
Less Frequently Used Research Methodologies in Applied Linguistics
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Content
- Intro
- Less Frequently Used Research Methodologies in Applied Linguistics
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- 1. Introduction
- 2. A synopsis of the chapters
- References
- Chapter 2 The Multiperspectival Approach to Applied Linguistic research
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 3. Methodological orientation
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.1.1 The researcher's perspective
- 3.1.2 Participants' perspective
- 3.1.3 Textual perspective
- 3.1.4 The social action perspective
- 3.1.5 The socio-historical perspective
- 3.2 Types of research questions addressed by MPA
- 3.3 Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 3.4 Ethical issues
- 4. Critiques and responses
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 3 Implementing the Multiperspectival Approach (MPA)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the study
- 3. Why was MPA used?
- 4. How was the MPA implemented?
- 5. What were the challenges of MPA, how were they addressed, and what insights emerged?
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 4 Multimodality
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 2.1 Multimodality as a functionalist social semiotic inquiry
- 2.2 Social semiotics and systemic functional multimodal discourse analysis (SF-MDA)
- 3. Methodological orientation
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.2 Types of research questions addressed by social semiotics and SF-MDA
- 3.3 Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 3.3.1 Data collection
- 3.3.2 Data analysis
- 3.4 Research ethics
- 4. Systemic-functional semiotics
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 5 Applying multimodal analysis
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the research focus and the case studies
- 2.1 Embodied teaching
- 2.2 Language textbook analysis
- 3. Why multimodal analysis?
- 3.1 Multimodality in embodied teaching
- 3.2 Multimodality in analyzing language textbooks
- 4. Implementing the studies using multimodal analysis
- 4.1 Case study 1
- 4.2 Case study 2
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 6 Conversation analysis
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The ontological and epistemological foundations of ethnomethodology and CA
- 2.1 Ethnomethodology
- 2.2 Conversation analysis (CA)
- 2.2.1 Context in CA
- 3. An overview of how conversation analysts set about doing emic research
- 3.1 What types of research questions do conversation analysts address, and how do we generate them?
- 3.2 Procedures of data collection, transcription, and analysis
- 4. The formal structure of talk
- 4.1 Turn-taking
- 4.2 Repair
- 4.3 Sequence organization
- 4.4 Preference
- 5. Transcription conventions
- 5.1 Jeffersonian transcription conventions
- 5.2 Multimodal transcription
- 5.2.1 Analysis
- 6. Critiques and responses
- 6.1 Moerman's contextual critique of conversation analysis
- 6.2 The epistemics debate
- 6.3 The Schegloff/Wetherell/Billig debates
- 7. Ethical issues
- 8. Conclusions
- References
- Appendix 1. Jeffersonian transcription conventions (based on Markee, 2015)
- Chapter 7 Doing conversation analysis
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the present study
- 2.1 Communication strategies
- 2.2 Learning behavior tracking
- 2.3 Participants
- 2.4 Data and analysis
- 2.4.1 Analysis
- 3. Why was Conversation Analysis (CA) used? And how was it implemented?
- 4. What challenges did the researchers face? How were the challenges addressed?
- 5. Insights gained using the conversation analysis
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 8 Grounded Theory
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 2.1 American pragmatism
- 2.2 Symbolic interactionism
- 2.3 Empirical sociology
- 2.4 Emergence of the grounded theory methodology
- 3. Methodological orientation
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.2 Types of research questions addressed by the GTM
- 3.3 Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 3.4 Ethical issues
- 4. Critiques and responses
- 5. Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 9 Applications of Grounded Theory in the field of Extensive Reading
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Overview of the study
- 3. Why was the GTM used? How was it implemented?
- 3.1 Initial venue
- 3.2 Research participants
- 3.3 Research procedures in the field
- 4. What challenges were faced? How were the challenges addressed?
- 5. Insights gained using the grounded theory method
- 5.1 Infograzing
- 5.2 Bookmining
- 5.3 Storyhunting
- 6. Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Chapter 10 Phenomenology
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 3. Methodological orientation
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.2 Types of research questions addressed
- 3.3 Data collection and analysis procedure
- 3.4 Ethical considerations
- 4. Critiques and responses
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 11 Phenomenology
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the study
- 3. Why was phenomenology chosen, and how was it implemented?
- 4. Challenges faced and how they were addressed
- 5. Insights gained using phenomenology
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 12 Narrative inquiry
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 3. Methodological orientations
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.2 Types of RQs addressed by narrative inquiry
- 3.3 Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 3.4 Ethical issues
- 4. Critiques and responses
- 5. Conclusions
- Funding
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Chapter 13 Narrative inquiry
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the study
- 3. Why was narrative inquiry used?
- 4. What challenges were faced?
- 5. Insights gained
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Appendix. Transcription and abbreviations conventions
- Chapter 14 Repertory grids
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical foundations
- 3. Methodological orientation
- 3.1 Principles and affordances
- 3.2 Types of RQs addressed by repertory grid
- 3.3 Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 3.4 Ethical issues
- 4. Critiques and responses
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 15 Repertory grids
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of the study
- 3. Why was repertory grid technique used?
- 4. What challenges were faced?
- 5. Insights gained using repertory grid technique
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 16 Challenges and contributions of less frequently used methodologies
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Challenges faced
- insights gained
- 3. Ethical issues
- 4. Methodological contributions
- References
- Index
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