,318 and 234,514
words, respectively. For comparative purposes, the combined subcorpora of
the PGS and WRSS were used—these are valid sources for such data both in
terms of text types i n them and tokens: the combined length of the two sub-
corpora is 231,211 words. The KWIC concordance of / think [that] was cap-
tured for the PGS and the WRSS, and the frequency of the phrase compared
with those i n the other two samples. The result is tabulated i n Table 27
(showing the frequencies normalized for 200,000 words).
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The difference between the use of the phrase by EFL learners and native
users was confirmed. As can be seen, the difference between frequencies in
the LI and the combined Hungarian learner subcorpora was markedly lower
than between the ICLE and the LI corpus.
However, one is cautioned not to overgeneralize from the result that both L2
learner corpora contained higher frequencies of the phrase. The main reason
for this caveat is that the relative frequency of J think [that] in the individual
subcorpora is hardly significant. Also, we know little of the purpose and au-
dience of the individual scripts contained in the ICLE and the native sample.
In the PGS and the WRSS, the use of the phrase cannot be regarded as
"overuse" unless one further explores these two text organizing principles.
As this was not performed on the other two corpora, the hypothesis that
learners overuse / think [that] cannot be confirmed—further studies are ne-
cessary. For the future analysis, the variables of purpose and audience have
to be controlled and validated for both the LI and the L2 samples.
4.3.6 Hypothesis 6
The use of the adverb very i n written production has been the subject of a
number of rhetorical and pragmatic analyses. Zinsser (1998) suggested that
this adverb and what he called "little qualifiers" such as a bit, a little, sort of,
kind of, rather, quite, and in a sense dilute one's style (p. 71). Explaining his
professional writer's attitude in the context of purpose, he pointed out that
"every little qualifier whittles away some fraction of the reader's trust.
Readers want a writer who believes in himself and i n what he is saying"
(Zinsser, 1998, pp. 71-72). The issue is also related to the Gricean (1975) max-
ims of quantity and quality. As for the use of amplifiers and very, Granger (in
press) hypothesized that when L2 learners "over-use" very, they compensate
for their "under-use" of what may appear to be more specific amplifiers.
Hypothesis 6 was based on the experience that introduced to JPU English
majors the notion that when aiming at concreteness in academic writing, au-
thors need to review their use of such adverbs so that their intentions may be
transparent to readers. As Appendix F shows, a component of a WRSS syl-
labus introduced the "Very-less week" program so as to make students aware
of the issue. The hypothesis claimed that the adverb would still have a high
frequency in the JPU Corpus, but that it would be less significant in the PGS
and the WRSS.
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As Appendix K reveals, very is ranked 83rd i n the raw frequency list of
the full corpus. To test the hypothesis on its distribution, I tabulated the fre-
quencies for very in the PGS, the WRSS, and the non-writing subcorpora
(RRS, ES, and LPS), and then calculated the chi square index to determine
whether differences were statistically significant. When looking at Table 28,
we can see that the lowest frequency was found in the WRSS, followed by the
PGS, and that the highest figure was obtained for the rest of the corpus.
The chi square test revealed that the differences were significant (% = 128.9,
df = 2, p < 0.001), verifying the hypothesis: the WRSS scripts contained much
lower frequencies of very than either of the other two subcorpora. Whether
or not this tendency can be observed in the long run requires further study,
however.
4.3.7 Hypothesis 7
Both in writer- and reader-based prose, authors are advised to look for ways
to enliven their language by the use of specific expressions that carry their
exact points and attitudes. McMahan and Day (1984), Raimes (1996), and Leki
(1989), among others, made this point. Zinsser (1998) added that for such
specificity to occur on the vocabulary and text level, one needs clarity of
thought: in personal essay writing and in academic discourse, writers are ad-
vised to establish simplicity, rather than clutter. Critically reading one's own
text, sharing with others, and monitoring the progress during revision are the
stages of how this development takes place.
One form of clutter of thought and of expression, in both L I and L2 writ-
ing, is the use of imprecise vocabulary that does not readily lend itself to in-
terpretation. The writing pedagogical experience of the past semesters at JPU
has familiarized me with the issue, and by reading and commenting on stu-
dents' drafts, I aimed to enable participants to work on clarity and specificity.
This is a long process. To investigate a part of the related segments of the JPU
Corpus, I looked for the occurrence of five words that seemed to be frequent
in student writing: two nouns, two adjectives, and an abbreviation: case,
thing, good, interesting, and etc. Hypothesis 7 claimed that the frequency of
these words would be lower in the PGS and the WRSS than in the rest of the
JPU Corpus, as students i n the WRS courses had the advantage of practicing
learning and revising strategies for the avoidance of these vague terms.
To test the hypothesis, I obtained the frequency of the lemmas CASE and
THING, and of the two adjectives and the abbreviation, and calculated the
value for each set of distribution. The results appear in Table 29.
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Table 29: The distribution of and statistical information for the frequency of
each of the five words in the three subcorpora
Word
CASE
PGS
121
WRSS
76
Rest of JPU ||
146
yl
8.77
df |
2
P
<0.05
1
THING 74 46 159 74.46 2 < 0.001
good 128 90 163 20.97 2 < 0.001
interesting 68 22 61 26.73 2 < 0.001
etc. 19 5 68 71.28 2 < 0.001
The table reveals that for each word, the differences of frequencies were sig-
nificant; the lowest level for CASE, and for each of the other four observa-
tions, the high statistical significance level of < 0.001 was obtained. This ver-
ifies the overall hypothesis that in the writing subcorpora specificity of ex-
pression was not marred by the frequent use of these words.
4.3.8 Hypothesis 8
The last investigation involving the full sample of the JPU Corpus was con-
cerned with two prefabricated patterns: the fact that, and in order to. The first
of these often appears in both LI and L2 texts with no apparent extra infor-
mation contained in them. The third phrase is regarded by several sources as
a redundant prepositional phrase that can often be substituted by the simple
to infinitive (see, for example, Strunk & White, 1979; Raimes, 1996; and
Zinsser, 1998).
As far as the fact that is concerned, Granger (in press) noted that L2 stu-
dent writers demonstrate excessive "over-use" of the phrase, also citing
Lindner (1992), who studied a corpus of German EFL texts and suggested that
the high frequency of the phrase can be attributed to students' perception
that expository and argumentative writing has to carry high "verbal factual-
ness."
The hypothesis claimed that there would be lower frequencies for the fact
that and in order to in the PGS and the WRSS than in the rest of the JPU
Corpus. To test the hypothesis, the same procedure was applied as for testing
the previous one. The results appear in Table 30.
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Table 30: The distribution of and statistical information for the frequency of
As the table shows, part of the hypothesis was confirmed by the test: the
phrase the fact that is significantly more frequently used i n the three subcor-
pora than either the PGS or the WRSS. However, no similar trend was ob-
served for the phrase in order to—the distribution of its frequency being
fairly even. The second part of the hypothesis was thus rejected.
4.3.9 Hypothesis 9
So far, we have seen the results of eight investigations, highlighting various
lexical choices students made in writing. They have involved the analysis of
one subcorpus, the full JPU Corpus, contrastive studies across the subcor-
pora and the analysis that showed similarities and differences between the
JPU Corpus and the ICLE. For the last two investigations, I selected the re-
search paper samples of the WRSS. As noted in section 4.2.1 on the current
composition of the JPU Corpus, the majority of scripts, 107, were submitted as
the final research paper requirement of the course. This collection represents
a valid basis on which to test hypotheses 9 and 10, the former related to
introductions, the latter to conclusions.
The investigation of the types and composition of these first sentences of
the introductions was motivated by the linguistic and pedagogical concern
with the importance of drafting and revising introductory and concluding
matter. By looking closely at this sample, we can gather useful information on
students* choices, using authentic data that can be exploited for future lan-
guage education (to be discussed in detail in the next section of this chapter).
Of the 107 papers, 33 discuss aspects of Hungarian newspaper articles
published on the day students were born. As section 3.3.3.2.1 suggested, this
option was designed to include a personal intrinsic motive for students to
begin to want to do research. The high number of such papers seems to prove
that the approach was successful. However, a large number of other content
and method types are also represented in this subcorpus—these are listed in
Table 31.
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Table 31: Content and method types in the 107 research papers in the WRSS
Type Number
Newspaper articles from the day student was born 33
Analysis of students' writing 30
Survey among students 20
Word processing for writers 4
Types of revision 3
Analysis of WRS course tasks, readings, procedures 2
Analysis of Umberto Eco's writing 2
Survey among teachers 2
Analysis of teacher's comments on portfolios 1
Analysis of essay test markers' comments 1
University syllabus analysis 1
Analysis of writing textbooks 1
Introductions i n 75 Readings 1
Analysis of introductions i n HUSSE Papers 1
Analysis of narrative essay 1
Analysis of Zinsser's notion of simplicity 1
Models of paragraph 1
Analysis of structure in research papers 1
Proficiency test for high-school students 1
The hypothesis claimed that the type of introductory sentence chosen by stu-
dents would affect the length and vocabulary of the first sentence. Besides, I
aimed to gather descriptive information on the frames of the first sentences
(Andor, 1985). To test the hypothesis, the first sentence of each introduction
was saved as a separate document, which was then processed by the con-
cordance^ also calculating tokens, types, and average sentence length i n
different groups: in short, the introductory sentences were treated as a mini
corpus. Besides these measures, a table was also designed, listing the types of
introductions observed.
The mini corpus of these sentences contained 1,946 words, of 579 types, a
ratio of 3.36. The average length of a sentence was 18.18 words.
To test the validity of the hypothesis, I performed a content analysis of
the sentences, using categories. Initially, I identified five categories to capture
the types of frames of the introductions, representing different approaches I
knew students employed in their texts. These included
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> opening with a narrative ("The first thing that many peo-
ple do in the morning is opening one of the daily news-
papers and browsing among the articles."
> giving a definition of a field, an issue or a problem
("Students' opinion about syllabi can influence the
popularity of courses.")
> beginning the text with five semantically germane nouns,
verbs or adjectives ("Clutch, weep, glare, jerk, loathe.")
The last of these introductory frames was first employed and practiced, pri-
marily for personal descriptive and narrative essays, in the WRS course in the
Spring 1998 semester.
In categorizing the introductory sentences, I scanned them for traits of
these frames. As some introductions did not fit into the original categories,
new ones were set up:
These labels were then assigned to the introductory sentences. To test the re-
liability of the categorization, the same procedure was conducted a second
time. In only two instances was there a difference between the first and the
second result, which were identified with a question mark, and the first and
second label recorded. Altogether, I identified twelve types of introductions
in the WRSS sample, with the 13th represented by the problematic examples.
When these measures were taken, the frequency of types was rank-ordered.
The results appear in Table 32. The table shows overwhelming preference for
four types of introduction: those based on a definition, a personal incident,
an obvious issue, and a historical detail. Altogether, the four types account
for the majority of the papers, 83 out of 107.
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Table 32: The rank order of types of introductory sentences i n the WRSS sam-
ple
Rank Type Frequency |
1 definition 47
2 personal 15
3 obvious 12
4 historical 10
5 aim 7
6 method 4
7 five 3
8 citation 2
reader
? (obvious-
definition;
obvious-
historical)
9 narrative 1
question
title
To confirm or refute the hypothesis that the type of introduction affected the
length of the first sentence, I devised the following procedure. Of the 107 sen-
tences, I selected the 83 that belonged to the most popular options. As the
rest of the sentences were each represented by only seven or fewer examples,
they were eliminated from the investigation, as their low frequency would not
have given sufficient information on length distribution. After this, I calcu-
lated the length of each of the 83 sentences in the four main groups. When
these indices were obtained, I determined the effect of the type on length via
one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Table 33 presents the statistics.
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Table 33: Results of the analysis of variance on the data of length of first sen-
tences
Source df SS MS F Pr[X>F]
Total 83 4609.24
Grand Sum = 1504.00 Grand Mean = 17.90
4.3.10 Hypothesis 10
Similarly to the importance of how a research paper opens the theme for the
reader, in writing the conclusion's last sentence, the author has an opportun-
ity to make a last and maybe lasting impression. In this investigation, I ana-
lyzed the final sentences of concluding sections of the 107 papers, looking for
the same types of information as in the previous study. Hypothesis 10 claimed
that there would be a number of types of concluding sentences, which in turn
would affect their length and vocabulary. The procedures for testing this last
hypothesis were the same as for the previous one.
The mini corpus of the concluding sentences was made up by 105 sen-
tences—two fewer than in the introductory mini corpus, as two students did
not include a conclusion in the submission. The sample contained 2,389
words, representing 818 types, resulting in a ratio of 2.92. The rounded aver-
age length of sentence was 23 words. When compared with the same statistics
for the introductory m i n i corpus, we can see that concluding sentences
tended to be somewhat longer, using more types of words on average than
the introductory ones. However, the differences cannot be regarded as
marked, as shown in Table 34.
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Table 34: Descriptive statistics of the two mini corpora
Index Introductions Conclusions
Tokens 1946 2389
Types 579 818
Ratio 3.36 2.92
Average length 18.18 22.75
As for the typology of the last sentences, the following eight categories were
set up initially:
Again, not all concluding sentences could be grouped under these headings.
The three new categories added were
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Each of the 105 sentences was coded, and the grouping double-checked. In
the second analysis, the original division was found to be reliable.
Table 35: The rank order of types of concluding sentences in the WRSS sam-
ple
Rank Type Frequency
1 qualitative 47
2 practical 26
3 obvious 9
4 unclear 7
5 quantitative 5
6 question 3
7 hypothesis 2
limitation
non-sequitur
8 citation 1
reader
The two most popular last statements in the mini corpus were represented by
the qualitative and the practical outcome types. This result is in line with pre-
vious pedagogical experience suggesting that student writers favored these
options. They also appear to be relevant for the types of research design the
scripts were based on. However, the high ranking of the obvious type of sen-
tence and of the unclear category calls attention to the need for more practice
in the area of writing conclusions. As the next section on the pedagogical ex-
ploitation of the corpus will show, this can be facilitated by channeling back
the information on students' scripts to the writing course, using authentic
student texts.
Finally, to test the relationship between type of concluding sentence and
length, I employed a one-way analysis of variance test for types. I used the
sentence-length data for the qualitative and practical groups, and the com-
bined length for the obvious and unclear types. The results appear in Table
36.
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Table 36: Results of the analysis of variance on the data of length of last sen-
tences
Source df SS MS F Pr[X>F]
Total 88 9401.51
Grand Sum = 1978.00 Grand Mean = 22.22
Qualitative Mean: 23.36
Practical Mean: 24.23
Obvious + Unclear Mean: 15.62
The table shows that the analysis revealed a significant effect of type of con-
cluding sentence and length: F = 4.34; p = 0.02. Whereas the mean length of
the qualitative and practical type of concluding sentences was almost identi-
cal (23.36 vs. 24.23 words), the length of the combined group of obvious and
unclear type sentences was 15.62, for which the analysis confirmed significant
variation. Thus, Hypothesis 10 claiming that type of sentence affected length
was verified.
The statistical finding may imply that students who wrote the type of con-
cluding sentences that were categorized as either unclear or obvious them-
selves had difficulty ending their papers, and thus they opted to write much
shorter sentences than others. This hypothesis, however, does not intend to
suggest that there is correlation between quality of conclusion and quantity
of concluding sentence. Also, factors such as grammatical accuracy of the sen-
tences, the type of concluding sentence and the full concluding paragraph,
and the appropriateness of the type of conclusion in relation to the body text
of the research paper are to be investigated in the future.
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As Chapter 2 demonstrated, D D L is often used for individual study.
Applying the classroom online concordancing technique, the tutor and the
student focus on relevant issues, arising from either the student's or the tu-
tor's initiative. Parallel concordances are exploited, as in Johns's (1997b)
kibbitzer technique. However, the corpus of students' texts facilitates pair and
group work, too. In several WRS courses, students were provided with hand-
outs that featured samples of their own writing, the purpose being that I
aimed to draw attention to the importance of lexical and collocational
choices. As authorship was hidden in these examples, the affective filter was
lowered, yet the studying and discussing of the co-texts allowed for the effec-
tive use of the monitor (Krashen, 1985).
1 tions about the television and most of my pupils agree with her point of
2 cially on the introduction part. When my pupils had finished their works
3 scussion. It is fascinating for me that my pupils liked that Barbara - the
4 opic's historical background. Some of my pupils opted for this method,
5 irstly, I reply on the second question. My pupils were satisfied with their
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1 and analyse it. The next step was that my students had to fill in a questi
2 of the original introduction and what my students have done. I wanted
9
3 ng the original introduction and using my students opinions about this
4 the specific. My last question was for my students what they think, what
9
5 ussion. I am going to prove it through my students works. There was a
The purpose of the second example was to present to students the task of re-
porting the author's aims in a research paper. I had sampled the introduc-
tions of their submissions and found a limited lexis of verbs that announced
the purpose and method of the paper. Although most of this vocabulary ap-
peared to be relevant to the main texts they were clipped from, I realized
there was a need to raise students' consciousness of the importance of using
more specific verbs in these sections. The following handout was produced.
When you read or write a paper, you often find that reporting what
the researcher will do greatly facilitates the clarity and relevance of
the results. With a partner, list ten verbs, appearing in introduction,
that indicate what the paper will "do " After that, skim the worksheet
and underline those you listed.
1 and distribution. In this paper I will address the latter of the issues,
2 links with the rest of the paper. I will also scan for the thesis sentenc
3 were written in 1996. I will analyse my essay's introductio
4 texts, conclusions and references. I will check whether there are
5 and their analyses. In my paper I will concentrate on semantic relati
6 are analysed in a text. I will concentrate on pronouns in t
7 a foreign language - writing skills. I will evaluate my essays in terms of
8 that makes a text coherent. I will examine repetition in the
9 and Oleanna - of the chosen essay. I will examine the text according to
10 making the writing more effective. I will introduce different revision
11 many hyponyms and antonyms, but I will introduce some here.
12 The hypothesis that I will present and discuss in some d
13 in terms of their structures; I will survey the introductions, the
After the task, students discussed the use of verbs they listed but did not find
on the worksheet.
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4.4.3 Guiding individual study
In writing courses, tutors aim to allow students to experiment with topics, text
types and purposes so that what they learn in the sheltered environment may
be applicable i n future courses. The process approach to writing pedagogy
emphasizes this need for sustainable improvement—but even i f the curricu-
lum facilitates cooperation between courses, in the framework known as writ-
ing across the curriculum, the role of the writing course has been fulfilled
when the course ends. To provide for continuity after these classes are over,
writing tutors can apply one task type based on DDL: the individual study
guide based on each student's last submission to the course (Horvath, 1999b).
In recent JPU ED writing courses, undergraduate and postgraduate stu-
dents have received such tasks. Combined with the tutor's assessment of their
work, these guides aimed to raise students' awareness of discrete features of
their writing, positive and negative qualities that I commented on i n the final
assessment but also regarded as suitable for further study. The use of the
guides followed weeks of work on the text: the students and the teacher had
consulted the merits of the submission and the latter suggested areas for the-
matic, structural, and grammatical improvement. It stands to reason that indi-
vidual students' consciousness of their writing strategies and skills grew as a
result—what the study guides added to this process was the opportunity to
focus on one factor of their writing. Example 3 presents a study guide for a
student who was asked to consider replacing the all-purpose noun "things"
for more specific terms in the paper.
1
or a comic strip. They are usually funny things in some connection
2
to underline, to write in bold type and other things. One of the six "La
3
language in a variety of forms ( desribing things, people, places st
4
They should be able to inquire about these things. They should be ab
Example 4 is similar to the previous one: it, too, is concerned with concrete
vocabulary, this time challenging the writer to evaluate her data and identify
more precise terminology instead of "good."
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Example 4: What makes a good ***?
revises the essential rules of how to write a good composition, from a goo
composition, from a good introduction to a good conclusion. In this exer
from what you are trying to say. It's a good idea to check through y
feelings; word order; semantic markers; a good introduction and con
of how to write a good composition, from a good introduction to a good
Potentially the most intrinsically motivating of this type of study guides are
those that invite the student to scan and reflect on the co-texts of the first
person singular pronoun. When such use is frequent, the student can dis-
cover new contexts for the theme, enabling her to verify a focus.
1
Both the classroom and the individual study guides aimed to raise students
awareness of their own writing, so they were in a better position to continue
to improve editing and revising skills. By using students' original texts in the
early stages of developing a research paper, I aimed to help students from a
discourse community in a sheltered environment. Scaffolding and focusing
on discrete elements of their writing was not employed to focus on error;
rather, the objective was to highlight features that represented choices writ-
ers made i n the process of exploring a field. The study guides also encour-
aged exploitation of students' texts after the course ended. The concordance
revealed lexical choices that were often subconscious. Used i n combination
with more traditional task types, the concordance-based study guides can re-
sult i n increasing levels of learner autonomy, an essential criterion for
development in the long run.
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4.4.4 Other applications
Besides the study guides prepared earlier, the analyses presented i n this
chapter lend themselves to practical applications. As noted in section 4.3.4,
students used the modal auxiliary will more often in thesis and method state-
ments than the J would like to construction, and they employed a wider array
of verbs. This data can be adopted for WRS sessions that deal with the need
for explicit and valid information on, for example, how the student will pre-
sent various data types.
The verbs that were shown to collocate with / will can be listed and the
following worksheet prepared for pair work:
The verbs listed below are clipped from previous students' research
papers. They were used in the Introductory and Method sections.
With your partner, discuss what these verbs indicate in a paper.
Then, suggest which three of the verbs were most frequently used
by the students.
check discuss present
address
compare evaluate summarize
analyse
concentrate on examine survey
analyze
deal with focus on
argue
delineate give analysis
attempt
demonstrate point out
The JPU Corpus sample can facilitate the preparation of a large number of
such authentic study guides.
143
Digitized by Google
Yet even with these limitations, the corpus is representative enough for
valid linguistic and pedagogical application. In the next phase of its devel-
opment, I am planning to focus on incorporating first and last versions of
personal narrative essays and research papers. A subcorpus will provide
data for analyzing lexical and discourse changes a text undergoes during the
process of revision. This parallel set of data will enable future research on
vocabulary choice and size. Also, a growing corpus will continue to provide
the raw material for classroom concordancing and study guides.
A second plan is to include the test essays written in the past six years as
part of the proficiency tests. The current size of that handwritten data set is
about half a million words. As the conditions of the essay writing test have
differed greatly from those that gave rise to scripts currently incorporated in
the JPU Corpus, a more refined view of learner written English may emerge.
Together with the present structure of the corpus, these two sets of data can
also facilitate diachronic studies of various features of language use under
different circumstances.
Yet another vista of future work is the incorporation of students' theses
in the corpus. The majority of writers who have contributed to the WRS and
PGS subcorpora are still at JPU and will be submitting their dissertations in
the next few years. Obtaining the electronic version of these texts would en-
able research to investigate the final outcome of university education.
Finally, to bring about an even more structured synthesis of corpus
methods and writing pedagogy, a new type of annotation will be worked out:
pedagogical corpus annotation (PCA). PCA is what teachers of writing al-
ready do all the time: they mark up text by students, who, in turn, attempt to
understand, critique and apply some of the comments. This part of the peda-
gogical process, however, is often lost to research and pedagogy when the
comments are shared. With PCA made part of the corpus, teachers' commen-
tary can be incorporated with the student text, and fine-tuned analysis would
be made possible. Applications of PCA could include the testing of the con-
sistency and reliability of types of comments across comments, as well as the
validation of the comments teachers make. Another use lies in the contrastive
analysis of discourse and style in students' and teachers' texts (Horvath,
2001). Such an incorporation of teacher comments can be managed when
learners submit scripts on disk, so that the reader can add comments via either
a word processor's annotation or footnote module or a dedicated co-author
program, such as Prep 1.0 (Chandhok, Kaufer, Morris, & Neuwirth, Miller, &
Erion, 1993). Besides, students' own reflective notes about the purpose and
evaluation of their own texts and those of their peers can enhance the data of
present-day learner corpus projects.
144
CONCLUSION
This book has undertaken to probe into EFL writing pedagogy with
advanced Hungarian university students. After reviewing relevant theory
and empirical work i n the related fields of writing pedagogy and corpus
linguistics, it has presented a possible ethnography of advanced writing at
university, and given details of the lexical and discourse features of the JPU
Corpus. It has aimed to synthesize pedagogy and linguistics by bridging the
gap between process and product approaches—an area that remained virtu-
ally unexplored before this endeavor. The course of investigation has been
framed by current understanding of writing processes (Zamel, 1992; Zinsser,
1998) and by the increasing prevalence of developing and exploiting
representative and specialized computer corpora (Sinclair, 1997; Kennedy,
1998).
A number of factors have remained beyond the scope of the analysis. For
example, there has been no space to position the theory and practice of the
institutional assessment and evaluation of writing skills, which represents
one of the outcomes of the writing process. This field is well worth further
investigation. Also missing from the evaluation of the writing process have
been the wide range of classroom and study guide materials developed
during the past years and the assessment of the practice i n out-off-class
meetings with students.
However, it seems that the original three-fold aim of the study, that is, to
collect evidence of advanced students' language use, to apply this data to
research, and to apply the results in writing pedagogy, has been met.
In terms of processes, we have seen the development of the writing course
syllabus that gradually moved in the direction of focusing on the process of
developing writing skills, according equal importance to the products of each
step during that process. A number of pedagogical innovations and new task
and text types have been introduced and evaluated. Their analysis has been
special i n that it has had to be predominantly self-reflective: as no concurrent
outside observation took place, the study describing and evaluating E F L
writing pedagogy at JPU has employed mainly qualitative data.
In terms of products, this book has been the first in Hungary to present
the case for the need to collect data on written language performance by
advanced students of EFL. It has described and explained the design and
development of the JPU Corpus, and provided a sample of the lexical and
discourse analysis made possible by the scripts. We have seen the results of
writing pedagogy i n the work of pre-service and in-service students of EFL.
The study of the ten hypotheses has provided evidence of the uniqueness of
learner scripts. One area where the investigation may have opened up a new
perspective of corpus application has been its limited focus on error. Instead,
it has attempted to capture some of the characteristic elements of student
writing i n a non-prescriptive manner, much in the tradition of how corpora of
145
LI texts are dealt with. The pedagogical exploitation of the scripts has been
shown to include the design and application of several types of tasks that are
to guide students' acquisition of lexis and discourse patterns.
Further empirical work is also to be conducted. There are scores of areas
that can be studied for a fuller understanding of learner writing, and, even-
tually, how new generations of EFL students acquire and reflect on written
discourse, whether personal or academic. Of these, I will recommend what
appear to be most needed and relevant, divided into three groups according
to discipline: those that are primarily concerned with writing pedagogy, those
that focus on the analysis of a corpus, and those that would aim to synthesize
the two disciplines.
146
at participating institutions, developing new team-taught
courses, and developing new teaching materials.
> The expertise of the writing tutor and the role of training
and continuous development are two closely related con-
cerns well worth further research. Case studies are neces-
sary to establish the pedagogical variables that con-
tribute to student achievement. This focus could help
reveal how various learner styles match and mismatch
with teaching preferences. The results may also have i m -
plications in developing pre-service and in-service
teacher education.
> A n exploration of current issues in testing writing skills
in EFL at Hungarian secondary schools and universities
would contribute to collecting data on the validity and
reliability of various types of assessment instruments.
More research is to be initiated on the writing component
of the secondary school-leaving exam, on marker training,
and on validation procedures. Teams and individual
teachers could conduct action research and validate
progress and proficiency tests. Experiments measuring
the effects of item and task type, length, and time variables
would require concerted effort and sustained funding.
147
Digitized by Google
mean the contribution of a 200.000-word subset of the
JPUC in the ICLE and the LonLC. Comparative and con-
trastive studies of lexis and discourse could be devel-
oped.
It remains to be seen how many of these suggestions for further inquiries into
the three areas will meet with support. Clearly, awareness of, and interest in,
the need to raise standards in Hungarian writing pedagogy and the potential
outcome of improved levels of student performance are among the motives
that determine the sustainability of any educational proposal. In submitting
my work on the processes and products of advanced writing in EFL, I hope to
have laid the necessary basis and shown some direction for these and other
studies that aim to achieve those ultimate goals.
Furthermore, the JPU collection of scripts can become the basis of estab-
lishing a Hungarian EFL learner corpus, so that college and university stu-
dents' scripts may be collected and studied by a national team. One outcome
148
of this study may be that writing teachers with a similar concern may cooper-
ate i n syllabus development and corpus analysis. We need such a collection
to capture the essence of what goes into the writing process and how its
products can be appreciated.
149
Digitized by Google
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APPENDIXES
APPENDIX A
Essay titles and themes suggested by the ICLE developers (courtesy of
Sylviane Granger)
Most university degrees are theoretical and do not prepare students for the
real world. They are therefore of very little value.
Marx once said that religion was the opium of the masses. If he [were] alive at
the end of the 20th century, he would replace religion with television.
The Gulf War has shown us that it is still a great thing to fight for one's
country.
Feminists have done more harm to the cause of women than good.
In his novel Animal Farm, George Orwell wrote, " A l l men are equal: but some
are more equal than others." How true is this today?
In the words of the old song, "Money is the root of all evil."
Europe
In the 19th century, Victor Hugo said: "How sad it is to think that nature is
calling out but humanity refuses to pay heed." Do you think it is still true
nowadays?
167
Some people say that in our modern world, dominated by science technology
and industrialisation, there is no longer a place for dreaming and
imagination. What is your opinion?
168
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APPENDIX B
Course Description
This Essay Writing course offers students the opportunity to further develop skills
required in university formal writing assignments: short in-class expository
writing,
longer take-home assignments, and the thesis. The course will enable students to
understand the nature of various assignments and take appropriate writer's decisions
based on this understanding
relate to different types of audience and draft essays for these audiences
develop personal strategies that will carry essay theses
review and consolidate spelling, punctuation and formatting styles
appreciate, analyze and comment on other students' writing in a professional
manner
Course Themes
Reading writing
The photography of writing
Types of academic writing
Style manuals
Understanding the assignment
Developing a research plan
Subjectivity vs. objectivity
Focus, Accuracy, Vocabulary, Paragraph and Essay Organization
169
Responding to commentary
Drafting and revising
Presenting the essay
Plagiarism: what it is and how to avoid it
The mechanics: punctuation, dangling modifiers, sentence fragments, run-ons and
comma splices
Requirements
Submission guidelines
Each take-home assignment will be submitted printed and on disk in one of the
following formats: WordPerfect 5 or 6, or Word 2, 5, or 5. For the printed version,
follow the master essay for this course. Students are well advised to join one of the
word processing sessions offered on campus.
Required Readings
Additionally, students will read the drafts of other participants. These drafts will be
available in print and electronic form.
170
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APPENDIX C
Aims
This course aims to enable students to develop writing and research skills
and strategies that will empower them to achieve success in academic
discourse. Central to the course is the communication of what constitutes
academic writing and how such writing is conceived, structured, edited,
drafted and presented. The course will assist students in communicating
relevant ideas and research findings in various types of academic discourse,
such as descriptive essays, review essays and research papers.
Class procedures
Students will be invited to participate in individual, pair and group activities
that will be structured so that they can build on what skills they have
already acquired. Activities and tasks will include predicting, drafting,
interviewing, observing, completing, editing and reflecting in various oral
and written formats.
Course themes
Reading styles
Writing styles
Processes, purposes and preferences
Plain English
Content and form
Readers and editors
Academic assignments
Peer editing
Group writing
The miniature essay
The research paper
The mechanics
Plagiarism and how to attack it
Writing for an audience
Packaging and selling
171
Required Readings
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Marius, R. & Weiner, H.S. (1985). The McGraw-Hill college handbook. New
York: McGraw-Hill. 598-620.
Nikolov, M . & Turner, S. (1997). Guidelines for writing theses in the English
Department. (Ver. 1.4). Pecs: Janus Pannonius University.
Pinker, S. (1994). The language instinct. London: Penguin. 370-403.
Schubert, G. (1996). Introduction to xyllabology. NovELTy, 3 (1), 86-88.
Recommended Readings
Arnaudet, M.L. & Mary E. B. (1990). Paragraph development. (2nd ed.).
Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall Regents.
Berry, A. (1994). The research project. How to write it. New York: Routledge.
Gray, J. and Melis, I. (1996). Little red writing book. Budapest: Nemzeti
Tank6nyvkiad6.
Assessment
Workshop Participation (discussing, brainstorming, group writing,
presenting and commenting) 20 marks
Writing Portfolio
drafts 10 marks
peer editing 10 marks
essay on tape 10 marks
Research Paper 20 marks
Writing Terms and Processes Quiz 10 marks
Assignments
Students will receive a calendar of dates when assignments are due. The
dates will be negotiated in the second class and the calendar signed by
each student.
Copyright
All student material generated in this course will be the copyright of the
individual authors. The tutor will, however, solicit contributions to collections
to be published during and after the course.
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APPENDIX D
Welcome to the Fitness Center. As you might know, this is the place where I
will take care of putting your writing skills into good shape by allowing you
to work out and get the right amount of nutrition and protein. To become a
lean, strong, and energetic sportsperson in academic writing, you will do
some physical, mental, grammar and interpersonal activities.
Workout schedule
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* Three in one * A travel guide to any place
* A high school graduation you've been to
ceremony speech * Profile of a person, based on
* A travel guide to your home interview
town * A description of how you make
* A travel guide to JPU campus coffee, shave, or apply make-up
* A travel guide to a P£cs site
* A description of how a house, a * Truncate it: make each word
bridge, a television set, a book, a longer than two syllables one
pen, a pullover, or some other syllable shorter in any text you
object or construction is made choose
* The revised news story * A learning experience: personal
essay on tape
Required Readings
Besides reading and using class handouts, a thesaurus, and former students'
papers, you will need to read, evaluate and use the following resources:
Hubbard, F. (1988). How writing works: Learning and using the processes.
New York: St. Martin's.
Hurtt, S. D., 8c Boylan, B. (Eds.). (1989). Seventy-five readings: An anthology
(2nd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Kurdi, M . , 8c Horvath, J. (Eds.). (1997). HUSSE papers 1997: Proceedings of the
third biennial conference. Pecs: University Press Pecs.
Novelty. (1997). Volume 4, Number 3.
Strunk, W., 8c White, E. B. (1979). The elements of style. New York: Macmillan.
Zinsser, W. (1988). On writing well. New York: Harper.
Recommended Readings
Assessment
You will receive a grade at the end of this course. The grade will be a
composite of the marks I have awarded to you:
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Attendance and participation: 10 marks
Portfolio: 20 marks
Writing Quiz: 5 marks
Research paper: 10 marks
Note that you will have the option of rewriting the paper. If you choose to do
so, the mark you receive on the last version will be incorporated in your final
grade.
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APPENDIX E
Janus Pannonius University
English Department
Spring 1998
Welcome to the Script Center. In this course, I will aim to enable you to write
in fluent, accurate, and plain English. I encourage experimentation with
topics, genres, audiences, and purposes. During the sessions and out-of-class
meetings, you will practice and improve your planning, sequencing,
presenting, packaging, and editing skills. By the end of the course you can
expect to have become a more proficient writer of the following types of texts:
descriptive essays, reviews, timed exam essays, and research papers.
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(Simon Le Bon) Rhetoric and Sandburg) Presentation of first-
referencing V draft of papers; Assessment
O© The auk flies backward so as
to see where its been. (Carl
| Required Readings •
[Assessments
177
APPENDIX F
Janus P a n n o n i u s U n i v e r s i t y
Department o f E n g l i s h A p p l i e d L i n g u i s t i c s
F a l l 1998
Description
Welcome to the writing center. This course will aim to enable you to present
your ideas, opinions, and observations i n personal narrative and descriptive
essays, as well as to formulate a manageable research question and develop a
small-scale project. You will read and learn about the content, structure, and
presentation requirements of academic writing.
For each class, there will be at least one non-graded written assignment to be
developed later i n the portfolio. Please make photocopies of these scripts so
that you can show them to your classmates, other students at JPU, and
possibly to international students.
Assessment
Participation 10 points
Test 5 points (to be given on November 4)
Portfolio 10 points (to be finalized by November 11)
Research paper 10 points (first draft to be submitted by December 2)
For u.c . the portfolio, and the research paper, I will distribute separate
informal- sheets.
178
Readings
Babarci Bulcsu. "In the Cocoon of M y Room." Novelty 5.3 (1998): 50-51.
Bacskay Katalin. Portfolio. 1998.
Demeter Andrea. Portfolio. 1998.
a
Foldesi Virag. A Piece of Italy." Novelty 5.2 (1998): 48-49.
. Portfolio. 1998.
Gibaldi, John. MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. 4th ed. New
York: M L A , 1995.
Grundy, Peter and Vivian L i . "Responding to Writing: Credible Alternatives
to the 'You Write: I Correct' Syndrome." Novelty 5.3 (1998): 7-13.
Horvath Jdzsef. "Port Folio: Writing Tips for Advanced Students." Novelty 5.3
(1998): 14-18.
, Nikolov Marianne and Sarah Turner. Guidelines for Writing Theses
in the English Department of JPU. Rev. ed. Pics: UP ?ics, 1998.
Racz Emese. "Reforming University." Novelty 5.2 (1998): 52-54.
Research Papers. Online. Available http://ipisun.jpte.hu/~joe/papers. 1998.
75 Readings: An anthology. 2nd ed. New York: McGraw, 1989.
Smalzer, William. Write to Be Read: Reading, Reflection, and Writing.
Cambridge: Cambridge UP.
Vadon Balazs. Portfolio. 1998.
Zinsser, William. On Writing Well: An Informal Guide to Writing Nonfiction.
New York: Harper, 1988.
Note that the libraries in my office, at the department and faculty abound in
resource books for writers. Also, i f you do not yet have one, you will do well
to check out a recent edition of a thesaurus.
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7 Processes and skills: Identifying,
restricting, drafting, revising, and
editing
8 Ketchup and mayonnaise: The intro
and the close
9 Observation and opinion:
Preparing for the research paper
10 Dissecting a paper
11 Assembling a paper
I look forward to the time we will be spending together, and to your ideas
and texts.
I wish you a memorable and exciting time in the writing center.
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APPENDIX G
The photographer
The flight metaphor was similar to photography: it, too, described processes,
but the main purpose this time was to illustrate the relationship between
writer and reader. In a plane flight, the metaphor suggested, the pilot (the
writer) took off (introduced a subject) to passengers (readers) who trusted
the professionalism and skills of the pilot and who had a definite destination
(purpose). The flight is the pilot's responsibility: the route has to be followed
(coherent discussion) at the right altitude (sufficient distance from subject),
with the plane loaded with the right type of fuel (mechanics, syntax,
vocabulary). This was no Boeing jet: passengers at the windows had to have a
fine view of the countryside (theme) below. At arrival, the pilot touches down
safely (concludes), as the crew (the group) were assisted by ground control
(academic requirements) and the co-pilot (peers and the tutor).
181
A variation of this technique was the train ride: a more mundane experience,
this involves the passenger's personal desire to reach a destination after
checking timetables, arriving at the station in time, buying a ticket, locating the
right car, and enjoying the ride. As opposed to the flight metaphor, the train
ride example aimed to communicate the writers own purposes in discovering
a territory, a route, and reaching a relevant goal.
The slim plain English metaphor aimed to illustrate the need for energetic
and strong sentence-level writing. Beginning with the Spring 1997 WRS
course, some form of plain English content was always present in the sessions.
By the following semester, it had become the central identity of the whole
course. As the section on Objectives has shown, goals included putting
students' writing skills in "good shape," and helping them become "lean,
strong, energetic" sports people by allowing them to "work out." While it can
be problematic that the descriptive part of the syllabus contains no concrete
academic writing terms, the Course themes section does identify related tasks
and concepts: simplicity versus clutter, based on Zinsser (1988, 1998), concern
the choices writers make about what degree of formality they envision for
their writing. Specifically, the emphasis on short Anglo-Saxon verbs and
concrete nouns, features of clutter-free texts, as opposed to a preference of
long Latinate expressions and redundancies, qualities of cluttered writing, a
symptom of fuzzy thinking.
182
APPENDIX H
A n example of a co-authored essay: We and Our Names
My name is Polg£r Judit. Before you ask I am my name, and my name is me. I
whether I am the famous world champion cannot live without it, and it's not a name
of chess, I have to disappoint you. I am without the person. Yet the problem is:
not. there is only one me, but thousands with
My father gave me this name by the name the same name. Horvdth J6zsef is among
of a Jewish girl. Maybe he didn't think of the most common names in Hungary.
being another girl who has the same name Not that it's a big deal. Living, as I have,
as his "little angel." 39 years does reconcile one to knowing
Sometimes I don't like my name because one's name is anything but special.
of the silly jokes in the University and in It does get special when I meet a stranger
the offices, but other times I like and he happens to be called—me. Two or
belonging to the group of famous people. three years ago, for example, when I first
Am I famous? No, I don't think so. I have heard of the email service the White House
a funny name, but it hasn't changed me. I had introduced, I sent a message to Bill
am not more valuable than other students, I Clinton. I knew one of his secretaries
am not more intelligent than someone would answer, not him.
else, and I can't give check to the computer And so it was. I got an answer in a couple
in five moves. I am only a person in of days saying my email had been received
society. and that the President was regularly updated
In the past twenty-one years I have met a on all the mail he was getting.
lot of people with common names who At the end of the message, there was a
belonged to the group of Kovacs Jozsefs, request that I should check whether I was
Kiss Katalins, and Horvath Karolys. on the list attached. Some technical
Are they worthless? No, they aren't, but problem occurred as a result of the
many of them run to and fro in the world. thousands of messages to the White House,
If someone introduces himself to me like and they were asking me to check whether
"Antal Imr^nek hivnak," I break into a the right person got the right message.
little smile and memorize his face. He is And so I began scanning the list of names
my friend, he is a member of famous and email addresses for my name. As I was
persons' group. doing this, I noticed dozens of Horvath
Names! Jozsefs. "Htfha," I said to myself, "frni
Your name is you, and my name is me. kene nekik—talan oket is erdekli, ha mar
You have the same name as me and he has igy Osszejfittunk, ki kicsoda."
the same one as you. We are different, but I sent the same message to all these
we are equal. people in the world, twenty-odd of them.
Quite a few answered. There we were, in the
US, Hungary, New Zealand, and Poland, all
with the same names, all with similar
email addresses, all writing to the
President of the US.
It was one of the times that made my
name special.
And the only time Washington made a
notice of me. Me and my name.
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APPENDIX I
The theme selection table of the writing test of the Filter Test used in 1999
First-year students take the proficiency test, which includes a writing compo-
nent. They are instructed to select one element from each of the three
columns, thus making up their titles and the purpose with which a reader will
evaluate the text. The last rubric in the second column is left blank so that
students can add their own selections to a title. (On the development and val-
idation of this type of test, see Horvdth, 1996b; Szabo, 1996.)
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APPENDIX J
A copy of the Permission form
Permission
1 To list my name and the title of my work in the References section of his
Ph. D. dissertation.
Signed by
Signed on (date)
185
APPENDIX K
The most frequent word forms i n the JPU Corpus
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another (374) articles (277) tide (226)
found (374) while (275) fact (225)
news (372) order (273) foreign (225)
where (362) during (272) means (225)
both (361) just (271) able (224)
number (359) being (270) great (224)
tasks (357) why (269) article (223)
know (354) form (268) method (223)
sentence (352) vocabulary (268) following (222)
task (350) teaching (265) show (221)
hungarian (349) last (264) using (220)
much (349) since (262) children (219)
style (348) through (262) parts (218)
written (348) grammar (261) topics (218)
second (345) attention (259) times (216)
skills (345) learners (259) mistakes (215)
help (343) present (259) case (214)
those (340) him (257) practice (214)
reader (338) learning (256) among (213)
world (337) must (252) still (213)
story (335) general (249) events (212)
does (329) verbs (248) need (212)
me (325) without (248) test (212)
main (322) lot (247) listening (210)
own (318) computer (245) useful (210)
questions (318) long (245) end (209)
paragraph (316) whole (245) process (209)
then (315) author (244) several (209)
writer (314) day (244) analysis (208)
your (312) type (244) problems (208)
according (311) university (244) personal (207)
give (310) however (243) something (207)
conclusion (303) short (243) want (207)
four (299) got (242) person (206)
ideas (297) items (239) types (205)
read (296) often (239) years (204)
see (295) take (239) am (202)
always (293) content (237) cannot (202)
every (292) five (236) learn (202)
given (292) others (236) third (202)
ones (290) knowledge (235) before (201)
point (288) activities (233) writers (201)
example (285) aim (233) enough '(199)
think (285) class (233) certain (198)
papers (284) school (233) put (198)
results (284) exercises (232) table (198)
texts (282) place (231) british (196)
year (282) us (230) role (196)
readers (280) kind (227) wrote (196)
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although (193) quite (162) follow (137)
asked (193) family (161) connection (136)
paragraphs (193) go (161) section (136)
problem (192) thoughts (161) situation (136)
rather (191) again (158) war (136)
usually (191) computers (158) called (135)
best (190) now (158) common (135)
here (190) say (158) forms (135)
difficult (189) sometimes (158) members (135)
page (189) culture (157) further (134)
subject (189) categories (156) itself (134)
level (187) down (156) material (134)
based (186) structure (156) thus (134)
discussion (186) back (155) already (133)
opinion (185) letter (155) power (133)
system (185) either (154) special (133)
view (185) especially (154) examples (132)
whether (185) exercise (154) grammatical (132)
having (182) gives (154) name (132)
stories (182) really (154) reason (132)
possible (181) interesting (151) going (131)
might (180) simple (151) hand (130)
category (179) thought (151) later (130)
points (179) data (150) look (130)
next (178) makes (150) picture (130)
answers (177) never (150) cases (129)
unit (177) participants (150) develop (129)
answer (176) american (149) differences (129)
groups (175) beginning (149) wanted (129)
real (175) far (149) intermediate (128)
books (173) better (148) old (128)
introductions (173) focus (148) political (128)
over (173) home (148) towards (128)
thesis (173) right (147) importance (127)
idea (172) study (147) relationship (127)
together (172) experience (146) effective (125)
few (169) little (146) themselves (125)
coffee (168) result (146) understand (125)
said (167) hungary (144) within (124)
speaking (166) shows (144) almost (123)
though (166) meaning (142) behaviour (123)
clear (165) works (142) interest (123)
gave (165) authors (141) mentioned (123)
become (164) britain (141) activity (122)
feel (164) six (140) come (122)
things (164) ways (140) length (122)
dallas (163) seems (139) choice (121)
less (163) started (139) correct (121)
similar (163) characters (138) tutor (121)
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classroom (120) values (112) besides (104)
expressions (119) chose (no) front (104)
purpose (119) features (110) india (104)
cards (118) passive (110) negative (104)
least (118) state (110) states (104)
became (117) try (110) verb (104)
various (117) communication (109) elements (103)
countries (116) description (109) influence (103)
easy (116) examined (109) instead (103)
friends (116) major (109) issue (103)
letters (116) money (109) proficiency (103)
child (115) provide (109) sections (103)
choose (115) against (108) seen (103)
chosen (115) composition (108) theme (103)
development (115) man (108) yes (103)
future (115) took (108) hard (102)
human (115) under (108) interested (102)
ten (115) contains (107) making (101)
thing (115) cultural (107) program (101)
change (114) high (107) related (101)
considered (114) previous (107) age (100)
everything (114) small (107) country (100)
units (114) eight (106) finally (100)
giving (113) facts (106) free (100)
set (113) film (106) getting (100)
social (113) history (106) keep (100)
talk (113) item (106) kinds (100)
writings (113) past (106) sense (100)
exam (112) around (105) tried (100)
specific (112) body (105)
therefore (112) techniques (105)
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INDEX
A Clouse, B. F. 87
Cohen, A . D. 29
Alderson, C. 63
Conrad, S. 53-55
Alitzer, N . 87
Cook, L. 16
Allwright, J. 29
Crews, F. 87
Andersen, R. 17
Andor, J. 63,132
Arnaudet, M . L. 87 Cs
Arnold, J. 87 Csap6, J. 63
Aston, G. 38,43 Csomay, E. 88
Atkinson, D. 10
D
B Davies, F. 13,14
Bardos, J. 8 Day, S. 87,129
Bartram, M . 27 Dheram, P. K. 28
Beal, R. S. 87 Diallo, A . 146
Bello, T.16 Dickson, M . 16
Bereiter, C. 9 DiYanni, R. 87
Berry, R.38,87 Dornyei, Z. 7,25,60
Bertagnolli, 0 . 88
Biber, D. 35, 37,45,53-55
Bloor, M . 13
Blue, G. 18 Eco, U . 87,132
Bocz, A. 63,100 Ellis, R. 6,7,60
Botley, S. 47 Elsbree, L. 87
Boughey, C. 14 Erion, P. 144
Boylan, B. 87 Evans, V . 87
Bracher, F. 87
Brumfit, C. 6
Bullon, S. 36, 38,41
Farrell, P. B. 19
Burnard, L. 42,43
Farrington, B. 57
Fathman, A. K. 28
c Fekete, H . 20
Carroll, D. 58 Fillmore, C. 35,37, 102
Carson, J. 16 Fligelstone, S. 47
Caudrey, T. 12,13,19,20 Flower, L. S. 8
Cavalcanti, M . C. 29 Fox, J. 41
Chandhok, R. 144 Francis, G. 41,59
Chapelle, C. 56 Frankenberg-Garcia, A . 28
Chen, J. F. 29 Frodesen, J. 21,22
Chomsky, N . 34
Clear, J. 41,55
191
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Gadsby, A. 62 Jamieson, J. 56
Garside, R. 46,47 Johansson, S. 40
Gavioli, L. 59 Johns, T. 36, 37, 48, 57-59,101, 139
Gere, A. R. 87 Jones, C. 56, 58
Gibaldi, J. 87
Gillard, P. 62
Goodluck, H . 40 K
Gould, E. 87 Kail, H. 16
Gowers, E. 87 Kaplan, R. B. 8-10;,24
Grabe, W. 9; 24 Kaszubski, P. 62,102
Granger, S. 60-62,101,102,105,127, Kaufer, D. 144
128 Kennedy, G. 34, 38-41,44, 55,59, 99,
Gray, J. 87 112, 114-116
Greenbaum, S. 38,43 Kerka, S. 16
Grice, H. P. 128 Kirk, J. M . 59
Grundy, P. 29, 84,87, 88 Kirschenbaum, M . 16
de Guerro, M . C. M . 25 Kiszely, Z. 88
Koster, C. J. 55,108
Kowitz, J. 58
H Kramer, M . G. 87
Hadley, G. 59 Krapels, A. R. 10,11
Hall, D. 87 Krashen, S. 7, 8,12, 56, 86,139
Hamp-Lyons, L. 10,87 Krishnamurthy, R. 41,46
Hansen, J. 12, 87 Kroll, B. 17, 18
Harmer, J. 87 Kurdi, M . 87
Hayes, J. R. 8
Heasley, B. 87
Hedgcock, J. 30 L
Higgins, J. 57, 58 Labov, W. 35, 103
Hoey, M . 38 Lane, B. 22-24
Hollosy, B. 63 Larsen-Freeman, D. 6
Hoppert, L. 16 Lazar, A. P. 48
Huang, S. 26 Leech, G. 33,40,46,47,59
Hubbard, F. A. 87 Lefkowitz, N . 30
Hult, C. A. 87 Legett, G. 87
Hunston, S. 59 Leki, I. 9,10,16, 29,30, 87,129
Hurtt, S. D. 87 L i , V. 29,84,87,88
Hymes, D. H. 35 Long, M . 7
I M
Inkster; 46 Madden, C. G. 87
Major, E. 20
Malderez, A. 25
Mangelsdorf, K. 26
Marius, R. 87
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Mark, K. 62,63,102 Rholck, T. N . 87
Mary, E. B. 87 Ronesi, L. 16
McCrimmon, 87
McEnery, T. 35,38,44,46,55,108
McMahan, E. 87,129 s
Mead, C. D. 87 Salamon, G. 81,87
Medgyes, P. 14 Sank6, Gy. 56
Melis, I. 87 Sato, T. 26
Scardamalia, M . 9
Meyers, G. 16
Schenk, M . J. 88
Miller, D. 144
Schmied, J. 37
Mindt, D. 59
Scott, M . 48
Minugh, D. 63
Seliger, H . W. 34
Moon, R. 41
Selinker, L. 61,107
Mosher, J. 29
Sengupta, S. 25
Morris, J. 144
Shohamy, E. 34
Myers, S. 29
Silva, T. 9-12
Sinclair, J. 33,35, 36,38,41,42,46,57,
N 59
Neuwirth, C. 144 Singh, 15
Nikolov, M . 20,56,87 Smalzer, W. 84,87
Smith, M . 87
Smith, G. 87
0 Sotiriou, P. E. 87
St. John, M . J. 13
Owen, C. 37,59 Stevens, V . 56-58
Strunk, W. 87, 123, 130
Stubbs, M . 35,36
P Sullivan, N . 15,19
Pally, M . 146 Summers, D. 36,37,45,46
Pennington, M . 57 Svartvik, J. 59
Phillipson, R. 107
Sz
Pinker, S. 87
Prabhu, N . S. 7
Pratt, E. 19 Szabo, G. 82
Szerdahelyi, J. 88
Q Szirmai, M . 63
Quirk, R. 107
R T
Rackham, J. 87 Tono, Y. 62
Raimes, A. 8,9,12,16,17,84,88,129, Tribble, C. 58, 60,62
130 Tsui, A. B. M . 13,14
Ramanathan, V . 10 Turner, S. 87
Rankin, D. 88
Renouf, A. 42,46,63
Reppen, R. 53-55
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V Y
Villamil, 0 . S. 25 Young-Scholten, M . 18
w z
Walton, R. 27 Zalotay, M . 81,87
Wardhaugh, R. 34 Zamel, V . 5,12,28
Warschauer, M . 15 Zinsser, W. 16,17,29,65,84,87,123,
Weiner, H . S. 87,88 128,-130, 132
Whalley, E. 28 Zirinsky, D. 18
White, E. B. 13, 87, 123,130
Widdowson, H . 36, 37, 107
Wilson, A . 35,38,44,55,63,108
Wolff, D. 56
194
Digitized by
A d o n y i Nora, A n d o r k o Reka, Babarci Bulcsii, Bacskay Katalin, Baditz M i h a l y , Kagi Adam, B a j o m i l a /
Peter, Bajusz Judit, B a k o n y i Berta, B a k s a Gabor, B a l a s s a Gabor, B a l a z s i Aniko, Balazsik Eszter, Balint Anita,
B a l o n y i Beata, Barabas M a r i a n n , B a n Helga, Bardi P i r o s k a , B a r k a s z i O r s o l y a , Barna Eszter, Barsi G i z e l l a ,
B a u e r K a t a l i n , Bator M o n i k a , Belsd Adrienn, Bencze K r i s z t i n a , Benko A g n e s , Berecz M o n i k a , Bereczki
V e r o n i k a , B e r k e I l d i k o , B e r n a t h O r s o l y a , Berta Aniko, B e r e s n e T i m a r A n d r e a , Bieber Laszlo, B i l l c g c Virag,
Bizse F e r e n c , B l a s s z a u e r Janos, B l e y e r Julia, B o d r o g i n e F a r k a s P i r o s k a , B o g d a n l a s z l o , Bokodi Judit, B o k o r i
M o n i k a , B o r d a s Paine, B o r s a n y i V a l e r i a , B r a d a k A n n a , B r u n n e r M o n i k a , B u c s a n y i Erika, B u z a s i Balazs,
C z e g l e d i Edina, Csapd A n g e l a , Csako F r u z s i n a , C s e k e I l d i k o , Cserna Gyorgy, C s i b a Bszter, C s i k o s h r / s e b c t ,
C s i p k e n e Kocsis Hva, C s o n g o r Csilla, Csonka G a b o r , Csontos Zsuzsanna, Csordas David, D a r b c z i H e l g a ,
D e m e t e r A n d r e a , D e k a n y Renata, Devai D o r a , Dittrich M e l i n d a , D i t z Eva, Doilibovarhje Csillag M a r i a , Dozsa
E v a , D o b r o s y I l d k o , Dunai Peter, F g r i S z a b o l c s , F l e k Attila, Fngert A g n e s , E n y e d i Szilvia, E r d e l y i D o r a , ElttS
Aniko, E b e l Emese, Elii Veronika, F a r a g b Edit, F a r k a s Agnes, Farkas Gabriella, Farkas R o l a n d , F e h e r Fatime,
F e h e r G y o r g y i , Fejes I s t v a n , F e k e t e B a l i n t , Fekete T i i n d e , Fodor Marten, Fodorne H o r v a t h A n e t t , F o n a i
A n n a m a r i a , F o l d e s i V i r a g , F i i z e r Balazs, Gaalne V o r o s Judit, Gadti L a s z l o , G a l l a i Ditta, Gallen M o n i k a ,
G a v l i k n e R o b o t k a O r s o l y a , Gazdag Zsuzsa, G a l Beata, G e l e n c s e r Peter, G e l l e n n e Kaldi S z i l v i a , Geresdi
A n n a m a r i a , Gergely A n i k o , G e r h a t Zsofia, G e r t n e r Brigitta, Gombas Eva, G r e g o n e S/ili K a t a l i n , Grosch
A n d r e a , G u l y a s Judit, Gyallai K r i s z t i n a , G y e n i s n e O s z b a c h M o n i k a , G y o r o k T i m e a , G y u l a v i c s I l d i k o , I L u i s
K l a r a , H a d n a g y n e Kovacs Judit, Hajdu A n e t t , H a r m a t A g o t a , Harmath Virag, Hartmann Edina, Hatta D i a n a ,
H a z a t y K r i s z t i n a , H e g e d u s Anita, Hegedus E v a , H e n c s e i V i l m o s , H e r k o v i t s Margit, I l e t e s i S a n d o r , H i r t h
M a r k u s , H o r o n y B e r n a d e t t , H o r v a i K r i s z t i n a , H o r v a t h Eszter, H o r v a t h G e r g e l y , H o r v a t h Janos, H o r v a t h
Judit, H o r v a t h M i l c n a , H o r v a t h N o r a , H o r v a t h S a n d o r , H r i v t u i k O r s o l y a , H u b e r Vera, Hubert A n d r e a ,
H u s z a n a g i c s M e l i n d a , Huszar Z s u z s a n n a , H u s z a r n e Szabo M a r i a , Mesne G e s z t e s i Piroska, Inczedy L a s z l o n e ,
Ivan Lucia, Jasko Veronika, J a v o r s z k y M a r i a , Jonas I l d i k o , Jbzsa Anita, J u h a s z H e d v i g , K a l m a r n e M a r i a s
I l d i k o , Kamper Gergely, Karadi O r s o l y a , K a r a g i t s M e n y h e r t , K a s z a s H e n r i e t t a , K a r o l y T i i n d e , K a r p a t i I l d i k o ,
K e c s e - N a g y K a t a l i n , K e r t a i H a j n a l k a , K e s z t h e l y i Erika, K i s g y i i r g y Peter, K i s s Agnes, K i s s G a b r i e l l a , K i s s
Judit, K i s s E s z t e r , K o h a j d a Edina, K o k a s M a r i a n n a , K o m a r o m i C s i l l a , K o n d o r E d i t h M a r i a , K o p j a r Ivett,
KovacS Attila, Kovacs Z s o l t , K o p i s A n d r e a , K o v e s d i V e r o n i k a , K o b e r l Kinga, K r a m m e r n e G e h r i n g £va,
K r i g l e r Gabor, K r i p n e r M o n i k a , L a n g K a t a l i n , L a n g R i t a , L a s z l a i N o e m i , L e h m a n n M a g d o l n a , Leksz A i u l r a v
L e n g v a r i Agnes, L e n a r t H e n r i e t t , L u s p a i G a b r i e l l a , M a d a r a s z M o n i k a , M a g n e T u r c s i c s T i m e a , M a g o n y
Timea, Magyar Z s u z s a n n a , M a g y a r t a l v i D o r a , M a k r a Melinda, M a r o s v a r i n e Deak Z s u z s a , M a t h e i s z E v a ,
Matolcsi L a s z l o , Madai Gellert, M a r k M o n i k a , Marki M i k l o s , M a r k u s M e l i n d a , M e g g y e s i G a b o r , M c r c n y i
A d r i e n n , Meszaros Krisztiin, Mikota E r z s c b e t , M o j z e s Kamilla, Molenaar P. G a b o r , M o l n a r K r i s z t i a n ,
Mondok Agnes, M u t h I m r e , N a g y Agnes, N a g y B o r b a i a , N a g y G y o r g y , N a g y E l v i r a , N a g y - M e l y k u t i L u c a , N e m e s
D o r a , N e m e l h Erika, N e m e t h P i r o s k a , N o g r a d i L a s z l o , Qlall M a r i a , OlK-s A n i k o , Paczolay E v a , P a l l a Ljvia,
Pandur Zsanett, Paposne H o r v a t h Judit, P a p p A r p a d , Papp L s / t e r , P a d a r Denes, P a l i N o e m i , Perjes B e a t r i x ,
Pete I s t v a n , Petti O r s o l y a , Petz Janos, P e r c s i c h R i c h a r d , Petersz T a m a s , Pteit'er B e r n a d e t t , P i n t e r K a t a l i n ,
P i s k o Beata, P o t u r a k L a u r a , P o v a z s a i Z i t a , Ponya K l a r a , Radnai T a m a s , R a c z E m e s e , R a t k a y O r s o l y a , R e k e t t y e
Gabor, Renkb Z s u z s a n n a , Ribiczei Z s u z s a , R o h o n c z i K r i s z t i n a , R o h o n y i B o r b a i a , Roll E s z t e r , Roza S z i l v i a ,
Rozgonyine Inke K r i s z t i n a , Rosa G e z a n e , Saskoi Kinga, Sata E l n d , Sarty M a r i a , S c h l d g l K r i s z t i a n ,
S c h o n b e r g e r T a m a s , S c h r a m Agnes, S c h r o t t i n e T a n u i s i M o n i k a , S c h u b e r t Gabor, S c s a u r s z k i R i t a , S i m o n
G y o r g \ nc, S i m o B o g l a r k a , S i n k a Hilda, S k u l t e t y Judit, S o m K a t a l i n , S o m o r j a i n e O r o s z A n d r e a , Sobs Z o l t a n ,
S r a n k o N o r a , S t e m l e r K a t a , Stile B r i g i t t a , Szabados Peter, Szabo Gabriella, S z a b b I l d i k o , S z a b o I m r e , S z a b o
S o m a , Szakaly Zsofia, S z a l o n t a i M a r i a , S z a r k a B r i g i t t a , S z a n t o G y o r g y i , S z a t h m a r i Timea, Szegedi Csilla E s / t e i ,
Szecsi T i i n d e , S z i k l a i Gabor, Szmolenszky Tiinde, S z o k o l N o r a , S z t a n i c s L i d i a , Szucs Mariann, Szucs Rita,
T a k a c s A n i t a , Takacs Z s o l t , T a n c z i k n e \ ' a r g a S z i l v i a , Tanczos Balazs, T a r n a i D o r a , T a r n a i G a b o r , T i h a n y i
L a s z l o , T i m a r Z s u z s a , Tokorcsi E v a , T o r m a S z i l v i a , T o t h A n d r e a , T o t h A g n e s , Toth B o g l a r k a , T o t h M o n i k a ,
Toth T a m a s , Tovishati L i l l a , T u k e O r s o l y a , Trap) S z i l v i a , 1 r i z n a y Z s u z s a , T r o c s a n y i B a l a z s , T u r i S z a b o l c s ,
T u r i a k T i b o r , T i i r i A n d r e a , Tuii O r s o l y a , Urban Miklos, D z M a r k , V a d o n B a l a z s , Vajda V i o l e t t a , V a c i n e N y a r i
Eszter, V a m o s i Gyula, V a r g a B e r n a d e t t , Varga T a m a s , V a r g a n e U z s o k i M a r t a , V e g h O r s o l y a , V i s z l a i Eszter,
Vizhanyo B a r b a r a , V l a s k o v i t s D o r a , W a g n e r Z i t a , W i t t i n g e r K a t a l i n , W o l l e n t Ida, Z a b o r s z k y Z o l t a n n e , Zajzon
T a m a s , Z o n g o r Judit, Z s i b o r a s Eszter, Z s i g o v i c s n e K o v a c s M a r g i t