While language teacher education programmes and language syllabi in secondary education
encourage the use of the target language in the classroom, resources to support teachers in this
endeavour, such as books with useful phrases, do not state that the examples they provide are
corpus-based, i.e. drawn from actual language use rather than invented phrases. This paper
investigates whether consultation of a corpus of classroom discourse can be of benefit in language
teacher education. The paper describes a project involving the creation of corpora of classroom
discourse in French and Spanish, and the use of these corpora with student teachers. After setting
the research in the context of corpora and classroom interaction, it examines issues such as the
content of the corpora, the type of consultation (direct or mediated by the teacher), and the student
teachers’ evaluation of the activity. Special attention is paid to one particular aspect of classroom
interaction, discourse markers.
History
Publication
ReCALL;18 (1), pp. 83-104
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Note
peer-reviewed
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