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Developing linguistic literacy: perspectives from corpus linguistics and multi-dimensional analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2002

DOUGLAS BIBER
Affiliation:
Northern Arizona University and Portland State University
RANDI REPPEN
Affiliation:
Northern Arizona University and Portland State University
SUSAN CONRAD
Affiliation:
Northern Arizona University and Portland State University
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Abstract

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In their conceptual framework for linguistic literacy development, Ravid & Tolchinsky synthesize research studies from several perspectives. One of these is corpus-based research, which has been used for several large-scale research studies of spoken and written registers over the past 20 years. In this approach, a large, principled collection of natural texts (a ‘corpus’) is analysed using computational and interactive techniques, to identify the salient linguistic characteristics of each register or text variety. Three characteristics of corpus-based analysis are particularly important (see Biber, Conrad & Reppen 1998):

  1. [bull ] a special concern for the representativeness of the text sample being analysed, and for the generalizability of findings;

  2. [bull ] overt recognition of the interactions among linguistic features: the ways in which features co-occur and alternate;

  3. [bull ] a focus on register as the most important parameter of linguistic variation: strong patterns of use in one register often represent only weak patterns in other registers.

Type
DISCUSSION
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press