Developing pragmatic competence on a stay abroad

Project: Research

Project participants

Description

STUDY-ABROAD RESEARCH PROJECT


Study-abroad programs are generally believed to enhance foreign language skills to an extent that classroom instruction cannot match. Students and language educators often state that one of the most important benefits of spending a semester abroad is the opportunity to master a foreign language. Given the importance of study-abroad in both European and US degree programs, considerable research effort has been devoted to examining the ways in which a sojourn abroad can contribute to the development of foreign language skills. One of the most obvious benefits of living in a foreign country can be that students interact with local people and can observe how they communicate.

As most studies have shown, spending a semester abroad often results in both better pragmatic awareness and the use of more appropriate conventional expressions in various communicative situations. Despite their great expectations, however, some students do not seem to make much more progress during study abroad than those students who participate in focused pragmatic training at their home establishments.

Therefore, the aim of our innovative research project is twofold:

a) to develop study materials and administer a training course for students who go on study-abroad in order to raise their awareness of the language learning opportunities that such an experience can give them, and prepare them for the kinds of cross-cultural encounters that they might expect during their stay. The course is entitled "Detektiv im Ausland: eine sprachliche Online-Begleitung während eines Auslandsaufenthalts“ /“Detective abroad: Support language development during stay abroad” and is going to be offered in the course catalogue for outgoing students (on stay/abroad in English-speaking countries) in the Winter semester starting in September; and

b) to conduct a longitudinal study in order to evaluate our study-abroad preparation course, and to extend previous research into the effects of study abroad to the use of novel media applications and the impact of individual differences on the success of such programs.



For more information please contact:

Prof. Dr. Anne Barron or Dr. Anna Trebits
LeuphanaUniversitätLüneburg
ZeMoS / Study-Abroad Project

StatusFinished
Period01.09.1201.09.14

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Publications

  1. Towards a global understanding of tree mortality
  2. Towards a Critique of Social Networking
  3. Bolt load retention and creep response of AS41 alloyed with 0.15% Ca
  4. Necessity and inefficiency in the generation of waste
  5. Corrosion behavior of As-Cast binary Mg-Dy alloys
  6. “Smart is not smart enough!” Anticipating critical raw material use in smart city concepts
  7. A revised theory of contestable markets
  8. Export scope and characteristics of destination countries
  9. A transfer operator based numerical investigation of coherent structures in three-dimensional Southern ocean circulation
  10. Synthesis, self-assembly, bacterial and fungal toxicity, and preliminary biodegradation studies of a series of L-phenylalanine-derived surface-active ionic liquids
  11. Friedenspraxis
  12. Analphabetismus
  13. How students’ self-control and smartphone-use explain their academic performance
  14. Towards an Intra- and Interorganizational Perspective
  15. Optimal grazing management rules in semi-arid rangelands with uncertain rainfall
  16. Leaf Nutritional Content, Tree Richness, and Season Shape the Caterpillar Functional Trait Composition Hosted by Trees
  17. Carbon performance and disclosure
  18. Dimension theoretical properties of generalized Baker's transformations
  19. Math-Bridge: Adaptive Platform for Multilingual Mathematics Courses
  20. Klassengröße
  21. Legal Parameters of Space Tourism
  22. Comparison through conversation
  23. Not only biocidal products
  24. Editors’ Introduction
  25. Organizational Wrongdoing, Boundary Work, and Systems of Exclusion
  26. Mapping Swap Rate Projections on Bond Yields Considering Cointegration
  27. Modeling and Simulation of Electrochemical Cells under Applied Voltage
  28. Exploiting the Economic Opportunities of the Energy Transition
  29. Collisionless damping in the spectra of active plasma resonance spectroscopic probes