Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Conference Programme - IRMSS 15.05.2017
Conference Programme - IRMSS 15.05.2017
PROGRAMME and
ABSTRACTS
Sixth Annual
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH METHODS
SUMMER SCHOOL (IRMSS) 2017
Mary Immaculate College, Limerick,
Ireland
Friday May 19th Sunday May 21st, 2017
1
IRMSS PROGRAMME
FRIDAY MAY 19TH SUNDAY MAY 21ST 2017
(All venues in TARA Building, Mary Immaculate
College, Limerick)
2
SATURDAY MAY 20TH 2017
9:00- IRMSS PLENARY
10:00 TOM MORTON- CONTENT AND LANGUAGE INTEGRATION
IN MULTILINGUAL EDUCATION AS A WICKED PROBLEM:
TOWARDS A TRANSDISCIPLINARY APPROACH
VENUE: T1.18
Chair: Joan OSullivan
10:00- IRMSS PLENARY
11:00 MARIE PARKER-JENKINS EDUCATION IN TIMES OF FEAR: ISSUES OF
EQUALITY, IDENTITY AND BELONGING
VENUE: T1.18
Chair: Jim Deegan
11:00 BREAK
11:30- MARIE RYAN JOHN HARNETT- GIOVANI JANE BRENNAN- SEELY
12:00 Research Expertise Multimodal Fluency SANTOS- Design and delivery of
Exchange (REX): and the Art of Mix and match: a a self-study A0
The Research Remembering: method on how Syllabus for Brazilian
Expertise Using the Graphic to analyse Learners in Ireland
Exchange, a Novel to Assimilate pragmatic
collaboration Traumatic competence in
platform Memories. second language.
for educational
research
VENUE: T1.18 VENUE: T1.17 VENUE: T2.12 VENUE: T2.13
Chair: Sarah Chair: Alicja Chair: Ana M Chair: Yasir Almuways
OLeary McCloskey Terrazas-Calero
12:00- CATHAL DE PAOR- DENISE BURNS- Aiding ANNE OKEEFFE- Balancing
12:30 Methods for researching Culturally Responsive acts in Corpus Pragmatics:
verbal interactions and Assessment in Schools form-to-function and
professional learning in function-to-form approaches
teacher induction
VENUE: T1.18
Chair: Sarah OLeary VENUE: T1.17 VENUE: T2.12
Chair: Alicja McCloskey Chair: Ana M Terrazas-Calero
12:30 LUNCH (MIC Canteen)
13:30 GYORGY NAGY- POSTER PRESENTATION An tSli (TARA Building)
3
SATURDAY MAY 20TH 2017 (continued)
14:00- MARY MASTERSON- JULIAN BLOOMER- AISLING N JANE BRENNAN-
14:30 Promotion of Using a political DHIORBHIN- SEELY
cultural awareness ecology Oideolaochta um Variations in teacher
in the post-primary framework to Theagasc an classroom talk in 3
foreign language examine extra- Lireolais do stages of teacher
curriculum legal livelihood Bhunmhinteoir career development
strategies: a faoi Oiliint
Lesotho-based
case study of
cultivation of and
trade in cannabis
4
SATURDAY MAY 20TH 2017 (continued)
15:30- IRMSS PLENARY
16:30 KARL KITCHING WHAT CAN RESEARCH ON EDUCATION INJUSTICE
REPRESENT? WHAT DOES IT DO?
VENUE: T1.18
16:30- CONCHR BROLCHIN & T.J. MUHAMMAD KASHIF JALIL-
17:00 CEALLAIGH- Language Choices and Developing A Model Pre-Service
Ideologies in Irish-medium Teacher Education Programme for
Education the Teachers of English in Pakistan.
5
SUNDAY MAY 21ST 2017
9:00- IRMSS PLENARY
10:00 UTE ROMER
COMBINING CORPUS AND PSYCHOLINGUISTIC METHODS IN SECOND
LANGUAGE ACQUISITION RESEARCH: THE BENEFITS OF
INTERDISCIPLINARY WORK IN APPLIED LINGUISTICS
VENUE: T1.18
10.00- ANA MARIA TERRAZAS MANSOUR ALAMMAR-
10.30 Build your own DIY corpus, they The Role of Collaborative Writing
said: the challenges and vs. Individual Work in Improving
opportunities of creating the Essay Writing: A Case Study on
Corpus of Fictionalized Irish Saudi Learners
English.
VENUE: T1.18 VENUE: T1.17
Chair: Chair:
10.30- XIN JIANG- JOAN OSULLIVAN-
11.00 Research Methods in the Study of Janey Assumpta!: the exploitation
Chinese Second Language of vocatives in simulating
Acquisition in China: A Critical everyday discourse in radio
Review of Methodologies advertising in Ireland
VENUE: T1.18 VENUE: T1.17
Chair: Chair:
11:00 BREAK
11:30- SUZANNE EGAN & MARCUS FREE- SARAH OBRIEN- MARGARET
12:00 AISLING MURPHY- Failure, guilt, Spanish Language HEALY-
ABCs and 123s: The confession, Ecosystems in New At the cold-face
effect of home redemption? Mexico of a methodology
based language and Revisiting for data
learning activities unpublished collection: how I
on reasoning and research through collected the
vocabulary a psychosocial CLAS corpus, with
development in lens a little help from
young children my friends.
6
SUNDAY MAY 21ST 2017 (continued)
12:00- CLARA HOYNE SANTHI MINNA TIAINEN- YUYING LIU-
12:30 & SUZANNE EGAN CORCORAN- Legitimizing digital Investigating EFL
The role of fathers When two worlds surveillance in Teachers
in early childhood collide: Creative political decision Perceptions of
caregiving and design and making: A critical Task-based
home learning unconventional discourse analysis of Language
activities dissemination in Finnish legislative Teaching in
Education documents Higher Education
Research. in China
7
ABSTRACTS (in alphabetical order)
Little attention has been paid to the use of collaborative writing to improve learners essay writing at
Saudi universities. The current study aims to examine the role of collaborative as opposed to individual
writing in improving learners skills in writing in class.This research study focuses on the advantages
of collaborative writing in class to improve EFL learners proficiency in essay writing. In the field of
applied linguistics, this issue is an interesting area to investigate: To what extent is collaborative
writing better than individual writing in improving learners skills in essay writing? The researcher
selected 20 L2 male students in level three majoring in English at Imam University, College of
Languages and Translation in Saudi Arabia.To collect data, the researcher utilized four researcher-
made instruments: an EFL essay writing test, error correction writing test, open-ended questionnaire,
and semi-structured interviews. The data was collected from the participants using a mixed method
technique that combines qualitative and quantitative analysis in a unique treatment. The data of this
study was found to be very significant, which will open room for wide research in collaborative writing
as a good method to adopt in teaching EFL writing.
This talk will discuss challenges facing the researcher who is examining illicit activities. These
challenges are experienced at all stages of the project, by both the researcher and participants.
Strategies need to be developed to minimise risk and ethical conundrums. The presenter will draw on
his experience of researching the illicit cannabis economy in southern Africa.
8
The term Gaeltacht denotes areas where Irish is, or was, the main spoken language of a substantial
number of the local population; these areas are also defined by Government order. However,
Gaeltacht areas are not the product of statutory regulation. Rather, they are vestigial examples of the
predominance of Irish as a spoken language. Historically, Irish was supplanted as the spoken language
in response to the process of colonisation and this happened remarkably quickly but it is equally
noteworthy that the replacement of Irish with English was not complete with the former surviving as
the primary language in a number of locales. One of the main commonalities between areas in which
Irish endured is that they tended to be characterised by geographical remoteness and marginalisation
from hubs where more favourable socio-economic conditions/circumstances prevailed. This paper
focuses on an ongoing study of the 'Gaeltacht' areas of An Rinn and An Sean Phobal in County
Waterford. The aim of the study is to establish the distinctiveness of this area in terms of the use of
Irish as one of the primary modes of communication. The research seeks to identify and explain the
reasons for this reflexive use of language as a form of socio-cultural behaviour that continues despite
external processes that have caused language shift in other similar sized areas. The area of focus
comprises two contiguous places that can be identified by their designations as parishes and which,
together, are also formally designated as Gaeltacht na nDise. This study investigates why Irish has
survived in one such community. The paper will outline the study design which includes the following
four phases of data-collection: 1) a household survey (2015); 2) 2 focus groups (2016); 3)
questionnaires to schools (2016); and 4) interviews with people from both parishes, chosen randomly
(2017).
9
Brennan-Seely, Jane, PhD Applied Linguistics Candidate, Mary Immaculate
College, University of Limerick
Title (paper 2): Design and delivery of a self-study Beginner Syllabus for
Brazilian Learners in Ireland
A significant proportion of EFL students in Ireland at the moment are Brazilian, with over 8000
Brazilians currently studying in Ireland and the majority based in Dublin. As a Director of Studies in a
private language school with a large cohort of Brazilian leaners, I undertook to design an introductory
syllabus targeted specifically towards Brazilian learners entering Ireland at A1. While there are A1
syllabi and textbooks already in existence that could meet the general needs of beginner learners, I
believe that there are specific needs for Brazilian learners which can be better met in a purpose-
designed course. In order to highlight these specific needs I conducted research in my school and
several schools in Dublin city centre, conducting interviews and questionnaires with Brazilian learners
about their experience learning English in Brazil, their initial reasons for learning English, and some
linguistic problems they faced on arrival in Ireland. As the majority of schools operate a system of
rolling enrolment, these learners may find themselves seeing grammatical and lexical topics that they
have never encountered before, while still needing the time to master more basic linguistic content.
This can be very demotivating for learners, but often schools do not have the resources or the student
numbers to deliver an A1 or beginner course in order to bring these learners up to speed. The
syllabus which I designed is a 20 hour programme designed for autonomous study, delivered fully
online via an e-learning platform using original materials and videos, but can easily be adapted to the
classroom or as a blended learning course.
Burns, Denise, Centre for Evaluation, Quality and Inspection, School of Policy
and Practice, Dublin City University.
Title: Aiding Culturally Responsive Assessment in Schools
The presentation is entitled Aiding Culturally Responsive Assessment in Schools (ACRAS). It present
the methodology involved in a project that has Erasmus+ funding and has partners in Austria, Ireland,
Norway and Turkey. For the purpose of the project the term culturally responsive assessment refers
to classroom-based assessment that acknowledges and respects learners' cultural background and
approaches to learning as they strive for academic success. The target student population for the
project is second-level students with a migration background. The aim of the project is to produce a
toolkit for second-level schools for culturally-responsive assessment.
a literature survey with each partner country researching assessment literature in their own
country
10
a toolkit developed from the findings in the four languages piloted in each country.
Dissemination will include a module for pre-service teacher education. An external evaluator will give
a report which will be included in the final report to be published in the four languages in 2019.
Dr. Martin Brown, Centre for Evaluation, Quality and Inspection, School of Policy and
Practice, Dublin City University. martin.brown@dcu.ie
Professor Joe OHara, Director: Centre for Evaluation, Quality and Inspection, School
of Policy and Practice, Dublin City University. joe.ohara@dcu.ie
Professor Gerry McNamara, Centre for Evaluation, Quality and Inspection, School of
Policy and Practice, Dublin City University. gerry.mcnamara@dcu.ie
11
reader in the text. As is the case in much of the literature on academic writing in general, there are
comparatively fewer studies focusing on reader engagement in languages other than English or
contrastively across languages. However, in a world of increasing international exchange, there is a
growing need for such research on academic writing. This paper proposes the application of English-
language based models of reader engagement to the contrastive analysis of questions and reader
pronouns in the English, French and Spanish research article in the discipline of economics.
The framework applies models of reader engagement contrastively in order to measure equivalence
and investigate the extent to which English-language based models can successfully be applied to
languages other than English. Equivalence of questions and reader pronouns is measured through a
convergent corpus-based contrastive functional analysis, tested for different types of equivalence
such as frequency, distribution, form, word class and sentence length. The preliminary results of this
research indicate evidence of strong similarities and important differences in the use of questions and
reader pronouns as reader engagement, contributing to the literature on the culture and nature of
academic writing in English, French and Spanish. Pedagogically, the attested examples in multiple
languages, acquired from the corpus approach, can be useful in illustrating grammatical structures
used to pose questions and include readers in research. Furthermore, this approach can demonstrate
the application of comparable corpora to the teaching of English for academic purposes, and its French
and Spanish counterparts, francais langue acadmique and el Espaol con fines acadmicos.
The aim of this research was to explore the impact of home based learning activities on young
childrens language and cognitive development. The data were drawn from the Growing Up in Ireland
study, a nationally representative longitudinal birth cohort study. We examined whether different
types of learning activities affect scores on a development index when the infants were 9 months, and
on standardised reasoning and vocabulary tests when the children were aged 3 years. We also
controlled for other factors such as the educational level of the parents and whether the child is in
12
regular non-parental childcare. We found evidence that language activities such as reading and talking
to the infant have a modest but statistically significant effect on cognitive development as young as 9
months. Similarly, at 3 years of age reading is associated with higher reasoning and vocabulary scores
but other learning activities such as games, songs, painting, counting and reciting the alphabet have
mixed effects. We consider the implications of the findings for government and educational policy.
13
Garska, Jessica. School of Linguistic, Speech and Communication Sciences,
Trinity College Dublin
Title: Re-imagining Academic Writing: Presence and Influence of Power,
Identity, and Culture
Issues surrounding English for Academic Purposes in regards to non-native English speakers at tertiary
schools have become increasingly important in recent years with the increase of globalization and
student mobility. Approaches to English for Academic Purposes pedagogy have evolved from a skills
model and socialization model to an academic literacies model. While academic literacies research
has identified that power, identity and culture play a role in academic writing, the presence of and
attitudes towards these aspects in academic writing has not been studied thoroughly. Therefore, the
mixed-methods research analyzed attitudes towards and the presence of power, identity and culture
in academic writing by non-native students at a tertiary institution in Ireland. To form this study,
questionnaires were analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively, while three case studies formed from
interviews and writing samples were analyzed using discourse analysis. The findings suggest that,
while participants generally have positive attitudes towards these aspects, there is a high level of
negotiation and conflict between dominant norms and the expression of power, identity, and culture
of the individual within their academic writing. Additionally, participants felt that the expression of
power, identity, and culture in academic writing should be allowed to a certain extent, and that this
expression would not negatively impact the meaning of the writing. Significantly, the analysis of
writing samples did find a presence of power and identity within their academic writing which
reflected the findings of the interviews and questionnaires. Possible implications of these findings for
the English language teaching field could be to increase the focus on academic literacies in tertiary
institutions to aid in the negotiation of these aspects and increase the academic success of non-native
English speakers.
14
contextual examples taken from another well-known graphic memoir of war time atrocity, Art
Spiegelmans Maus. Thus, a contextual analysis of both novels will be used to theorise the benefit of
visualising traumatic memories while at the same time conveying compelling narratives by way of
navigating an integrated domain capable of exploiting the full potential of multiple modes of
communication.
The Cambridge, Limerick and Shannon (CLAS) corpus project is a collaborative research project
undertaken in partnership with Cambridge University Press (CUP), Mary Immaculate College (MIC)
Limerick and Shannon College of Hotel Management (SCHM), which aims to capture the spoken
language used by both native speakers and nonnative English speakers in a hotel management
education institution. This one-million word corpus of spoken English is drawn from a specialised
academic and linguistic environment where the students undertake a four-year BBS in International
Hotel Management Degree programme. Recorded over two academic years, the participants include
over 450 students, plus lecturers and some additional contributors. The data cover a broad matrix of
recording events such as lectures (general business/industry specific modules), practical classes
(Culinary/Restaurant Service), English language classes, oral exams and student presentations. This
paper recounts the data collection process. Having CUP involved in this project facilitated access to
their standard guidelines and expertise in the design of spoken corpora. Preliminary work in areas
such as documentation, participant database components and transcription conventions were
particularly helpful. These documents were generic guidelines that needed to be adapted to the local
context, as an initial pilot sub-corpus demonstrated. Certain challenges emerged that had to be
addressed locally, for example, CUPs standard transcription conventions did not adequately
accommodate the Irish-English variety spoken at SCHM including vocalisations, elongations and
Gaeilge i.e. Irish language words sprinkled throughout the vernacular. As the researcher, I attended
almost all the recording events, gaining an invaluable emic perspective on the project which enabled
me to identify aspects of the discourse not only for my own research but conscious of subsequent
transcription difficulties. I will highlight some of these specific challenges.
15
Jiang, Xin, Center for Studies of Chinese as a Second Language, Beijing
Language and Culture University, Beijing 100083
Title: Research Methods in the Study of Chinese Second Language Acquisition
in China: A Critical Review of Methodologies
In this proposal, the current state of research methods in Chinese as a second language in mainland
China is subjected to critical review. The paper first provides a brief overview of the main themes and
issues in L2 Chinese acquisition research. The main focus of the paper will involve a review based on
an analysis of 100 representative empirical works on L2 Chinese teaching and learning, published in
the core journals in mainland China. The analysis of these data focuses specifically on methodological
issues in the body of research. These works are analysed in terms of their rationale, the design and
method of data collection, and the type of analysis carried out on the data. This will lead to a critical
review of the main methodological paradigms which prevail in researching the acquisition of Chinese
as a Second Language in China. Finally, the implications of the study for future research will be
discussed.
Title: What can research on education injustice represent? What does it do?
In this paper, Karl will examine the lived ethics and politics of conducting and disseminating research
on education and social injustice. It is possible to assert a set of normative, moral principles on
research conduct and dissemination, and such principles are institutionalised in various codes.
However, drawing on his research on racisms, religious discrimination and sexualities in Irish
education contexts, Karl will outline how the lived everyday reality of research exceeds these
principles in both creative and problematic ways. He will draw on Michel Foucaults work on the
16
normalising power of discourses, or bodies of knowledge, and Judith Butler on performative citation,
to argue for a form of research community that practices intensive, yet open-ended analyses, which
defy neat categorisations and reifications of dis/advantage apparent in education policy and practice.
Finally, he will examine the merits of post-representational, feminist and Deleuzian research genres
that ask not just what our research findings are, and perhaps more significantly, what our research
does.
This paper presents ongoing research which is examining the categorisation of minority languages by
new media entities (such as Facebook, Google, etc.) as long tail languages. Primarily, it discusses the
methodological approach of this research, virtual ethnography (cf. Hine, 2000). Virtual ethnography
transfers the ethnographic tradition of the researcher as an embodied research instrument to the
social spaces of the Internet (Hine, 2008: 257). It involves looking at computer mediated
communication (CMC) in online networks and communities, analysing the language content and
observing the online interactions at the level of the users. It is also a useful method to examine
language(s) online, the choices, options and practices on websites (Lenihan and Kelly-Holmes, 2017:
173). Virtual ethnography is a mixed methods approach (Fay, 2007) and allows for a range of methods
including interviews, content analysis, discourse analysis, etc. The distinctive feature of virtual
ethnography is the aim of thick description (Geertz, 1983) from the perspective of the participants
(Lenihan and Kelly-Holmes, 2016).
In this study, virtual ethnographic methods are used to consider the language practices of new media
entities in relation to minority languages. Initial research focussed on Facebook and its Translations
application, an app the company developed to crowdsource translations of their website (Lenihan,
2013). Over 100 language versions of Facebook are available, including in minority languages such as
Irish and Welsh. This research found that Facebook categorised some languages, mainly minority
languages as long tail languages, which influenced the design/working of their respective
Translations app. The current study extends the field of interest to a number of other new media
entities such as Google and their Google in Your Language initiative and considers this categorisation
of long tail languages in terms of the commercialisation of minority languages (cf. Coupland, 2010).
Liu, Yuying, Centre for Applied Language Studies (CALS), School of English and
Education, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, P.R. China
Title: Investigating EFL Teachers Perceptions of Task-based Language Teaching
in Higher Education in China
Nunan (2003) suggests that Task-based Language Teaching (TBLT) emerges as a central concept from
a study of curriculum guidelines and syllabi in the Asia-Pacific countries including Japan, Vietnam,
China, Korea and Malaysia. The National Curriculum Syllabi for English Language Teaching in China,
published in 2001 and 2011, advocate the use of TBLT. But TBLT has not been sufficiently researched
to be proven empirically in classroom practice in foreign language learning (Carless 2004). Research
on curriculum innovation and implementation suggests that one of the causes of the discrepancy
17
between theory and classroom practice may be teacher attitudes (Evdokia 1996). Given the teachers
central role in how curricular elements are put into practice, there is a need for systematic
investigation of the relationship between teacher conceptions of TBLT, what actually happens in the
classroom and what kinds of innovation are possible. Few studies have investigated in-service
teachers response to this proposed language teaching method in the Chinese college English context.
This research contributes to filing this gap in the literature by investigating EFL teachers attitudes
towards TBLT and assesses the current implementation of TBLT in Chinese colleges. The methodology
is primarily qualitative and analysis is carried out via questionnaires and interviews. The findings show
that there are opportunities for the implementation of TBLT in the Chinese context. Most of the
Chinese ELT teachers hold positive views on TBLT implementation and the frequency of use of TBLT is
high (Liu 2015; Liu and Xiong 2016). However, this study also reveals that the majority of the
participants are not confident in their understanding of TBLT, but they are willing to get training in
TBLT (Liu, Mishan and Chambers 2016 forthcoming). The article concludes with a discussion of
practical implications of the findings on how successful implementation of TBLT can be encouraged in
the Chinese context.
18
Nagy, Gyorgy, Student in Structured PhD in TESO, University of Limerick.
Title: Towards Intercultural Competence: Integrating Irish Culture into TESOL
in Ireland
Without the study of culture, second language acquisition is not complete (Paige and Stringer, 1997).
While teaching culture raises learners awareness of the target culture and their own home culture, it
gives them an intercultural competence (Kramsch, 1997, p. 231). This research contributes to the
vibrant global conversation among professionals about the ways of developing learners intercultural
competence. The study aims to provide insights into the current teaching practices in developing
intercultural competence through teaching Irish culture in the English for Speakers of Other Languages
provisions in the Limerick and Clare Education and Training Board of Ireland where the overall
educational goal is to facilitate the successful integration of newcomer adult learners into Irish society.
As there were only four coursebooks of Irish origin in 2008 (Mishan, 2008) and 97 per cent of teachers
lack appropriate training in teaching English as a second language including developing learners
intercultural competence (Lyons and Little, 2009), this research study pays particular attention to how
teaching materials support teachers and learners in developing learners intercultural competence in
an Irish context. Data collection consists of quantitative and qualitative content analyses of the
materials in use, a questionnaire and semi-structured interviews with the teachers as well as a
participatory action research approach for gathering data from the learners. The investigation also
involves the exploration of the state-of-the-art literature on culture, intercultural competence and the
cultural content of teaching materials. This study aims to offer a recommendation for an Irish national
framework for materials that are to develop newcomer adult learners intercultural competence in an
Irish context and it intends to help teachers incorporate Irish culture into their materials effectively
and appropriately.
This research project will inform the development of an online language diagnostic resource
for Irish at university level, aimed at supporting and improving students language awareness
and promoting efficient, independent language learning. This project investigates students
ability to self-assess language proficiency and these results will be compared with a corpus of
writing samples from the same cohort. A mixed-methods approach is used. Qualitative
methods are used to compare responses concerning motivation and self-assessed language
proficiency (questionnaire concerning motivation and self-assessed competence level) with
quantitative results (error analysis focusing on grammar in written work), which are
benchmarked against the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR)
competency descriptors. Students will reflect on CEFR-based Can do statements, as used by
the Association of Language Testers of Europe (ALTE), to answer the following question:
19
These results will be compared with samples of students writing, produced under test
conditions. Furthermore, the abovementioned questionnaire will also investigate students
attitude towards computer-assisted language learning (CALL), self-directed learning, learning
methods, and the target language (Irish). Finally, a comparative analysis will be carried out on
outcomes achieved by participants with regard to their use of a diagnostic language tool to
measure the effect of using an individualised language diagnostic resource on Irish language
grammar proficiency.
20
to teacher needs in relation to the implementation of wellbeing supports in school and to develop
practical strategies to support the wellbeing of the school community in each participants individual
context. The outcomes of this approach to professional development proved very successful and
resulted in teachers actively engaging in the rhetoric surrounding wellbeing. Findings from the project
showed a lack of awareness of the Wellbeing Guidelines, confusion around the term wellbeing and a
fear of reluctance to engage in the topic with school staff. Yet these same teachers shared practical,
effective and exciting approaches to supporting the wellbeing of students in their individual
classrooms. This professional development approach also supported teachers ability to broach the
topic with their colleagues and develop a shared understanding of wellbeing.
This presentation will draw on themes of heritage language education and culture-bound language
attitudes, via an exploration of receptiveness to Spanish language learning in New Mexico. The
research underlying the article was carried out by the presenter within three school districts in New
Mexico, a South Western U.S. state with protracted historic ties to the Spanish language yet which
nonetheless struggles to develop Spanish language proficiency within its school going population.
Drawing from mixed-method sourced data collected over a seven month period in 2016 in three
school districts within New Mexico, the paper discusses the stratified views of high school students,
teachers, parents, educators and community members to Spanish language use in New Mexico,
explores concepts of identity that Spanish language evokes in the sampled population, traces the
historic and cultural factors that have impacted on attitudes to the use and learning of Spanish in New
Mexico and makes suggestions on how these research findings can be used by language-planners to
improve outcomes for language learners in the United States and beyond. Finally, data findings will
be discussed in terms of their illumination of the role of family and community engagement in the
cultivation of native, heritage and second languages.
21
immersion education in which pupils are encouraged to language in their L1, in order to unlock
learning efficiencies. Furthermore, although practitioners see a translanguaging approach as holding
potential benefit for certain cohorts of pupils in other language programs, it is often perceived to be
unsuitable in the minority language immersion contexts of this study. We conclude, that this
reluctance is being driven primarily by anxieties around the perceived fragility of Irish, vis-a-vis the
omnipresence of English in pupils lives, coupled with, a lack of expertise in cross-linguistic pedagogical
practices, such as those espoused in development stages of Irelands Integrated Language Curriculum
(Cummins & Duibhir, 2012). Finally, opportunities for professional development across the
continuum of teacher education are outlined and areas for further research are explored.
One of the many changes, or turns, in linguistics research, since the 1970s, has been the empirical
turn, where introspection on language was superseded by empirical investigations. Within this new
paradigm, corpus linguistics (CL) has become the main methodology (Taavitsainen and Junker 2015).
This methodological dominance has happened within a matter of a few decades and this has been in
tandem with technological leaps in data storage and analysis software. Within its development, corpus
linguistics has spread its application to many sub-fields of linguistics as well as remaining a robust sub-
field in its own right. As del and Reppen note, however, some subfields are more amenable to
corpus-linguistic methodology than others (2008: 1). Pragmatics is one of the sub-fields to take on
this data-driven empirical methodology even though it already had established means of collecting
empirical (elicited) data, mainly through Discourse Completion Tasks (DDLs) and role-plays, especially
in the context of the study of contrastive second language pragmatic competence (Blum-Kulka et al.,
1989). Bringing a CL methodology to pragmatic studies is not without its challenges, as this paper will
discuss. The default analytical approach inherent in CL is to move quantitatively from frequencies of
forms to their functions. In other words, it takes a primarily form-to-function approach to analysing
data. For those involved in the study of pragmatics, and especially speech acts, the norm is to work in
the opposite direction, starting with a quest to investigate a specific pragmatic function and, through
means of carefully designed elicitation tasks, to work from the function under investigation to the
forms which are typically used, in a function-to-form approach. In the context of corpus pragmatics
methodology, this paper will look at how form-to-function approaches can be balanced with function-
to-form approaches.
22
On foot of the observation by Clancy (2016: 172) of the need for a comparison of unscripted intimate
discourse with media representations of such discourse as a locus for future research, this paper seeks
to address the question as to what extent the intimate contexts of radio advertising in Ireland
represent naturally occurring intimate discourse. This paper highlights the usefulness of a corpus-
based approach in addressing this question. The research examines the use of the vocative in the
context of radio advertising in Ireland through the analysis of a corpus of ads broadcast on an Irish
radio channel. This linguistic item is examined in terms of its occurrence and functions in the distinct
components of the ad, the Action (comprised of context-based dialogic interaction, designed to
imitate discourses of everyday informal interaction (Lee 1992:172-3)) and Comment (commonly
monologic, decontextualised and associated with the slogan or voice of authority (Sussex 1989)).
Comparisons are made between the findings from studies of naturally occurring Irish English data and
those of the radio ad corpus, with a view to determining how the occurrence and function of this
linguistic item reflects unscripted intimate discourse in the Irish context.
23
language transfer and typology play in this context. Comparisons of learner production data at
different proficiency levels allow us to trace the emergence of constructional knowledge in L2
learners. Data on L2 learner knowledge of VACs come from lexical production tasks, the German and
Spanish subcomponents of ICLE (the International Corpus of Learner English) and LINDSEI (the Louvain
International Database of Spoken English Interlanguage), and subsets of EFCAMDAT (the Education
First Cambridge Open Language Database). Inspired by my positive experiences with this project, I will
also discuss the value of collaborative work in Applied Linguistics. I will show how combining methods
and data types from different fields can be beneficial to research outcomes, and call for more
collaboration between corpus linguists and scholars from neighbouring disciplines.
Studies on spoken language have greatly benefited from Corpus Linguistics over recent years (Caines
et al. 2016). One of the many insights from spoken corpora studies is that of the interactional and
relational nature of spoken language in use (OKeeffe et al. 2007, p.159). Indeed, face-to-face
communication requires speakers to make use of strategies to convey their messages and orientate
themselves through conversation in real time. Among such strategies is found a body of language
employed to maintain the relationship between speakers, including pragmatic markers (PMs), which
OKeeffe et al. (ibid.) refer to as relational language. This paper presents the methodological strategy
employed in order to inform and support a PhD study with a focus on second language development
within a study-abroad context. Most specifically, the study investigates the production of PMs in the
24
English spoken as a second language by Brazilian university students in Ireland. However, unlike most
contrastive studies on second language (L2), this research, concurring with Prodromou (2005), does
not subscribe to the deficit view derived from a native-centric perspective, but, instead, analyses L2
in its own right by looking at competences rather than errors. Due to the specific research theme and
its position taken towards L2, a parallel bilingual corpus had to be designed and careful consideration
had to be taken in order to choose, and adapt, an appropriate theoretical framework. The
methodological strategy demonstrated in this paper entailed 4 steps: 1) corpus design; 2) corpus
compilation; 3) data transcription; and 4) choice of theoretical framework. The discussion, thus,
includes issues of representativeness in corpus design; challenges of data transcription (when
adapting a transcription convention that was originally devised for native speaker data); the fusion
between Corpus Linguistics and Pragmatics, namely Corpus Pragmatics, and its valuable theoretical
framework to analyse small context-specific corpora; and, finally, how a contrastive method
commonly associated with a native-centric approach, namely Contrastive Interlanguage Analysis
(Granger 2015), can also be successfully employed to investigate and analyse L2 in its own right.
Title: DIY corpus building: The challenges and opportunities of creating the
Corpus of Fictionalized Irish English
The usefulness of Corpus Linguistics (CL) as a tool for the investigation of language use has become
increasingly obvious over the last few decades. By means of computerized software, this discipline
allows for the application of a scientific approach to linguistic research which provides quantitative
and qualitative empirical data on language use, patterns, and developments which simple intuition
could never discern. Although controversial, literary dialects can function as linguistic evidence, seeing
as their use of orality to infuse realism into books can also provide insight into potential linguistic
developments (Hodson 2014: 200). Traditionally, research conducted in terms of fictionalized Irish
English (FIrE) has either concentrated on the use of this literary dialect by specific writers or on the
use of particular features (Sullivan 1980; McCafferty 2009; Amador-Moreno 2015, among others).
However, few academics have looked at the use of this literary dialect systematically using corpora
corpora (Hickey 2003, Cesiri 2012, and Connell 2014), and none have look at its use in contemporary
literature. Thus, my PhD thesis investigates the use of FIrE in a corpus of contemporary IrE literature
that I compiled, i.e. Corpus of Fictionalized Irish English (CoFIrE), which consists of 16 works of fiction
and contains over 1 million words.Despite the considerable help corpus analysis tools offer
researchers, building a DIY corpus can also be an arduous task. From selecting and digitizing the books
to creating a reliable coding system, among other issues, building CoFIrE was challenging, yet the
advantages of using it far outweigh the drawbacks. In this paper, therefore, I discuss the strengths and
weaknesses of building a corpus of contemporary Irish English fiction.
25
surveillance on citizens online activities. Now, however, Finland is trying to catch up and is planning
such a massive expansion of state surveillance that even alterations to the constitution are needed.
The planned legislation has attracted severe criticism as it causes concern for citizens privacy and
political freedoms. Consequently, the legislative process offers fruitful data for examining discursive
struggles over the justification of surveillance at a critical moment in political decision-making. This
article examines the ways digital surveillance is legitimized and contested in the political documents
relating to the Finnish legislative process. Thus, it hopes to shed light onto the strategies that are used
for constructing increases in surveillance as necessary and beneficial, as well as the ways that these
strategies are challenged. The main theoretical and methodological framework applied here is Critical
Discourse Studies (e.g. Wodak & Meyer 2016, Fairclough 1992), from which the article draws its view
of the constructive nature of language use and subsequent societal relevance of political discourse
and the legitimation strategies appearing in it. The central analytical concept applied in the analysis is
discourses, understood as socially constructed perspectives that are related to specific understandings
of legitimacy (e.g. Foucault 1972). For a deeper understanding of particular legitimation strategies,
insights from van Leeuwens work on categories of legitimation (2007) are applied.
26
Structured PhD in Education at MIC:
www.mic.ul.ie/sphded
27