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1
Optimizing Water and Nitrogen Strategies to Improve Forage Oat Yield and Quality on the Tibetan Plateau Using APSIM
In: Agronomy; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 933 (2022)
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2
Assessing Writing in French-as-a-Foreign-Language: Teacher Practices and Learner Uptake
In: Languages; Volume 6; Issue 4; Pages: 210 (2021)
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3
La retroacció correctiva oral amb estudiants adults poc escolaritzats
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4
Studying depression through big data analytics on Twitter
In: TDX (Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa) (2021)
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5
Peer Interaction in the L2 Classroom: A Study among Malaysian ESL Learners
In: Issues in Language Studies, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2021) (2021)
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6
INTENTIONAL VS INCIDENTAL ESP VOCABULARY ACQUISITION BY POLITICAL SCIENCE STUDENTS
In: Advanced Education; 2020: Issue 16; 18-27 ; Передовое образование; 2020: ; 18-27 ; Новітня освіта; 2020: ; 2410-8286 ; 2409-3351 (2020)
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7
Analysis of Learner Uptake in Response to Corrective Feedback in Advanced Foreign Language Classrooms: A Case in the United States
In: Applied Linguistics Research Journal, Vol 4, Iss 4, Pp 1-29 (2020) (2020)
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8
Lost in Uptake Translation: Examining Genre Negotiations in Students’ Writing Performances
Macklin, Mandy. - 2019
Abstract: Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019 ; In this dissertation, I build on scholarship in Rhetorical Genre Theory (especially the concept of “genre uptake” as developed in speech act theory and expanded by rhetorical genre scholars to account for the interplays and trans-actions between genres) to trace students’ uptake negotiations and translations in action, paying particular attention to the pathways drawn, managed, and constructed to make certain uptakes possible and not possible. By revealing what gets taken up and what gets sets aside or blocked (the uptake remainders), my dissertation research contributes to the development of pedagogical practices that can enrich understandings of genre uptake and performance so that students can make fuller use of writing resources within first-year composition. Examining uptakes in motion poses methodological challenges, especially since the linguistic, cultural, emotional and rhetorical variables involved are often metacognitive, dynamic, and fluid, as well as embodied, affective, and often invisible. Drawing on methods developed to study genre uptake, knowledge transfer, translingual and transmodal practices, and metacognition, my research examines two first-year writers’ genre uptakes during an introductory “stretch” composition course designed for historically underrepresented students at a large public research university. To capture what gets lost or set aside in uptake, I collected a pre-quarter web survey, assignment prompts, course writing, student video diaries, class observations, teacher feedback, and teacher and student interviews. Additionally, I used technologies that animate students’ writing processes in motion in order to better understand uptake at a micro-level. My dissertation findings reveal that—in making myriad dynamic and complex choices when writing or communicating—what gets taken up and left behind by students is made possible (or not), in part, by the pathways teachers and students perceive as available as well as the relations (physical, conceptual, cognitive, material, etc.) that hold these pathways together. The results of my study contribute to efforts already underway to account for students’ existing rhetorical repertoires, lived experiences, and diverse meaning-making strategies in order to better support all student writers, including multilingual students and transnational literacies. More specifically, my findings highlight the range of possibilities available during uptake and the possible elements that might block uptake. I offer a new theoretical concept, “uptake remainder,” as a way to describe what can get “lost” in uptake translation as students take up genres. The intervention that my project makes is both theoretical and methodological, offering an approach to studying micro-, meso-, and macro-level negotiations in uptake that operate under the surface. This dissertation has implications for multilingual writers who have more cultural and linguistic repertoires than we can often see. Beyond implications for multilingual learners, this dissertation also has implications for multimodal composition, transfer research, and translingualism. In Chapter I, I situate my dissertation in relation to Rhetorical Genre Studies (RGS), genre uptake, and composition studies and identify theoretical and methodological gaps to explain how my research will address these gaps. I also describe how genre uptake can be seen as a process of translation and negotiation while making a case for “uptake remainders.” Studying uptakes (and remainders) poses methodological challenges, which I will describe in detail in Chapter II, which introduces a qualitative, mixed-method approach to studying uptake remainders and the methodological contributions I hope to make through my research. In Chapters III-V, I will address my research questions by reporting findings on the process in which uptake remainders are formed and the factors that cause them to manifest. In Chapter VI, the implications section, I suggest how my research findings can influence future research directions as well as practical implications for research and teaching more broadly.
Keyword: Composition; English; Genre; Language; Rhetoric; Uptake
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1773/44186
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9
Uptake of Educational Texts in Multilingual Composition Classrooms
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10
Local Histories of Composition and the Student Writer: Women Students Writing Within, Against, and Beyond Required Classroom Genres
Polo, Sarah Elizabeth. - : University of Kansas, 2019
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11
Corrective Feedback and Learner Uptake by English Learners of Chinese in Advanced Second Language Classrooms in the USA
In: Applied Linguistics Research Journal, Vol 3, Iss 3, Pp 1-21 (2019) (2019)
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12
SEMELHANÇAS ENTRE UPTAKE E TRACE: CONSIDERAÇÕES SOBRE TRADUÇÃO
In: DELTA: Documentação e Estudos em Linguística Teórica e Aplicada; v. 13, n. 2 (1997) ; 1678-460X ; 0102-4450 (2019)
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13
New Directions in Treatments Targeting Stroke Recovery.
In: Stroke, vol 49, iss 12 (2018)
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14
The Interpretation of an Evolving Line Drawing
In: Empirical Comics Research. Digital, Multimodal, and Cognitive Methods ; https://hal.univ-lille.fr/hal-01872997 ; Alexander Dunst; Jochen Laubrock; Janina Wildfeuer. Empirical Comics Research. Digital, Multimodal, and Cognitive Methods, Routledge, pp.197-214, 2018 (2018)
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15
Corrective feedback and learner uptake in Spanish heritage and second language learner interaction
Yoon, Hyunjee. - 2018
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16
JOHN LANGSHAW AUSTIN E A VISÃO PERFORMATIVA DA LINGUAGEM
In: DELTA: Documentação e Estudos em Linguística Teórica e Aplicada; v. 18, n. 1 (2002) ; 1678-460X ; 0102-4450 (2018)
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17
Constructs of Reflection in Six First-Year Composition Classrooms
In: Electronic Theses and Dissertations (2017)
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18
Analysis of corrective feedback in a multilingual classroom context from a CLIL perspective.
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19
Writing Assignments and Student Responses: Uptake in a Fifth-Grade Class
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20
On the Benefits of Multimodal Annotations for Vocabulary Uptake from Reading
In: Education Publications (2017)
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