Gillian Perrett - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Gillian Perrett

Research paper thumbnail of Globalization and the de-Anglicization of English

TEFLIN Journal - A publication on the teaching and learning of English, 2015

With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being t... more With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being transformed. In the modern world peoples were grouped within nations and communicated in speech communities largely within their own countries; communication outside the boundaries of the national speech communicty was not the norm for the majority of people. In the post-modern world the position of these vertical boundaries is changing to horizontal and an upper stratum of society (wherever it is located) is able, with computer technology, to communicate relatively freely across national borders. The lingua franca of this communication is English. It is not the English of any particular country and it is developing new cultural norms, especially in the electronic media. In one stratum professional functions dominate and electronic usage closely reflects familiar print genres. In other strata more interpersonal functions occur and at the same time the language is moving away from old stan...

Research paper thumbnail of Discourse analysis models for second language teaching

Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1987

The categories of the functional-notional syllabus are inadequate because, like the speech act th... more The categories of the functional-notional syllabus are inadequate because, like the speech act theory on which they are based, they recognize only the social function of language and not its discourse function. A further difficulty is that illocutionary acts do not map onto single utterances as this approach to syllabus design appears to assume. Communicative acts in interactional discourse function both as illocutionary acts (they have an intentional effect on another participant) and as interactional acts (they have a role in structuring the discourse of the interaction). This paper discusses attempts by various discourse analysts to model this fact in three different ways: (1) to conflate both types of function into a single analysis (John Dore), (2) to code all utterances for both types of function keeping the two sets of analysis separate (Willis Edmonson) and (3) to code the two types of function in a manner which relates them to each other in a systematic manner (Gordon Wells...

Research paper thumbnail of Advanced mathematical discourse: a case study

This article discusses a project that was undertaken to introduce first year undergraduate mathem... more This article discusses a project that was undertaken to introduce first year undergraduate mathematics students to written and spoken forms of mathematical discourse. Initial research focuses on language use in mathematics teaching and learning materials, lectures, tutorials and journals which publish different types of mathematics content. This research led on to the development of a coursebook, in which different articles for students to study were collected. In it students are introduced to macro- and micro-genres often used by mathematical writers and to particular grammatical patterns commonly encountered. Thus, the coursebook seeks to introduce students to the discursive practices of mathematics and to raise critical awareness of how mathematics may become part of, or may contest, hegemonic social practice.13 page(s

Research paper thumbnail of PETER PETOCZ j

ABSTRACT. In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics student... more ABSTRACT. In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students _ conceptions of mathematics. Almost 1,200 students in five countries completed a short survey including three open-ended questions asking about their views of mathematics and its role in their future studies and planned professions. Responses were analysed starting from a previously-developed phenomenographic framework (Reid et al., 2003) which required only minor modification. Students_ conceptions of mathematics ranged from the narrowest view as a focus on calculations structures, to the broadest view of mathematics as an approach to life and a way of thinking. Broader conceptions of mathematics were more likely to be found in later-year students (pG0.001) and there were significant differences between universities (pG0.001). The information obtained from the study not only confirms previous research, but also provides a basis for future development of a monitoring questionnaire.

Research paper thumbnail of Discourse and Rank: The Unit Transaction in the Oral Interview (Or What Is the Purpose of This Conversation Anyway?)

Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1997

The number of ranks required for an adequate discourse analysis may vary between genres and can b... more The number of ranks required for an adequate discourse analysis may vary between genres and can be explained with reference to the social purpose of that genre. Stages of generic structure were attributed to eight language testing interviews on the basis of apparent interviewer purpose, and this attribution was subsequently justified by the distribution of speech function types and mood choices between them. A problem in analysing the major section of the interview was whether to model it as a group of recurring elements at the level of stage, at the level of exchange, or at an intermediate level. The intermediate level of transaction was adopted, allowing for an model which recognises the common purpose and speech function patterns of the stage but also allows an account of how conversational exchanges group to construct both dialogic and monologic texts with or without the characteristics of other recognisable genres. Such an analysis is especially useful in assessing learners’ ability to engage in extended conversational discourse.

Research paper thumbnail of Learning to function with the other tongue: A systemic functional perspective on second language teaching

Perspectives on Pedagogical Grammar, 1994

... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rheto... more ... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rhetorical ... first, the paradigmatic representation of the form as a resource for making ... The system of transitivity realising the experiential metafunction " has" syntagmatic structures that are ...

Research paper thumbnail of Student voices : implications for teaching mathematics

Abstract: We report on an international study of students&#x2... more Abstract: We report on an international study of students' ideas about mathematics and how they view its relevance to their further studies and their careers. About 1200 students enrolled in mathematics subjects at five universities in different countries responded to three open-ended ...

Research paper thumbnail of Teaching the Register of Computer Science

The English Language changes in each generation, in response to developments in society, movement... more The English Language changes in each generation, in response to developments in society, movement of peoples, and innovations in technology. The register of computing science was initially regarded as close to that of other branches of technology. Artificial intelligence is, however, a very different technical activity from those that went before it and as such is developing a register of English which is in its turn different.

Research paper thumbnail of Globalisation and the de-Anglicisation of English

With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being t... more With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being transformed. In the modern world peoples were grouped within nations and communicated principally in speech communities within their own countries; communication outside the boundaries of the national speech community was not the norm for the majority of people. In the post-modern world the position of these vertical boundaries is changing to horizontal and an upper stratum of society (wherever it is located) is able, with computer technology, to communicate freely across national boarders. The lingua franca of this communication is English. It is not the English of any particular country and it is developing new cultural norms, especially in the electronic media. In the top strata professional functions dominate and electronic usage closely reflects familiar print genres. In the lower ones more interpersonal functions occur and at the same time the language is moving away from old standard forms; this is most apparent in email and chat room discourse. Teachers have to shift from traditional notions of culture and situation and embrace the new electronic forms, finding ways to help their students participate fully in the new intercultural situation.

Research paper thumbnail of UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ VIEWS OF THE ROLE OF MATHEMATICS IN THEIR FUTURE

International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education

We report on an international study about mathematics students’ ideas of how they will use mathem... more We report on an international study about mathematics students’ ideas of how they will use mathematics in their future study and careers. This builds on our previous research into students’ conceptions of mathematics. In this paper, we use data from two groups of students studying mathematics: those who participated in an in-depth interview and those who completed an open-ended questionnaire. We found that their responses could be grouped into four categories: don’t know; procedural skills; conceptual skills; and professional skills. Although some students held clear ideas about the role of mathematics, many were not able to articulate how it would be used in their future. This has implications for their approach to learning and our approach to teaching.

Research paper thumbnail of Undergraduate Students’ Conceptions of Mathematics: An International Study

International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2007

In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students’ concept... more In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students’ conceptions of mathematics. Almost 1,200 students in five countries completed a short survey including three open-ended questions asking about their views of mathematics and its role in their future studies and planned professions. Responses were analysed starting from a previously-developed phenomenographic framework (Reid et al., 2003) which required only minor modification. Students’ conceptions of mathematics ranged from the narrowest view as a focus on calculations with numbers, through a notion of mathematics as a focus on models or abstract structures, to the broadest view of mathematics as an approach to life and a way of thinking. Broader conceptions of mathematics were more likely to be found in later-year students (p<0.001) and there were significant differences between universities (p<0.001). The information obtained from the study not only confirms previous research, but also provides a basis for future development of a monitoring questionnaire.

Research paper thumbnail of Teacher Development Through Action Research : a Case Study in Focused Action Research

Focused action research' was employed in a teacher inservice program which sought to develop a fu... more Focused action research' was employed in a teacher inservice program which sought to develop a fusion between trainer-centred input and teacher-centred action research. The areas of input to teachers were learning strategies, thinking skills, questioning skills and the teaching of study skills. During the four months of this action research project of the teacher educators, teachers experienced two cycles of action research, one investigating their students' learning strategies and the second implementing a plan to improve some aspect of their students' learning -such as summary writing, remedial reading, hotseating, introducing group work, vocabulary-learning techniques -and wrote reports on their work. Although there was no evidence that the gains made transferred into the following school year the teachers both displayed and reported an increase in reflection during the project and immediately after it. Issues of sustaining transfer need to be addressed.

Research paper thumbnail of The development of English as a fireign and second language.

Researching Language in Schools and Communities. Len Unsworth (ed). , Jan 1, 2000

Every human learns a first language, many also learn a second. The old monolingual perception tha... more Every human learns a first language, many also learn a second. The old monolingual perception that knowing only one language is the norm is challenged both by the fact that in many parts of the world a minority of people are monolingual and by the experience of ...

Research paper thumbnail of Advanced mathematical discourse

Notes Workbook giving a practical introduction to mathematical discourse, aiming to develop unver... more Notes Workbook giving a practical introduction to mathematical discourse, aiming to develop unversity students&amp;#39; awareness of how texts differ in intended audiences and aims, including formal academic writing and less formal forms.

Research paper thumbnail of The language testing interview: A reappraisal

Individualizing the assessment of language abilities. eds de Jong, J.H.A.L. and Stevenson, D.K, Jan 1, 1990

Research paper thumbnail of Learning to function with the other tongue: A systemic functional perspective on second language teaching

Perspectives on pedagogical grammar, Jan 1, 1994

... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rheto... more ... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rhetorical ... first, the paradigmatic representation of the form as a resource for making ... The system of transitivity realising the experiential metafunction &quot; has&quot; syntagmatic structures that are ...

Research paper thumbnail of Globalization and the de-Anglicization of English

TEFLIN Journal - A publication on the teaching and learning of English, 2015

With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being t... more With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being transformed. In the modern world peoples were grouped within nations and communicated in speech communities largely within their own countries; communication outside the boundaries of the national speech communicty was not the norm for the majority of people. In the post-modern world the position of these vertical boundaries is changing to horizontal and an upper stratum of society (wherever it is located) is able, with computer technology, to communicate relatively freely across national borders. The lingua franca of this communication is English. It is not the English of any particular country and it is developing new cultural norms, especially in the electronic media. In one stratum professional functions dominate and electronic usage closely reflects familiar print genres. In other strata more interpersonal functions occur and at the same time the language is moving away from old stan...

Research paper thumbnail of Discourse analysis models for second language teaching

Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1987

The categories of the functional-notional syllabus are inadequate because, like the speech act th... more The categories of the functional-notional syllabus are inadequate because, like the speech act theory on which they are based, they recognize only the social function of language and not its discourse function. A further difficulty is that illocutionary acts do not map onto single utterances as this approach to syllabus design appears to assume. Communicative acts in interactional discourse function both as illocutionary acts (they have an intentional effect on another participant) and as interactional acts (they have a role in structuring the discourse of the interaction). This paper discusses attempts by various discourse analysts to model this fact in three different ways: (1) to conflate both types of function into a single analysis (John Dore), (2) to code all utterances for both types of function keeping the two sets of analysis separate (Willis Edmonson) and (3) to code the two types of function in a manner which relates them to each other in a systematic manner (Gordon Wells...

Research paper thumbnail of Advanced mathematical discourse: a case study

This article discusses a project that was undertaken to introduce first year undergraduate mathem... more This article discusses a project that was undertaken to introduce first year undergraduate mathematics students to written and spoken forms of mathematical discourse. Initial research focuses on language use in mathematics teaching and learning materials, lectures, tutorials and journals which publish different types of mathematics content. This research led on to the development of a coursebook, in which different articles for students to study were collected. In it students are introduced to macro- and micro-genres often used by mathematical writers and to particular grammatical patterns commonly encountered. Thus, the coursebook seeks to introduce students to the discursive practices of mathematics and to raise critical awareness of how mathematics may become part of, or may contest, hegemonic social practice.13 page(s

Research paper thumbnail of PETER PETOCZ j

ABSTRACT. In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics student... more ABSTRACT. In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students _ conceptions of mathematics. Almost 1,200 students in five countries completed a short survey including three open-ended questions asking about their views of mathematics and its role in their future studies and planned professions. Responses were analysed starting from a previously-developed phenomenographic framework (Reid et al., 2003) which required only minor modification. Students_ conceptions of mathematics ranged from the narrowest view as a focus on calculations structures, to the broadest view of mathematics as an approach to life and a way of thinking. Broader conceptions of mathematics were more likely to be found in later-year students (pG0.001) and there were significant differences between universities (pG0.001). The information obtained from the study not only confirms previous research, but also provides a basis for future development of a monitoring questionnaire.

Research paper thumbnail of Discourse and Rank: The Unit Transaction in the Oral Interview (Or What Is the Purpose of This Conversation Anyway?)

Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1997

The number of ranks required for an adequate discourse analysis may vary between genres and can b... more The number of ranks required for an adequate discourse analysis may vary between genres and can be explained with reference to the social purpose of that genre. Stages of generic structure were attributed to eight language testing interviews on the basis of apparent interviewer purpose, and this attribution was subsequently justified by the distribution of speech function types and mood choices between them. A problem in analysing the major section of the interview was whether to model it as a group of recurring elements at the level of stage, at the level of exchange, or at an intermediate level. The intermediate level of transaction was adopted, allowing for an model which recognises the common purpose and speech function patterns of the stage but also allows an account of how conversational exchanges group to construct both dialogic and monologic texts with or without the characteristics of other recognisable genres. Such an analysis is especially useful in assessing learners’ ability to engage in extended conversational discourse.

Research paper thumbnail of Learning to function with the other tongue: A systemic functional perspective on second language teaching

Perspectives on Pedagogical Grammar, 1994

... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rheto... more ... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rhetorical ... first, the paradigmatic representation of the form as a resource for making ... The system of transitivity realising the experiential metafunction &quot; has&quot; syntagmatic structures that are ...

Research paper thumbnail of Student voices : implications for teaching mathematics

Abstract: We report on an international study of students&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;#x2... more Abstract: We report on an international study of students&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;#x27; ideas about mathematics and how they view its relevance to their further studies and their careers. About 1200 students enrolled in mathematics subjects at five universities in different countries responded to three open-ended ...

Research paper thumbnail of Teaching the Register of Computer Science

The English Language changes in each generation, in response to developments in society, movement... more The English Language changes in each generation, in response to developments in society, movement of peoples, and innovations in technology. The register of computing science was initially regarded as close to that of other branches of technology. Artificial intelligence is, however, a very different technical activity from those that went before it and as such is developing a register of English which is in its turn different.

Research paper thumbnail of Globalisation and the de-Anglicisation of English

With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being t... more With the development of globalization cultural issues associated with TEFL are inevitably being transformed. In the modern world peoples were grouped within nations and communicated principally in speech communities within their own countries; communication outside the boundaries of the national speech community was not the norm for the majority of people. In the post-modern world the position of these vertical boundaries is changing to horizontal and an upper stratum of society (wherever it is located) is able, with computer technology, to communicate freely across national boarders. The lingua franca of this communication is English. It is not the English of any particular country and it is developing new cultural norms, especially in the electronic media. In the top strata professional functions dominate and electronic usage closely reflects familiar print genres. In the lower ones more interpersonal functions occur and at the same time the language is moving away from old standard forms; this is most apparent in email and chat room discourse. Teachers have to shift from traditional notions of culture and situation and embrace the new electronic forms, finding ways to help their students participate fully in the new intercultural situation.

Research paper thumbnail of UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ VIEWS OF THE ROLE OF MATHEMATICS IN THEIR FUTURE

International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education

We report on an international study about mathematics students’ ideas of how they will use mathem... more We report on an international study about mathematics students’ ideas of how they will use mathematics in their future study and careers. This builds on our previous research into students’ conceptions of mathematics. In this paper, we use data from two groups of students studying mathematics: those who participated in an in-depth interview and those who completed an open-ended questionnaire. We found that their responses could be grouped into four categories: don’t know; procedural skills; conceptual skills; and professional skills. Although some students held clear ideas about the role of mathematics, many were not able to articulate how it would be used in their future. This has implications for their approach to learning and our approach to teaching.

Research paper thumbnail of Undergraduate Students’ Conceptions of Mathematics: An International Study

International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2007

In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students’ concept... more In this paper, we report on an international study of undergraduate mathematics students’ conceptions of mathematics. Almost 1,200 students in five countries completed a short survey including three open-ended questions asking about their views of mathematics and its role in their future studies and planned professions. Responses were analysed starting from a previously-developed phenomenographic framework (Reid et al., 2003) which required only minor modification. Students’ conceptions of mathematics ranged from the narrowest view as a focus on calculations with numbers, through a notion of mathematics as a focus on models or abstract structures, to the broadest view of mathematics as an approach to life and a way of thinking. Broader conceptions of mathematics were more likely to be found in later-year students (p<0.001) and there were significant differences between universities (p<0.001). The information obtained from the study not only confirms previous research, but also provides a basis for future development of a monitoring questionnaire.

Research paper thumbnail of Teacher Development Through Action Research : a Case Study in Focused Action Research

Focused action research' was employed in a teacher inservice program which sought to develop a fu... more Focused action research' was employed in a teacher inservice program which sought to develop a fusion between trainer-centred input and teacher-centred action research. The areas of input to teachers were learning strategies, thinking skills, questioning skills and the teaching of study skills. During the four months of this action research project of the teacher educators, teachers experienced two cycles of action research, one investigating their students' learning strategies and the second implementing a plan to improve some aspect of their students' learning -such as summary writing, remedial reading, hotseating, introducing group work, vocabulary-learning techniques -and wrote reports on their work. Although there was no evidence that the gains made transferred into the following school year the teachers both displayed and reported an increase in reflection during the project and immediately after it. Issues of sustaining transfer need to be addressed.

Research paper thumbnail of The development of English as a fireign and second language.

Researching Language in Schools and Communities. Len Unsworth (ed). , Jan 1, 2000

Every human learns a first language, many also learn a second. The old monolingual perception tha... more Every human learns a first language, many also learn a second. The old monolingual perception that knowing only one language is the norm is challenged both by the fact that in many parts of the world a minority of people are monolingual and by the experience of ...

Research paper thumbnail of Advanced mathematical discourse

Notes Workbook giving a practical introduction to mathematical discourse, aiming to develop unver... more Notes Workbook giving a practical introduction to mathematical discourse, aiming to develop unversity students&amp;#39; awareness of how texts differ in intended audiences and aims, including formal academic writing and less formal forms.

Research paper thumbnail of The language testing interview: A reappraisal

Individualizing the assessment of language abilities. eds de Jong, J.H.A.L. and Stevenson, D.K, Jan 1, 1990

Research paper thumbnail of Learning to function with the other tongue: A systemic functional perspective on second language teaching

Perspectives on pedagogical grammar, Jan 1, 1994

... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rheto... more ... The system network of mood and modality construes interpersonal meanings, realising the rhetorical ... first, the paradigmatic representation of the form as a resource for making ... The system of transitivity realising the experiential metafunction &quot; has&quot; syntagmatic structures that are ...