Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions

In lecture introductions, student engagement is important for receptivity of the lecture. The study examined the use of personal pronouns (we, I, you) in lecture introductions in the arts and science disciplines. The 37,373-word corpus was compiled from 47 lecture introductions delivered in English...

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Main Authors: Yeo, Jiin Yih, Ting, Su Hie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/7/yih.pdf
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author Yeo, Jiin Yih
Ting, Su Hie
author_facet Yeo, Jiin Yih
Ting, Su Hie
author_sort Yeo, Jiin Yih
building UNIMAS Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In lecture introductions, student engagement is important for receptivity of the lecture. The study examined the use of personal pronouns (we, I, you) in lecture introductions in the arts and science disciplines. The 37,373-word corpus was compiled from 47 lecture introductions delivered in English in a Malaysian university. You is the most frequently used personal pronoun, followed by I and we which both have similar frequencies. All three pronouns are used for activating prior knowledge and giving instructions or announcements, the two main activities of the lecture introductions. In addition to these discourse functions, you-audience is used when lecturers share personal experiences and direct students’ attention but you-generalised occurs in explanations of subject matter. Inclusive-we is used for stating aims and objectives of the lecture and occurs more frequently than exclusive-we which sometimes surfaces in science lecturers’ explanations of the subject matter when reviewing content covered in previous lectures. The results suggest a disciplinary difference in the use of personal pronouns for student engagement in lecture introductions because the science lecturers used you-audience, we for I, we for one and I more than arts lecturers but you-generalised is more frequent in arts lecture introductions.
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institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
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publishDate 2014
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spelling unimas-85932022-05-12T07:47:24Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/ Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions Yeo, Jiin Yih Ting, Su Hie PR English literature In lecture introductions, student engagement is important for receptivity of the lecture. The study examined the use of personal pronouns (we, I, you) in lecture introductions in the arts and science disciplines. The 37,373-word corpus was compiled from 47 lecture introductions delivered in English in a Malaysian university. You is the most frequently used personal pronoun, followed by I and we which both have similar frequencies. All three pronouns are used for activating prior knowledge and giving instructions or announcements, the two main activities of the lecture introductions. In addition to these discourse functions, you-audience is used when lecturers share personal experiences and direct students’ attention but you-generalised occurs in explanations of subject matter. Inclusive-we is used for stating aims and objectives of the lecture and occurs more frequently than exclusive-we which sometimes surfaces in science lecturers’ explanations of the subject matter when reviewing content covered in previous lectures. The results suggest a disciplinary difference in the use of personal pronouns for student engagement in lecture introductions because the science lecturers used you-audience, we for I, we for one and I more than arts lecturers but you-generalised is more frequent in arts lecture introductions. Elsevier 2014 Article NonPeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/7/yih.pdf Yeo, Jiin Yih and Ting, Su Hie (2014) Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions. English for Specific Purposes, 34. pp. 26-37. ISSN 0889-4906 http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0889490613000859# doi:10.1016/j.esp.2013.11.001
spellingShingle PR English literature
Yeo, Jiin Yih
Ting, Su Hie
Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title_full Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title_fullStr Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title_full_unstemmed Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title_short Personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
title_sort personal pronouns for student engagement in arts and science lecture introductions
topic PR English literature
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/8593/7/yih.pdf