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Observation of new excited ${B} ^0_{s} $ states
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In: Eur.Phys.J.C ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03010999 ; Eur.Phys.J.C, 2021, 81 (7), pp.601. ⟨10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-09305-3⟩ (2021)
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‘New speakers’ on Irish language community radio: new understandings of linguistic variation on Raidió na Life
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Building a language community through radio in the age of social media: the case of Raidió na Life
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The role of emotions and positionality in the trajectories of ‘new speakers’ of Irish
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National identity and belonging among gay ‘new speakers’ of Irish
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Attitudes to Interprofessional Education Among Health Science Students Engaging in a Multidisciplinary Workshop Series
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In: International Journal of Health Sciences Education (2018)
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Reverse engineering language test constructs for Messick’s value implications: a sociolinguistic approach
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Special Issue: Comparing ‘New Speakers’ Across Language Contexts: Mobility and Motivations [Guest Editors]
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Kathryn A. Woolard: Singular and Plural: Ideologies of Linguistic Authority in 21st Century Catalonia : Oxford University Press, New York, 2016, xix + 365 pp, Hb £64, ISBN 978-01-902-5861-0 [<Journal>]
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DNB Subject Category Language
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New speakers of Irish: shifting boundaries across time and space
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‘New speakers’ of Irish in the United States: practices and motivations
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Enactments concerning the Irish language, 1922 - 2016
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Walsh, John. - : Clarus Press on behalf of the School of Law, Trinity College, Dublin, 2017
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‘I didn't know you were allowed two goalkeepers’ : how football managers negotiate invitations to criticise referees in the media
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Observation of $B^0_s\to\bar{D}^0 K^0_S$ and evidence for $B^0_s\to\bar{D}^{*0} K^0_S$ decays
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The art of saying no: A cross-cultural pragmatic comparison of Saudi and Australian refusal appropriateness applied in academic settings
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Changes in the Balawiy Bedouin Arabic dialect of Saudi Arabia 1985-2015
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The development of vocational English materials from a social semiotic perspective: participatory action research
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Abstract:
This study documents the design and use of vocational English materials informed by Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) as social semiotic theory. Extensive studies in language materials development have been undertaken particularly in English for Specific Purposes (ESP) programs in the higher education context (see Harwood, 2014) but only a few in the secondary vocational education sector (see Hua & Beverton, 2013). The study extends the scholarship of ESP materials development in the context of schooling, integrating context analysis, materials creation, and materials enactment (see Singapore Wala, 2013). Grounded in a participatory action research design, this study, conducted over a 13-month period, provides a detailed account of the design and use of the materials in one Indonesian vocational school. School administrators, English teachers, vocational teachers, and 142 students volunteered to participate in the study. Data for the study included field notes, non-participant and participant observations, curriculum documentation, focus group and individual interviews, reflective journals/diaries, and photovoice. The data were qualitatively analyzed using critical thematic and SFL based analyses. The context analysis revealed that while the current language policy provided teachers with full autonomy to design their own materials, the teachers consistently based their instruction on published textbooks, which contained decontextualized exercises geared towards school and national examinations. This situation did not provide students with opportunities to engage with vocational texts. With the support of the school, the teachers and the researcher in consultation with the students created and used text-based materials based on students‘ vocational specializations. The analysis of the actual use of the materials by the teachers and the students revealed that they had opportunities to explore different vocational texts, to analyze how language works in these texts, and to use the language as a tool for communication, knowledge building, and social participation. From a teacher perspective, the teachers viewed the materials development process as professional learning and a way to understand SFL theory and apply it to pedagogical practices, such as content based instruction and text based instruction. This study offers evidence of how social semiotic theory can contribute to ESP materials development and instruction. ; Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Humanities, 2015
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Keyword:
action research; materials development; secondary education; social semiotic perspective; systemic functional linguistics; Vocational English
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/97910
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