Abstract

The present study investigates the use of Problem-Solution in student essays to identify whether or not, or to what extent, this text pattern is a source of perceived difference in NNS student essays, in comparison with NS student essays. The study is a follow-up to Tahara (2017), which compared argumentation essays written by NNS students with those by NS students, conducted from the perspective of the use of metadiscursive nouns. They are general and unspecific meaning nouns that can serve as markers of the discourse in some ways by referring to a textual segment in the texts where the nouns occur. Of 33 selected metadiscursive nouns examined in Tahara (2017), this paper reexamines the use of a noun problem in relation to the Problem-Solution pattern. The focus of the noun for the investigation of the use of Problem-Solution is because in the 2017 study (Tahara), problem very often occurred in combination with a Response/Solution-indicating vocabulary in both corpora, as in ‘problem is solved’; ‘consider the problem’; or ‘problem should bedealt with’ (underlinedare vocabulary signaling Response/Solution). Problem-Solution is a well-known English rhetorical pattern, often used in technical academic writing (Flowerdew, 2003), but it seems not to have been taught in the writing of English essays, at least in Japan. In contrast, the text pattern often used in the class is Introduction-Body-Conclusion to prepare for TOEFL/IELTS writing, along with the teaching of the paragraph structure, comprised of a topic sentence, supporting details, and concluding sentences.

Highlights

  • The present study investigates the use of Problem-Solution in student essays to identify whether or not, or to what extent, this text pattern is a source of perceived difference in NNS student essays, in comparison with NS student essays

  • Vagueness in JICLE included bi-directional and narrative students, this feature was found common in Japanese editorials written by professional writers in the study of Ushie et al (1997)

  • Referring to insufficient use to the JICLE essays suggests that without some and vague information, problem in anaphoric functions in explicit instruction, pervasive L1 features may remain in JICLE often shifted the discourse abruptly, serving as a L2 writing

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Summary

Introduction

The present study investigates the use of Problem-Solution in student essays to identify whether or not, or to what extent, this text pattern is a source of perceived difference in NNS student essays, in comparison with NS student essays. This section has shown that Problem-Solution in US occurred in a similar sequence to the model English rhetorical pattern, even when causal relations were embedded. The comparison between the JICLE and the US using frame markers had a hard time to understand the essays revealed differences in the use of problem as a messages in the texts, indicating importance of frame marker of the discourse and in its relations to the markers in constructing Japanese texts.

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