M1 W7 Discourse Analysis (These Notes Ran Over Two Slots in The F2F Version)
M1 W7 Discourse Analysis (These Notes Ran Over Two Slots in The F2F Version)
H/O3 has a fuller definition (with other terms and bibliography on it)
The work you will do in here is largely concerned with coherence and cohesion (halfway down the
handout on the right).
H/O 4 asks you about coherence and cohesion – answer the question and then look at the key at
the end of this document.
Coherence H/O 5
Look at H/O 5 and choose which one is more coherent and say why.
Which one would your students choose ?
Mine used to choose the ‘wrong’ one (when I was teaching from this book), probably because they
found it easier to understand and a lot of their writing is quite like that too.
If you have worked your way steadily through About Language you will recognize this next handout
as it is Scott Thornbury’s take on how a text is held together by cohesion. If you look through the
top and the text about cotton, he lists all the cohesive devices that hold it together.
Then he gives you two more texts and asks you to identify the same devices in those.
Try it – there is a key at the end of the document.
Reference – H/O 7
First skim through the short text and say where it comes from (and if you don’t know what an
obituary is, look it up).
Now underline 7 instances of reference in that text and each time say whether they are anaphoric
or cataphoric. Nothing is exophoric.
Substitution H/O 8
Look at the examples of substitution and divide them into four groups.
The best way to do this is to work out what words would be there (and look at those).
Parallelism
These are four examples of things your learners might want / need to read.
Where is each one from ? How do you know ? What features of lexis, structure and
discourse does it have that are characteristic of that type of writing ?
The role of noticing in second language acquisition has been the subject of some attention recently (see for example Batstone 1996,
Schmidt 1990). It has been suggested (Schmidt and Frota 1986) that two kinds of
noticing are necessary conditions for acquisition:
1 Learners must attend to linguistic features of the input that they are exposed to, without which input cannot become ‘intake’.
2 Learners must ‘notice the gap’, i.e. make comparisons between the current state of their developing linguistic system, as realized in
their output, and the target language system, available as input.
‘Matching’ is the term used by Klein (1986) for this second type of noticing: ‘the learner must continuously compare his current
language variety with the target variety’ (1986: 62). Ellis (1995) prefers the term ‘cognitive comparison’, since this ‘better captures
the fact that learners need to notice when their own output is the same as the input as well as when it is different’ (ibid.: 90). Noticing
operations occupy a key role in Ellis’s model of second language acquisition, facilitating the process whereby explicit knowledge
becomes implicit knowledge. In short: ‘No noticing, no acquisition’ (ibid.: 89).
Right above the language selection list, you’ll find a hyperlink that says “Login.” Click the link and Moodle will
present you with the login screen, as shown in Figure 2-3. Your username and password will depend on how
your system administrator set up the system. Moodle has a number of options for user authentication,
including email authentication, or an LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) server, or users can
register their own accounts. Self-registration is the default method, and many sites use this.
If you need to create your own account:
1. Click the “Start now by creating a new account” button.
2. Fill in the new account form by creating a username and password for yourself (see Figure 2-4).
3. Enter a valid email address because the system will send you an email to confirm your account. You
won’t be able to log in again until you confirm your account.
4. Click “Create my new account.”
5. Within a few minutes, you should receive an email at the account you specified on the form.
6. Click the link in the email (or copy and paste it into the address window in your browser) to confirm
your account.
Definition
Discourse Analysis examines how stretches of language, considered in their full textual, social and
psychological context, become meaningful and unified for their users. Traditionally, language
teaching has concentrated on pronunciation, grammar and vocabulary, and while these remain the
basis of foreign language knowledge, discourse analysis can draw attention to the skills needed to
put this knowledge into action and to achieve successful communication.
If skills separate written and spoken aspects of language, how reliable are our conventional
resources, which are mainly based on written evidence (e.g. grammar books, dictionaries etc ) ?
How much of what counts as 'discourse' will be automatically transferred from the first language
and how much needs to be specifically taught or focused on in the syllabus, materials or classroom
activities ?
One of these texts lacks coherence, one of them has some cohesion, but not enough.
Which do you think is which and what are cohesion and coherence ?
A. The Austrian composer Mozart was a musical genius. He has got a swimming pool. It
actually tingles on your skin to tell you it is working. Water would then come out of
fountains such as the one shown here. And that is why dogs still chase rabbits.
B. The Austrian composer Mozart was a musical genius. Mozart began writing music at
the age of five. Mozart’s father took him to play at concerts in the great cities of Europe.
Mozart wrote church music. Mozart wrote opera. Mozart wrote nearly 50 symphonies.
Mozart worked hard. Mozart earned very little money. Mozart died poor.
Read the following texts and analyse them for the same features.
Lexical repetition
-Text 1
-Text 2
Indirect repetition
-Text 1
-Text 2
Lexical sets
-Text 1
-Text 2
Tense agreement
-Text 1
-Text 2
Pronoun reference
-Text 1
-Text 2
Article reference
Text 1
Substitution
Text 2
Ellipsis
Text 2
Conjuncts
Text 2
Discourse Analysis H/O 7 Reference
Underline the references in this text. Are they anaphoric (backward reference) or cataphoric (forward
reference) ?
What do they refer to ?
Hale knew, before he had been in Brighton three hours, that they meant to murder him ... That, as it
happens, is the opening of Brighton Rock, but turn up the opening lines of the rest of his books and they
won't disappoint you. Graham Greene, who died yesterday, rich in years and rich in honour, was first of all a
Substitution
Can you divide the following examples of substitution into 4 groups and say what the difference between
them is ?
7. Don't bother washing the cups. We can use the old ones.
December 2000
The authentic text for this question is an article from the on-line Grimsby Telegraph, 21st October 1998,
and is titled “Schoolgirl saves a life – a week after first aid course”.
It is reproduced in Appendix B
5.1 Task A (15 minutes)
Identify four features of the text that are characteristic of its genre (i.e. news story).
5.2 Task B (15 minutes)
Comment on the form and use of the following examples of modality in the text:
(The piece about the internet is now rather quaintly historical, but the discourse analysis is all still
valid)
Text A: The Beginner's Guide to the Internet published by Which On-line (p.27)
Text B; Global Economy - an article from the Eastern Daily Press (Monday March 1, 1999)
Identify and comment on each type of cohesive device used in this paragraph. Include examples
from the text in your answer.
Say which of the two texts is likely to be more difficult for use as a reading text with a group of
intermediate learners and why.
Sample text relating to Question2
Text A The Beginner’s Guide to the Internet published by Which Online (p.27)
The World Wide Web is one of the 1 pages on the same site, or even to pages
most attractive and easy to use parts on a completely different site. It’s this web
to the Internet. Part notice board, part of links that gives the World Wide Web its
magazine and part shop front, it name.
combines the best of traditional 5
publishing with completely new Browsing the web is like following a train
possibilities of its own. One of the of thought. A site created by someone
strengths of the web is that it is very interested in dangerous sports might
easy to publish information. Because include links to sites which concentrate
of this the web has plenty of 10 on one particular sport, to traders who
contributions from ordinary people sell relevant equipment, and so on. It’s as
who want to share their interests and if all the books in a library are somehow
enthusiasms with you. You will also tied together, so that when you pick out
find businesses, small and large, who one about a particular subject, you get all
have something to sell you, as well as 15 the others related to that subject as well.
a selection of information created by
more traditional publishing sources The web of links continues indefinitely.
such as newspapers and magazines. It’s possible to start at the dangerous
sports site, but end up at a site devoted to
On the web, information is arranged into children’s cartoons, having passed
sites and pages. Each site is a collection through pages about news, weather, the
of information maintained by one stock market, fish breeding and children’s
particular individual or organisation. To programmes of the 1970s - among others
make the information manageable sites along the way.
are divided into pages, which are rather
like the pages of a book or magazine. To use the web you need a web browser
– a kind of virtual assistant that finds
However, pages don’t have to be read in pages for you and brings the information
order – in fact they are usually designed on them to your computer screen. Which
to be browsed (or surfed) in whatever ? Online supplies Netscape Navigator
order you want. Version 3, which is one of the most
popular browsers. Netscape is very easy
This is possible because pages on the to use. Even complete beginners can find
web contain links – these usually appear their way around it very quickly.
as underlined words which lead to other
W7Discourse Analysis key for H/O 1
1 Newspaper article - sentence length paragraphs / headline with some omission / complex noun
phrases (billionaire dad’s 10m jet) pre and post modified / lots of reporting – reportedly, claimed, is
believed / direct speech to make things immediate
2. Academic article - references, definitions / dense packaging of information – can’t skim it,
nothing is repeated, all builds on what has gone before / passive constructions / formal choice of
lexis.
3. Instructions - imperatives, ifs, simple present / terms defined for clarity / broken down into steps,
some lexis is very field specific.
Lexical repetition
-Text 1 HOSPITAL ...Hospital ... hospital; cleaning ... clean
-Text 2 mobile phone ... mobile phone
Indirect repetition
-Text 1 VISITS ... inspecting, hospital ... the place;
-Text 2 using ... operate; approval ... acclaim
Lexical sets
-Text 1 hospital ... health ... casualty ... doctor ; minister ... officials
-Text 2 phone ... messages ... callers ... communications; piece of cake ... easy as pie ... half baked
Tense agreement
-Text 1 the first paragraph is narrated in the past simple
-Text 2 all the verbs are in the present
Pronoun reference
-Text 1 The minister ...his appointment ... he went about
-Text 2 using it ... The MT-20 ... controlling it ... the MT-20 ... it has all the functions; all the functions ... They
make
Article reference
Text 1 Safdarjang Hospital ... the hospital ... the place
Substitution
Text 2 Pick one up ... i.e. pick an MT-20 up
Ellipsis
Text 2 And several (functions) you wouldn't (expect); you'd have to be half baked not to (pick one up)
Conjuncts
Text 2 And ...; No wonder
Answer key to reference exercise
Substitution key
Nominal substitution
1. Your cooker is not working properly.
I know, I need a new one. (cooker)
5. I'll have a pint of beer.
I'll have the same (a pint of beer)
7. Don't bother washing the cups. We can use the old ones. (cups)
Verbal substitution
2. Does anyone want to go to the pub ?
Yes, I do. (want to go to the pub)
4. My mother nags me all the time.
Mine does too. (nags me all the time)
9. Can you give me a lift in your car ? Mine doesn't work. (my car)
Clausal substitution
3. Has the London train gone ?
I think so. (it has gone)
Identify four features of the text that are characteristic of its genre (i.e. on-line news story).
5.1.2 Guideline Answer
1. Layout: Headline (with elliptic articles) followed by body of text. Sentence length paragraphs.
2. Organisation: First sentence expands headline and summarises gist of passage. Successive sentences add more detail,
including circumstantial information (age, job, where from etc). Story told from perspective of the
crisis/main event and its consequences; background information, .e.g. previous events leading up to
crisis, sketched in later. Direct speech to provide immediacy, as well as reported speech to provide
comment. Closes with a “moral” e.g. informed opinion on the event.
3. Grammatical: Long, complex/compound sentences, carrying a high load of information. Frequent use of complex noun
phrases, pre-modified with noun modifiers (“teenager Jennifer…”) and participles “cool-headed”,
“impressed”. Post modification in the form of relative clauses, prepositional phrases and noun phrases
in apposition (“Humberside Ambulance’s community resuscitation officer Steve Johnson”). Use of past
tenses, including past perfect for referring to events prior to “story time” and past continuous for a
situation in progress in “story time” (“was not breathing”). Use of reporting structures, both direct and
indirect. Non-modalised forms to describe events (facts) but a lot of modality when giving opinions and
speculating (i.e. in latter half of text).
4. Lexical: neutral style, neither very formal nor very colloquial. Compound forms: life-saver, cool headed, 15-
year-old.
b) couldn’t: modal auxiliary, followed by perfect infinitive (have + past participle), in negative, meaning hypothetical past
(in)ability: I would not have been able to do it..
c) might: modal auxiliary, followed by perfect infinitive (have + past participle), meaning past possibility
d) could: as (b), forming the verb phrase of the main clause of a “third conditional” construction; meaning past
possibility (therefore could be substituted with might)
Uses some complex NPs and Uses some complex NPs and
complex sentences with complex sentences with
subordinate clauses subordinate clauses
Interest:
Many of my students chat on the internet regularly, and here the The British Council we have a CALL lab which is
always very popular. My students are not interested in issues about the European economy.