Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.

Personal pronouns are a linguistic device that is used to engage students at various educational levels. Personal pronouns are multifunctional, and their functions range from inclusion to exclusion, and include establishing of rapport with students. In this chapter, we compare the use of personal pr...

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Main Authors: Ting, Su Hie, Jiin-Yih, Yeo, Collin, Jerome, Shanthi, Nadarajan, Meng-Yew, Tee, Moses, Samuel
Format: Book Chapter
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2022
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Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/2/Student%20engagement.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/
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Institution: Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
Language: English
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spelling my.unimas.ir.406262023-10-11T06:23:41Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/ Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university. Ting, Su Hie Jiin-Yih, Yeo Collin, Jerome Shanthi, Nadarajan Meng-Yew, Tee Moses, Samuel P Philology. Linguistics Personal pronouns are a linguistic device that is used to engage students at various educational levels. Personal pronouns are multifunctional, and their functions range from inclusion to exclusion, and include establishing of rapport with students. In this chapter, we compare the use of personal pronouns at university and secondary school levels. Our previous study (Yeo & Ting, 2014) showed the frequent use of you in lecture introductions (2,170 instances in the 37,373-word corpus) to acknowledge the presence of students. The arts lecturers were more inclusive than the science lecturers, reflected in the less frequent use of exclusive-we and we for one, as well as the frequent use of you-generalised. We have also compiled and analysed a 43,511-word corpus from 15 English lessons in three Malaysian secondary schools. This corpus yielded 2,019 instances of personal pronoun use. The results showed that you was the most frequently used personal pronoun, followed by we and I. You-audience was used more than you-generalised, and the main function was to give instructions to students. The teachers appeared to be more directive than the lecturers in the previous study, who sometimes used the inclusive-we for you and I and we for I to lessen the social distance with students, indicating that the discourse functions of personal pronouns vary with the educational context. The findings suggest that educators can be alerted to the versatility of personal pronouns, for example, for engaging students in the lesson and for asserting authority in the subject matter. Routledge 2022 Book Chapter PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/2/Student%20engagement.pdf Ting, Su Hie and Jiin-Yih, Yeo and Collin, Jerome and Shanthi, Nadarajan and Meng-Yew, Tee and Moses, Samuel (2022) Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university. In: Multifunctionality in English: Corpora, language and academic literacy pedagogy. Routledge, Australia, pp. 96-113.
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic P Philology. Linguistics
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Ting, Su Hie
Jiin-Yih, Yeo
Collin, Jerome
Shanthi, Nadarajan
Meng-Yew, Tee
Moses, Samuel
Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
description Personal pronouns are a linguistic device that is used to engage students at various educational levels. Personal pronouns are multifunctional, and their functions range from inclusion to exclusion, and include establishing of rapport with students. In this chapter, we compare the use of personal pronouns at university and secondary school levels. Our previous study (Yeo & Ting, 2014) showed the frequent use of you in lecture introductions (2,170 instances in the 37,373-word corpus) to acknowledge the presence of students. The arts lecturers were more inclusive than the science lecturers, reflected in the less frequent use of exclusive-we and we for one, as well as the frequent use of you-generalised. We have also compiled and analysed a 43,511-word corpus from 15 English lessons in three Malaysian secondary schools. This corpus yielded 2,019 instances of personal pronoun use. The results showed that you was the most frequently used personal pronoun, followed by we and I. You-audience was used more than you-generalised, and the main function was to give instructions to students. The teachers appeared to be more directive than the lecturers in the previous study, who sometimes used the inclusive-we for you and I and we for I to lessen the social distance with students, indicating that the discourse functions of personal pronouns vary with the educational context. The findings suggest that educators can be alerted to the versatility of personal pronouns, for example, for engaging students in the lesson and for asserting authority in the subject matter.
format Book Chapter
author Ting, Su Hie
Jiin-Yih, Yeo
Collin, Jerome
Shanthi, Nadarajan
Meng-Yew, Tee
Moses, Samuel
author_facet Ting, Su Hie
Jiin-Yih, Yeo
Collin, Jerome
Shanthi, Nadarajan
Meng-Yew, Tee
Moses, Samuel
author_sort Ting, Su Hie
title Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
title_short Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
title_full Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
title_fullStr Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
title_full_unstemmed Student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
title_sort student engagement through personal pronouns in secondary school and university.
publisher Routledge
publishDate 2022
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/2/Student%20engagement.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40626/
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