Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

A Corpus-Based Analysis of Cohesion in L2 Writing by Undergraduates in Ecuador

Show simple item record

dc.contributor Myhill, Debra
dc.contributor Durrant, Philip
dc.creator LEMA ALARCON, J
dc.date 2023-01-12T08:26:27Z
dc.date 2023-01-16
dc.date 2023-01-11T20:13:16Z
dc.date 2023-01-12T08:26:27Z
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-23T12:19:13Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-23T12:19:13Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10871/132219
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/258757
dc.description In finding out the nature of cohesion in L2 writing, the present study set out to address three research questions: (1) What types of cohesion relations occur in L2 writing at the sentence, paragraph, and whole-text levels? (2) What is the relationship between lexico-grammatical cohesion features and teachers’ judgements of writing quality? (3) Do expectations of cohesion suggested by the CEFR match what is found in student writing? To answer those questions, a corpus of 240 essays and 240 emails from college- level students learning English as a foreign language in Ecuador enabled the analysis of cohesion. Each text included the scores, or teachers’ judgements of writing quality aligned to the upper-intermediate level (or B2) as proposed by the Common European Framework of Reference for learning, teaching, and assessing English as a foreign language. Lexical and grammatical items used by L2 students to build relationships of meaning in sentences, paragraphs, and the entire text were considered to analyse cohesion in L2 writing. Utilising Natural Language Processing tools (e.g., TAACO, TextInspector, NVivo), the analysis focused on determining which cohesion features (e.g., word repetition/overlap, semantical similarity, connective words) predicted the teachers’ judgements of writing quality in the collected essays and emails. The findings indicate that L2 writing is characterised by word overlap and synonyms occurring at the paragraph level and, to a lesser degree, cohesion between sentences and the entire text (e.g., connective words). Whilst these cohesion features positively and negatively predicted the teachers’ scores, a cautious interpretation of these findings is required, as many other factors beyond cohesion features must have also influenced the allocation of scores in L2 writing.
dc.publisher University of Exeter
dc.publisher Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences. Graduate School of Education
dc.rights http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
dc.subject cohesion
dc.subject corpus linguistics
dc.subject L2 writing
dc.subject automatic analysers
dc.subject CEFR
dc.subject lexical cohesion
dc.subject grammatical cohesion
dc.subject text analysis
dc.subject ELT
dc.subject EFL
dc.subject writing quality
dc.subject connective words
dc.subject conjunction
dc.subject lexical overlap
dc.subject latent semantic analysis
dc.subject regression
dc.subject writing
dc.title A Corpus-Based Analysis of Cohesion in L2 Writing by Undergraduates in Ecuador
dc.type Thesis or dissertation
dc.type PhD in Education
dc.type Doctoral
dc.type Doctoral Thesis


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Lema AlarconJ.pdf 5.586Mb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse