• Title/Summary/Keyword: everyday language

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Analysis of Elementary Students' Interlanguage in Science Class about Heat and Temperature (열과 온도 수업에서 나타난 초등학생들의 중간 언어 분석)

  • Lee, Ilyeon;Jang, Shinho
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.34 no.1
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    • pp.123-130
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    • 2015
  • For effective science learning, teachers need to rearrange scientific language so that students can understand the contents with their incomplete language resources. Interlanguage is the interplay between everyday language and scientific language. The purpose of the study was to analyze the patterns of interlanguage during 4th grade science class to learn "Heat and Temperature" and to find the features of meaning sharing inside classroom in which a teacher and students participated. The data analysis shows that elementary students' interlanguage has different features compared to scientific language that involves passive voice and content-specialized nouns. Students' interlanguage implied the quality of class community's knowledge-sharing, according to the degree of how students can connect scientific language and everyday language in more effective ways. The implication to elementary science education was discussed.

A Qualitative Study on the Wild Goose Mother's Everyday Life, Family Relationship and Social Networking (기러기엄마로 살기': 일상생활의 구성 그리고 관계 맺기)

  • Kim, Seon-Mi
    • Journal of Family Resource Management and Policy Review
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.41-59
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    • 2009
  • The purpose of this ethnography is to describe and analyze the wild-goose mother's everyday life, her family relationships, and her social networking. Thirteen mothers from New York, California, and Texas, U.S.A., were interviewed with an unstructured questionnaire. Their residency and everyday schedules are arranged around the children's educational conditions. They have experienced difficult relationships with Korean American immigrants, Korean students, other wild-goose mothers, and Americans. They have failed to develop their social capital effectively due to the language barrier and a cultural capital deficiency. As a kind of family strategy, this separation sometimes strengthens the spousal relationship, preventing divorce, but usually weakens the emotional ties and quality of communication between husband and wife. The acculturation gap between the mother and her children may cause the mother to become alienated and exacerbate the generational conflict.

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Language Apprehension among Non Native Speakers of English

  • Rafik-Galea, Shameem
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.103-114
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    • 2002
  • Language plays a central role in everyday communication activities. Therefore, an individual need to be able to use language to communicate with confidence and without fear. One of the major fears that people have is the fear of communication. This fear is most of the time due to a lack of confidence in communicating in a particular language or due to poor proficiency in the language. In some cases it can also be due to attitudinal problems. In the context of teaching and learning English as a second or foreign language, students can have a great fear of using English with confidence. This fear can be an acute one and thus students may avoid using English to communicate. However, non native speakers of English need to be highly competent in the use of the English language for a variety of communicative purposes particularly in meeting the challenges of globalisation and that of the digital age. This article presents some insights on language apprehension found among communication undergraduates who are non native speakers of English.

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Working Memory and Language Disorders : Literature Review (작업기억과 언어발달장애: 문헌연구)

  • Kim Soo-Jin;Kim Jung-Yeon;Lee Hye-Ran
    • MALSORI
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    • no.51
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    • pp.39-55
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    • 2004
  • Working memory is the term used to refer to the mental workplace in which information can be temporarily stored and manipulated during complex everyday activities such as understanding language. The studies on language and working memory are based on Baddeley's phonological working memory and Daneman and Carpenter's functional working memory. This article reviews two working memory models and the studies on language and working memory based on each model. These are described in the implication of working memory in language development and specific language impairment-evaluation and treatment.

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Use of Common Verb Phrases in Describing Everyday Activities by Advanced Korean-speaking Learners of English

  • Lee, Jin-Kyong
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.109-127
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    • 2007
  • As an attempt to investigate the use of common verbs by a small group of Korean college students at the advanced level, the present study describes the students' speech production data collected from picture description tasks. The primary focus of the data description was how the students used high-frequency verbs in describing everyday activities. Out of total 442 units, 149 verbs were erroneously used. All erroneous utterances were classified into four categories according to their characteristics. The most prominent error type was overgeneralization due to incomplete knowledge of lexical items. Results showed that verbs used in everyday life were not easy even for the advanced level students. Although in some cases, L1 influence was discerned, the students' problems are more fundamental. In particular, the data revealed lack of knowledge of collocational possibilities and restrictions, and confusion about semantic boundaries between verbs which have similar semantic areas. The findings suggest that teaching at the advanced level should take contrastive approaches intralingually as well as interlingually to the high-frequency verbs.

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An Analysis of Korean Language Learners' Understanding According to the Types of Terms in School Mathematics (수학과 용어 유형에 따른 한국어학습자의 이해 분석)

  • Do, Joowon;Chang, Hyewon
    • Communications of Mathematical Education
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.335-353
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    • 2022
  • The purpose of this study is to identify the characteristics and types of errors in the conceptual image of Korean language learners according to the types of terms in mathematics that are the basis for solving mathematical word problems, and to prepare basic data for effective teaching and learning methods in solving the word problems of Korean language learners. To do this, a case study was conducted targeting four Korean language learners to analyze the specific conceptual images of terms registered in curriculum and terms that were not registered in curriculum but used in textbooks. As a result of this study, first, it is necessary to guide Korean language learners by using sufficient visualization material so that they can form appropriate conceptual definitions for terms in school mathematics. Second, it is necessary to understand the specific relationship between the language used in the home of Korean language learners and the conceptual image of terms in school mathematics. Third, it is necessary to pay attention to the passive term, which has difficulty in understanding the meaning rather than the active term. Fourth, even for Korean language learners who do not have difficulties in daily communication, it is necessary to instruct them on everyday language that are not registered in the curriculum but used in math textbooks. Fifth, terms in school mathematics should be taught in consideration of the types of errors that reflect the linguistic characteristics of Korean language learners shown in the explanation of terms. This recognition is expected to be helpful in teaching word problem solving for Korean language learners with different linguistic backgrounds.

A Focus-Based Approach to Scope Ambiguity in Japanese

  • Okabe, Ryoya
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Language and Information Conference
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    • 2002.02a
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    • pp.370-382
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    • 2002
  • This paper puts forward an analysis of scope interactions between Japanese adverbial quantifiers like mainichi 'everyday'and tokidoki 'sometimes'and a negative morpheme nai 'not'on the basis of f(ocus)-structures. In this analysis, three f-structures are assigned to a sentence with an adverbial quantifier and a negative morpheme. One of them represents a negation-wide reading, and the other two represent quantifier-wide readings. Some f-structures, however, are unacceptable due to semantic or pragmatic factors. Different scope behaviors of the two quantifiers mentioned above can then be ascribed to acceptability of f-structures.

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The Poetics of Language: Reality, Thought, Language and the World

  • Park, Yee-Mun
    • Lingua Humanitatis
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.349-362
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    • 2002
  • The paper argues for the necessicity of revising many fundamental concepts that we use in everyday situations and in communication such as reality, thought, language, the world and finally the truth. The paper develops the argument that what the word ′truth′ actually signifies cannot be addressed just by explicating what philosophy, science or even religion denote but that it can only be answered fully by the study of language and therefore in a larger context linguistics. Language is the very tool that enriches the communication between one another due to its diverse significations that one may use when expressing one′s views, thereby making life more enjoyable. The paper develops why the above corresponding argument should be justified by developing three outstanding views as follows. The world or reality is indistinguishable from the common worldview that we associate with without the means of language. That the worldview is in essence inseparable from the mental and intellectual representation of it and the only means of expression lies with language. And finally, that the language is a complex signification in itself in every aspect. Language in short is the very essence of what we define as being ′poetic.′ With these arguments in mind, we may once again ponder the signification of Nietzsche′s words when he states that "to see science through the lens of art, and art through the lens of life."

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On the Analysis of Natural Language Processing Morphology for the Specialized Corpus in the Railway Domain

  • Won, Jong Un;Jeon, Hong Kyu;Kim, Min Joong;Kim, Beak Hyun;Kim, Young Min
    • International Journal of Internet, Broadcasting and Communication
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.189-197
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    • 2022
  • Today, we are exposed to various text-based media such as newspapers, Internet articles, and SNS, and the amount of text data we encounter has increased exponentially due to the recent availability of Internet access using mobile devices such as smartphones. Collecting useful information from a lot of text information is called text analysis, and in order to extract information, it is performed using technologies such as Natural Language Processing (NLP) for processing natural language with the recent development of artificial intelligence. For this purpose, a morpheme analyzer based on everyday language has been disclosed and is being used. Pre-learning language models, which can acquire natural language knowledge through unsupervised learning based on large numbers of corpus, are a very common factor in natural language processing recently, but conventional morpheme analysts are limited in their use in specialized fields. In this paper, as a preliminary work to develop a natural language analysis language model specialized in the railway field, the procedure for construction a corpus specialized in the railway field is presented.

The Patterns of Interlanguage in Science Learning and the Characteristics of Interlanguage through the Change of Understanding of Science Languages (과학 학습 과정에서 나타나는 중간언어의 유형 및 과학 언어에 대한 이해수준 변화에 따른 중간언어의 특징)

  • Yang, Chan-Ho;Kim, Ji-Yeong;Shin, Pil-Yeo;We, Hat-Nim;Shin, Myung-Hwan;Kang, Do-Young;Kim, So-Yo;Min, Hyun-Sik;Kim, Chan-Jong;Noh, Tae-Hee
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.31 no.5
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    • pp.745-757
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    • 2011
  • In this study, we investigated the interlanguage of ninth graders that was used to classify and explain the phenomena related to the change of the matters in a group discussion and semi-structured interview. The patterns of the interlanguage were classified and analyzed through the change of their understanding of science languages. The analyses of the results suggested that the interlanguage of the students are classified into the three patterns according to its meaning and form. Pattern 1 is science language used in combination with everyday language to express scientific meaning. This was used by most students regardless of the level of understanding of science languages. Pattern 2 is everyday language used to show scientific meaning, which was used by students who had better understanding of science languages than the others. Pattern 3 is using languages with multiple meaning, which was mainly used by students who have superficial understanding of science languages. Educational implications of these findings are discussed.