Towards evaluative meaning-making through enactive role play

The case of pre-tertiary students in Second Life

Authors

  • Caroline M.L. Ho Nanyang Technological University
  • Amilyn M.H. Ong Nanyang Technological University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/japl.v4i2.171

Keywords:

Evaluation, Appraisal, Argumentation, Virtual role play, Second Life

Abstract

This paper is an exploratory study into enhancing students’ critical thinking and argumentation skills through enactive role play in a virtual environment. Specifically, it focuses on the construction of evaluative expressions within a community of 17-18 year old Singaporean participants in the Second Life virtual world. Drawing on Martin and White’s (2005) Appraisal framework, the investigation delves into how participants overtly encode through linguistic means the virtual roles which they enact as they challenge, defend or persuade each other where appropriate. Participants’ evaluative meaning-making practices are reflective of the argumentation process at work through the virtual role-play. The study also examines paralinguistic cues adopted by participants. Form-function analysis of features such as facial expressions, head movements, body gestures in the virtual dialoguing offers a study of the interplay of these modalities as strategic devices which enhance to varying degrees the nuances of evaluative meaning-making in the virtual environment. Pedagogical implications of our findings are discussed.

Author Biographies

  • Caroline M.L. Ho, Nanyang Technological University

    Caroline M. L. Ho is Assistant Professor with the English Language and Literature Academic Group, National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Her PhD in Applied Linguistics from the University of Birmingham (UK) is in the area of asynchronous computer mediated communication. Her research interests include design research in new media and new literacies, discourse analysis of computer-mediated communication and language pedagogy in the areas of argumentation and critical thinking.

  • Amilyn M.H. Ong, Nanyang Technological University

    Amilyn M. H. Ong is Academic Associate, Centre for Culture and Communication, Republic Polytechnic, Singapore. She was Research Assistant during the data analysis phase of the study. She holds a BA (Hons) in English Language from the National University of Singapore. Her earlier research involved a discourse analytic investigation of ICQ messaging.

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Published

2015-09-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Ho, C. M., & Ong, A. M. (2015). Towards evaluative meaning-making through enactive role play: The case of pre-tertiary students in Second Life. Journal of Applied Linguistics and Professional Practice, 4(2), 171-194. https://doi.org/10.1558/japl.v4i2.171

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