Browsing by Subject "Second language socialization"
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Item Open Access Common ground and positioning in EFL classrooms : a comparison of native and non-native english-speaking teachers(2017-05) Kuka, SeçilThis study aimed to investigate how native (NEST) and non-native English-speaking (NNEST) teachers find common ground with their students and the ways they position themselves while establishing common ground in their social interactions. The purpose of the study was to investigate NESTs’ and NNESTs’ ways of establishing common ground with their students and positioning through common ground in their social interactions in tertiary level language classrooms in an English as a Foreign Language setting. The researcher collected data through classroom observations. Three NEST and three NNEST teaching partners who teach the same classes in turn were observed and audio recorded during the first and fifth weeks of a new course. Data were transcribed and then analyzed using an analytical framework adapted from Kecskés and Zhang’s (2009) socio-cognitive perspective on common ground and Davies and Harré’s (1990) positioning theory through discourse analysis. The findings revealed several differences in terms of the ways NESTs and NNESTs established common ground and positioned themselves in their social interactions. More specifically, NESTs’ lack of shared background with their students led to more establishment of core common ground (i.e., building new common knowledge between themselves and their students), which also positioned them as outsiders in a foreign country while NNESTs maintained the already existing core common ground with their students (i.e., activating the common knowledge they shared with their students) by positioning themselves as insiders. Moreover, the real life purpose of NESTs’ common ground building acts through L2 made their teacher-student interactions good opportunities for the use of target language to the leaners’ benefit. NNESTs’ conversations involving the activation of their shared linguistic and cultural background, however, aimed to facilitate classroom instruction. These findings helped draw the conclusion that NESTs and NNESTs differed in relation to their social interactions involving common ground and positioning. NESTs created meaningful contexts that enabled opportunities for language socialization through which students not only practiced language but also negotiated meaning. On the other hand, NNESTs activated the common knowledge they shared with their students to facilitate classroom instruction. Considering the results above, this study contributed to the literature by providing insights into the differences and similarities NESTs and NNESTs have in terms of their language socialization.Item Open Access Common ground for positioning: a discourse analysis on second language socialization(Hacettepe Universitesi, 2014) Ortaçtepe, DenizApplying Kecskes and Zhang's (2009) dynamic model of common ground in positioning theory (Davies & Harre, 1990), the present study aims to explore the second language (L2) socialization of Turkish students through the discursive processes as well as the skills they adopted in social interactions with the American speakers during a formal reception at an American university. The findings indicated that the Turkish students endorsed similar discursive processes not only to establish common ground as the American speakers', but also to position themselves in the speech context. This study highlights that engaging in real-life conversations with the target language speakers (Gumperz, 1996) encourages L2 learners/users (Cook, 1999) to embrace the discursive practices that are shared within a particular speech community. It also provides suggestions for future research embracing more longitudinal/ethnographic approahes to examine L2 socialization as well as teaching implications for instructional materials and contexts that reflect authentic social encounters.