An Analysis of the Application of the Core Ideas of Functional Linguistics to English Teaching in Colleges and Universities
Publié en ligne: 30 mai 2024
Reçu: 29 févr. 2024
Accepté: 04 mai 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/amns-2024-1240
Mots clés
© 2024 Jinfeng Wang, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Traditional English teaching methods primarily involve the teacher explaining textual knowledge, often leading to inefficient use of classroom time. This study employs functional linguistics, visual grammar, discourse analysis, and interactive communication theories to analyze multimodal discourse in teacher-student interactions within college English classrooms. The study employs both quantitative and qualitative methods, using ELAN annotation software to manually annotate and analyze classroom teaching videos and lessons on a second-by-second basis across multiple modalities. The results indicate that modal distribution varies across different stages of English teaching, with verbal moderation prevailing and non-verbal moderation serving as a supplement. Verbal interactions show that teacher discourse constitutes 42% of total course time, 1.24 times more than student discourse. These findings offer data-driven insights for teachers to refine their strategies and boost interaction in college English classes.