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Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.

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Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence. / Gabrielatos, Costas.
2003. Paper presented at BAAL 36th Annual Meeting, Leeds, UK.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Gabrielatos, C 2003, 'Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.', Paper presented at BAAL 36th Annual Meeting, Leeds, UK, 4/09/03 - 6/09/03.

APA

Gabrielatos, C. (2003). Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.. Paper presented at BAAL 36th Annual Meeting, Leeds, UK.

Vancouver

Gabrielatos C. Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.. 2003. Paper presented at BAAL 36th Annual Meeting, Leeds, UK.

Author

Gabrielatos, Costas. / Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence. Paper presented at BAAL 36th Annual Meeting, Leeds, UK.16 p.

Bibtex

@conference{aea083705cd644ebb403d37508e77c75,
title = "Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.",
abstract = "This paper presents the findings of a pilot study examining the representation of the typology of conditional sentences presented in English language teaching (ELT) materials (coursebooks and grammars) in a random sample of 1,000 conditional sentences from the British National Corpus. The if-clause and main clause of the conditional sentences in the sample was annotated for the form of the main verb (particularly tense and aspect), the modal auxiliaries and other lexis expressing modality, time reference and modality. Each sentence was also annotated for the type of relation holding between the two clauses, as well as their relative time reference. ELT materials essentially use the typology in logic (real, counterfactual and hypothetical conditionals), with the addition of two more types, {\^a}��zero{\^a}�� and {\^a}��mixed{\^a}��. The vast majority of ELT materials provide information about the following aspects of conditional sentences: a. The tense-aspect marking of the main verbs in the if-clause and main clause. b. The modal auxiliaries that can be used in each clause. c. The time reference of the conditional sentence (not of each clause). d. The user{\^a}��s attitude towards possibility. Maule (1988) examined 100 conditional sentences collected from television and found that there was a large group of sentences that could not fit in the framework of the 3 types. The study supports this finding, but also points towards the need to adapt the typology and information offered in ELT materials. The paper reports on the frequency of the five ELT types in the sample and outlines the cases that the typology does not cover. It also presents some preliminary findings regarding patterns in tense marking and modal expression on one hand, and time reference and modality on the other, briefly discusses implications for a pedagogical treatment of conditionals and proposes a tentative adaptation of the ELT typology.",
keywords = "if-conditionals, modality, typology, English language teaching, pedagogical grammar, pedagogical materials",
author = "Costas Gabrielatos",
year = "2003",
month = sep,
day = "5",
language = "English",
note = "BAAL 36th Annual Meeting ; Conference date: 04-09-2003 Through 06-09-2003",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence.

AU - Gabrielatos, Costas

PY - 2003/9/5

Y1 - 2003/9/5

N2 - This paper presents the findings of a pilot study examining the representation of the typology of conditional sentences presented in English language teaching (ELT) materials (coursebooks and grammars) in a random sample of 1,000 conditional sentences from the British National Corpus. The if-clause and main clause of the conditional sentences in the sample was annotated for the form of the main verb (particularly tense and aspect), the modal auxiliaries and other lexis expressing modality, time reference and modality. Each sentence was also annotated for the type of relation holding between the two clauses, as well as their relative time reference. ELT materials essentially use the typology in logic (real, counterfactual and hypothetical conditionals), with the addition of two more types, �zero� and �mixed�. The vast majority of ELT materials provide information about the following aspects of conditional sentences: a. The tense-aspect marking of the main verbs in the if-clause and main clause. b. The modal auxiliaries that can be used in each clause. c. The time reference of the conditional sentence (not of each clause). d. The user�s attitude towards possibility. Maule (1988) examined 100 conditional sentences collected from television and found that there was a large group of sentences that could not fit in the framework of the 3 types. The study supports this finding, but also points towards the need to adapt the typology and information offered in ELT materials. The paper reports on the frequency of the five ELT types in the sample and outlines the cases that the typology does not cover. It also presents some preliminary findings regarding patterns in tense marking and modal expression on one hand, and time reference and modality on the other, briefly discusses implications for a pedagogical treatment of conditionals and proposes a tentative adaptation of the ELT typology.

AB - This paper presents the findings of a pilot study examining the representation of the typology of conditional sentences presented in English language teaching (ELT) materials (coursebooks and grammars) in a random sample of 1,000 conditional sentences from the British National Corpus. The if-clause and main clause of the conditional sentences in the sample was annotated for the form of the main verb (particularly tense and aspect), the modal auxiliaries and other lexis expressing modality, time reference and modality. Each sentence was also annotated for the type of relation holding between the two clauses, as well as their relative time reference. ELT materials essentially use the typology in logic (real, counterfactual and hypothetical conditionals), with the addition of two more types, �zero� and �mixed�. The vast majority of ELT materials provide information about the following aspects of conditional sentences: a. The tense-aspect marking of the main verbs in the if-clause and main clause. b. The modal auxiliaries that can be used in each clause. c. The time reference of the conditional sentence (not of each clause). d. The user�s attitude towards possibility. Maule (1988) examined 100 conditional sentences collected from television and found that there was a large group of sentences that could not fit in the framework of the 3 types. The study supports this finding, but also points towards the need to adapt the typology and information offered in ELT materials. The paper reports on the frequency of the five ELT types in the sample and outlines the cases that the typology does not cover. It also presents some preliminary findings regarding patterns in tense marking and modal expression on one hand, and time reference and modality on the other, briefly discusses implications for a pedagogical treatment of conditionals and proposes a tentative adaptation of the ELT typology.

KW - if-conditionals

KW - modality

KW - typology

KW - English language teaching

KW - pedagogical grammar

KW - pedagogical materials

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - BAAL 36th Annual Meeting

Y2 - 4 September 2003 through 6 September 2003

ER -