• Title/Summary/Keyword: English Conversation

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Example-based Dialog System for English Conversation Tutoring (영어 회화 교육을 위한 예제 기반 대화 시스템)

  • Lee, Sung-Jin;Lee, Cheong-Jae;Lee, Geun-Bae
    • Journal of KIISE:Software and Applications
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.129-136
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    • 2010
  • In this paper, we present an Example-based Dialogue System for English conversation tutoring. It aims to provide intelligent one-to-one English conversation tutoring instead of old fashioned language education with static multimedia materials. This system can understand poor expressions of students and it enables green hands to engage in a dialogue in spite of their poor linguistic ability, which gives students interesting motivation to learn a foreign language. And this system also has educational functionalities to improve the linguistic ability. To achieve these goals, we have developed a statistical natural language understanding module for understanding poor expressions and an example-based dialogue manager with high domain scalability and several effective tutoring methods.

A Study on Language Anxiety and Learning Achievement through Immersive Virtual Reality English Conversation Learning Program (몰입형 가상현실 영어 회화 학습 프로그램을 통한 언어불안감과 학습성취도에 대한 연구)

  • Jeong, Ji-Yeon;Seo, Su-Jong;Han, Ye-Jin;Jeong, Heisawn
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.119-130
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    • 2020
  • This study developed an English conversation learning program in immersive virtual reality (VR) environments and compared its effects with non-immersive VR environment using a computer monitor. The effects of the program was assessed using language anxiety and learning achievement. The results indicated that students' language anxiety decreased significantly after learning English conversation in VR environment, but there was no difference between immersive and non-immersive VR. The two VR conditions also produced similar learning outcomes. Future research on immersive VR need to address cyber sickness problems and develop effective learning contents in order to realize its potential for learning.

An Analysis of English Listening Items on the TOEFL (TOEFL의 듣기문항 분석을 통한 한국대학생 듣기 학습효과)

  • Cha, Kyung-Whan;Yoo, Yoon-Hee
    • Speech Sciences
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.157-175
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    • 2000
  • The aim of this paper was to diagnose Korean college students' listening skills on the TOEFL. The researchers identified which section, among the TOEFL listening Part A, B, and C, is most easily teachable/ improvable during the period of a semester. First, the result of this research shows that Korean students tend to have lower scores in Part A than Part B or Part C. The results indicate that the short informal conversation doesn't give sufficient clues to students, and they don't have enough time to infer the answer. Second, the results revealed that. students showed the lowest progress in Part B after they studied TOEFL listening items and essential idioms for the listening section for 13 weeks. Because students didn't have much experience learning the informal conversation as opposed to the formal one in English, it is harder to achieve an improved grade in Part B, which consists of the informal conversation. But after a semester-long listening course, the average score on TOEFL listening sections increased.

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Cognitive Topic in the Production and Interpretation of Conversation (무엇에 관해 이야기 할까요?--인지학적 논제)

  • Lee, Chang-In
    • Annual Conference on Human and Language Technology
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    • 1993.10a
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    • pp.249-260
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    • 1993
  • 우리 일상 생활에서 매일 이루어지는 대화(conversation)를 살펴보면, 모든 대화는 어떤 '논제(topic)' 중심으로 이루어진다. 이 논문은 이런 논제 중심의 대화를 인지학적인 견해에서 재고해보고자 한다:논제는 우리의 인지구조로부터 어떻게 선택되며, 채택된 논제는 어떻게 상대방에게 전달되는가?

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Pedagogical Functions of Teachers' Conversational Repair Strategies in the ESL Classroom

  • Seong, Gui-Boke
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.77-101
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    • 2006
  • The present study examines various pedagogical functions of conversational repair strategies employed by the teacher in the ESL classroom. As part of interactional resources, conversational repair is defined as the treatment of trouble occurring in interactive language use and is originally designed to deal with communication problems. Research on conversational repair has focused on ordinary conversation and organization of repair practices. Studies on more pedagogical functions of repair sequences initiated by the teacher are very few. The data were from five hours of ESL structure classes in an intensive English institute at a large U.S. university. They were closely transcribed and microanalyzed following the conversation-analytic methodology. The analysis found that ESL teachers' repair techniques not only resolve communication problems but they are also designed to serve several important instructional purposes of teaching the target language. They include creating opportunities of comprehensible input, inducing modified comprehensible output from students, guiding and controlling student output, and initiating corrections by initiating repair.

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Developing a Curriculum of School Hotelier Using a Job Analyis (호텔 종사원의 직무분석을 통한 전문대학의 교과과정 개발에 관한 연구)

  • Park, Jeong-Hwa
    • Journal of Applied Tourism Food and Beverage Management and Research
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.109-123
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of the study is to develop a curriculum of school hotelier using a job analysis. A job analysis is used to reform the educational programs and to develop new ones. For the analysis New Analysis Method and Verification Method is applied. As the results of analysis are the following: Hotel Management, Food & Beverage Management, Cocktail, Hotel Marketing, Room Management, Service Management, Wine and Food, Principle of Cooking, Tourism Law, Hotel & Food Service Management Case study, On the Job Training in Hotel & Food Service, Out Eating Management, Introduction to English, Vocational English, TOEIC. English Conversation, Introduction to Japanese, Vocational Japanese, JPT, Japanese Conversation, Thesis, Language Study in Foreign Countries.

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The Function of the Author and the Poetic Experiments in Lyrical Ballads of 1798 (1798년 『서정민요집』의 저자의 기능과 시적 실험)

  • Joo, Hyeuk Kyu
    • Journal of English Language & Literature
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    • v.56 no.5
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    • pp.973-998
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    • 2010
  • This paper aims at assessing the significance of Lyrical Ballads of 1798, the agreed inaugurator of English Romanticism, in terms of such key concepts as poetic "experiments," "conversation," and the authorial function. The 1798 volume marks an interesting incidence in which an author with no tangible substantiality can wield his authorial function over his works. The volume is signed without the named proper noun-its author is neither William Wordsworth nor Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The figure of the author in this case is realized by the poems he writes; he produces, and is produced by, his works-a fact that constitutes part of the poetic experiments manifested in the Advertisement. Working under this reciprocal production, the Author of the 1798 volume and his poems are collectively aiming at establishing a new class of poetry and an interpretive community. The notion of "conversation" is a key element in the thematic, stylistic ties among individual poems. Poems of the 1798 volume effect multi-layered, "blended" voices. Readers are expected to draw out the topological interweaving among poems through the practices of dialogic reading. In this light, the sequential necessity of "The Rime" and "Tintern Abbey" should be emphasized. They are stitched together in a logic of textual placement and the transition from one to the other is never arbitrary. Most of all, they are working under the same authorial function, complementing each other, and addressing the same poetic project in different textual locations. As an inaugural work of English Romanticism, Lyrical Ballads of 1798 in fact makes so many things happen and yet again anticipates something yet to come with elusiveness. The value of this poetic experiments should be judged not only by what is claimed in it, but what it sets out to do and "how far" it will be performed, as implied in the Advertisement. The efficacy of the volume, more than anything else, is dependent upon the performative power of words.

The Use of Gambits in the English Language Classroom

  • Rafik-Galea, Shameem;Bhaskaran Nair, Premalatha K.
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.8 no.1
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    • pp.85-102
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    • 2002
  • Learners and users of a second language have to resort to a variety of conversational strategies or structures to enable them to communicate effectively and competently. Factors affecting effective communication among English as a second or English as foreign language (ESL/EFL) learners are diverse in nature because of different socio-cultural backgrounds. Gambits as a conversational strategy are used to a large extent and teachers must be made aware of such conversational strategies used by English as second or foreign language learners. Thus, studies focusing on conversational strategies among ESL/EFL learners in the English language classroom are important in order to identify the types of conversational strategies used and to help teachers to understand the appropriate conversational strategies and structures. Such understanding can be used to guide learners to use correct conversational strategies when communicating in English. The purpose of this paper is to highlight the use of gambits as a communication strategy in conversation among non-native speakers of English in an English as a second language(ESL) context based on Kellers conversational strategy signals. (175 words)

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About the Lectures on Medical English at Oriental Medical Colleges in Korea (한의대 교과목으로서 의학영어에 대한 고찰)

  • Kim, Hoon;Lee, Hai-Woong
    • Journal of Physiology & Pathology in Korean Medicine
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.216-221
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    • 2008
  • A lot of medicine-related schools have courses for Medical English in their curricula these days. Medical English of Oriental Medical Colleges is somewhat different from that of other colleges, especially medical schools, in contents for the lecture. The lectures on Medical English of Oriental Medical Colleges need to include : Oriental medical terminology, Medical terminology, Materials about Oriental Medicine and Western Medicine, Writing about Oriental Medicine in English, Conversation with patients in English, Presentation on Oriental Medicine in English. It would be better that the study of Medical English should be placed in the second year of pre-medical course in Oriental Medical Colleges.

Discourse Markers in EFL Learners' Turn-Taking through Computer-Mediated Communication (CMC)

  • Hahn, Hye-Ryeong
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.33-58
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    • 2007
  • The present paper aims at comparing the two modes of CMC - synchronous and asynchronous - in terms of discourse markers used in turn-initial positions. It further attempts to examine the viability and limitations of these two modes of CMC in fostering EFL learners' face-to-face conversation skills. For these purposes, the present study analyzed 33 Korean EFL learners' Web chat and E-mail exchange data. Discourse markers in the participants' Web chat transcripts and those in their E-mail transcripts were identified and then compared in terms of their frequency and functions. The analysis revealed that the participants show difference in their preference for discourse markers depending on the modes of CMC. Also, the functions of discourse markers used for Web chat showed were strikingly different from those for e-mail. Especially, e-mail discourse markers revealed greater discrepancy from the markers in face-to-face conversation. The differences were found to be attributable to the time factor involved with the turn-taking systems of the two modes of CMC, especially the degree of instantaneousness in their turn-taking. Findings suggest that the turn taking skills and discourse marker use in CMC is not applicable to face-to-face conversation contexts. Pedagogical implications are discussed.

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