Speakers – Jean Marguerite Jimenez
Jean Marguerite Jimenez
Jean Marguerite Jimenez is a Researcher in English Language and Translation at the University of Calabria, Italy, where she teaches EAP and ESP to students majoring in Business Administration, Education, and Political Science. She is part of the Advisory Board of the University Language Centre, where she is co-coordinator of the Test Development Team. She holds a PhD in Applied Linguistics from Lancaster University, UK. Her research interests include SLA, Corrective Feedback in CALL, Testing, and the use of Corpus Linguistics in the second language classroom. Ida Ruffolo is a Researcher in English Language and Linguistics at the University of Calabria, Italy, where she teaches EAP and ESP. She holds a PhD in Language analysis and interdisciplinary studies from the University of Calabria and an MA in ELT from the University of Reading. Her research interests are Corpus Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, and ESP, with particular interest in the language of tourism.
Joint Workshop – Jean Marguerite Jimenez / Jean Marguerite Jimenez: Data-driven learning in the ESP classroom: teachers’ and students’ voices
The purpose of this presentation is to share a didactic experience carried out with Tourism and Business Administration graduate students who used corpus tools in the ESP classroom for the first time. The aim of the activities was to raise students’ awareness of how language actually works as well as help them become more autonomous language learners by providing them with a critical approach to reading texts. Specifically, students examined a corpus of webpages from hotels which have received awards for their sustainable practices in order to investigate the discourse adopted by hoteliers when communicating their green practices. Through the use of a concordancing program, the students analysed the texts quantitatively and qualitatively in order to draw their own conclusions on the promotion of sustainability in hotel websites and decide whether potential tourists might consider the message conveyed reliable.Although the activities were considered a success by the teachers, further investigation on the learners’ perceptions was necessary. Thus, a questionnaire was administered at the end of the course to verify to what extent the students considered the data driven approach to be effective and how it could be improved to further facilitate language learning. During the first part of the presentation we will illustrate the didactic activities carried out and show how they can be adapted to other ESP contexts. We will then discuss the results of the questionnaire and consider pedagogical implications.