The purpose of this paper is to find out the advantages of English teaching strategies of writing in Malaysian secondary schools through compare and contrast of the teaching strategies in China and Malaysia. The study...The purpose of this paper is to find out the advantages of English teaching strategies of writing in Malaysian secondary schools through compare and contrast of the teaching strategies in China and Malaysia. The study of this paper focused on the views of the writing skills from Malaysian secondary schools.展开更多
Plagiarism is one of the main problems Chinese English majors face in thesis writing. This paper talks about the reasons behind it and then comes up with some ways for college English teachers to help their students b...Plagiarism is one of the main problems Chinese English majors face in thesis writing. This paper talks about the reasons behind it and then comes up with some ways for college English teachers to help their students better understand and avoid plagia?rism.展开更多
As the number of Chinese international students studying in the U.S. has grown dramatically in recent years, there has been increasing attention to how English Composition instructors approach these students' writing...As the number of Chinese international students studying in the U.S. has grown dramatically in recent years, there has been increasing attention to how English Composition instructors approach these students' writings. Using a dialogue format representing "narratives of classroom life" (Nelson, 2011a), this paper demonstrates two polemic views held by teachers and researchers: one view sees students' language use as problematic as it differs from the expected standards required for academic success in the U.S., while the other calls for more tolerance of the students' linguistic and cultural diversity and accordingly, more strategic ways to give "error feedback." By opening up the debate, the paper explores possibilities for teachers in the U.S. and around the world to help their students address the gap between academic expectations, and what they are currently capable of.展开更多
This paper reports a study into the use of amplifiers and amplifier collocations in the doctoral dissertations of Chinese EFL learners. A sample corpus of doctoral dissertations by Chinese doctoral students and a cont...This paper reports a study into the use of amplifiers and amplifier collocations in the doctoral dissertations of Chinese EFL learners. A sample corpus of doctoral dissertations by Chinese doctoral students and a control corpus of doctoral dissertations by native speaker doctoral students were compiled and used for the analyses. Results showed that the overall number of amplifiers used by the Chinese students and the native speaker students were comparable. However, the Chinese learners overused totally, very and really and underused entirely and highly in their writing. Moreover, the Chinese learners tended to use more amplifier collocations than their native speaker counterparts. In particular, they tended to use clearly much more frequently to intensify the reporting verbs and to use the amplifiers to intensify the meaning of general adjectives in their writing. It was also found that many amplifier collocations used by the Chinese learners were congruent collocations. The findings may indicate a non-native style within Chinese learners' writing. We argue that Chinese learners overuse amplifiers and amplifier collocations in order to focus the reader's attention as well as to enhance the meaning of general adjectives. Meanwhile, the Chinese learners' mother tongue exerts a clear influence on their use of amplifiers and amplifier collocations. Pedagogical implications are also discussed within the paper.展开更多
文摘The purpose of this paper is to find out the advantages of English teaching strategies of writing in Malaysian secondary schools through compare and contrast of the teaching strategies in China and Malaysia. The study of this paper focused on the views of the writing skills from Malaysian secondary schools.
文摘Plagiarism is one of the main problems Chinese English majors face in thesis writing. This paper talks about the reasons behind it and then comes up with some ways for college English teachers to help their students better understand and avoid plagia?rism.
文摘As the number of Chinese international students studying in the U.S. has grown dramatically in recent years, there has been increasing attention to how English Composition instructors approach these students' writings. Using a dialogue format representing "narratives of classroom life" (Nelson, 2011a), this paper demonstrates two polemic views held by teachers and researchers: one view sees students' language use as problematic as it differs from the expected standards required for academic success in the U.S., while the other calls for more tolerance of the students' linguistic and cultural diversity and accordingly, more strategic ways to give "error feedback." By opening up the debate, the paper explores possibilities for teachers in the U.S. and around the world to help their students address the gap between academic expectations, and what they are currently capable of.
文摘This paper reports a study into the use of amplifiers and amplifier collocations in the doctoral dissertations of Chinese EFL learners. A sample corpus of doctoral dissertations by Chinese doctoral students and a control corpus of doctoral dissertations by native speaker doctoral students were compiled and used for the analyses. Results showed that the overall number of amplifiers used by the Chinese students and the native speaker students were comparable. However, the Chinese learners overused totally, very and really and underused entirely and highly in their writing. Moreover, the Chinese learners tended to use more amplifier collocations than their native speaker counterparts. In particular, they tended to use clearly much more frequently to intensify the reporting verbs and to use the amplifiers to intensify the meaning of general adjectives in their writing. It was also found that many amplifier collocations used by the Chinese learners were congruent collocations. The findings may indicate a non-native style within Chinese learners' writing. We argue that Chinese learners overuse amplifiers and amplifier collocations in order to focus the reader's attention as well as to enhance the meaning of general adjectives. Meanwhile, the Chinese learners' mother tongue exerts a clear influence on their use of amplifiers and amplifier collocations. Pedagogical implications are also discussed within the paper.