Anda belum login :: 21 Apr 2025 08:50 WIB
Detail
ArtikelTranstivity Analysis of EFL College Students' Reader Responses to Short Stories  
Oleh: Iskhak ; Sofwan, Ahmad ; Hartono, Rudi
Jenis: Article from Proceeding
Dalam koleksi: KOLITA 14 : Konferensi Linguistik Tahunan Atma Jaya Keempat Belas, page 291-297.
Topik: Reader response theory; Aesthetic experience; Systemic functional linguistics; Transitivity; Mental processes
Fulltext: hal 291-297.pdf (18.75MB)
Ketersediaan
  • Perpustakaan PKBB
    • Nomor Panggil: 406 KLA 14
    • Non-tandon: 1 (dapat dipinjam: 1)
    • Tandon: 1
   Reserve Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikelThe present study reports on the usefulness of transitivity for scrutinizing EFL college students’ written responses to short stories assigned as shown in their negotiated response journals. Under the spirit of the integration of Literary Criticism and Halliday’s Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) (Beck and Jeffery, 2009; Moore, 2014), the study sees the shared points between the two trends. The former is concerned with approaches to selecting teaching pedagogy, the latter supports the ways of how to critically see the construing process of resulted discourses. Rosenblatt’s (2005) reader response theory-based treatment in teaching literature class has potentially allowed students as readers to aesthetically experience of being engaged in the process of transacting with the text. In addition, the study is also driven by Vygotsky’s view on socio-constructivism in that sociocultural aspect of learning influences its nature. The reader transaction process is socially constructed, contextually and culturally bounded, shaped by the state being of the research site, and enhanced by their literacy (negotiated reading-speaking-writing events in classroom as a community) experiences. Writing reader response journals then stimulated the readers as writers to use personal and critical expressions as seen in their use of certain linguistic elements. Aesthetic stances normally include both personal and critical accounts. Personally and critically speaking, writers’ reader response strategies embrace personal responses in that the first person pronouns and mental processes are uniquely dominant in their responses (Feez and Joyce, 1998). Owing to the limitedness of using traditional approach to categorize the used verbs in response journals, the so-called transitivity analysis is then essential to uncover linguistic features and to determine the ‘process’ types. The study took place in a reader response-based literature class in the English Education Program in a private college of EFL teacher education in Ciamis, West Java, Indonesia. Twenty two third grade student teachers as an intact group participated in the study. Along one semester course of study, they were trained how to personally and critically respond to several short stories. They deserved freedom in expressing their own ideas, wants, and expectations in nonthreatening classroom atmosphere and actualized them in reader response journals (Parsons, 2001). Teacher’s scaffolding strategy, small group and classroom discussions, and peer-feedbacks illuminated the response activities. In addition, their medium literacy level was indicated by writing skills that still needs improving and their TOEFL-like score with mediocre level from 450 to 475. The study focused on the successful student writers’ final written response drafts after being peer-reviewed. The findings indicated that the more the responses represent their aesthetic experiences, the more the first person pronouns and mental processes the writers use. The present study recommends that further study explore on the gender effects on the ‘processes’ realized in their reader responses to literary works.
Opini AndaKlik untuk menuliskan opini Anda tentang koleksi ini!

Kembali
design
 
Process time: 0.015625 second(s)