REVIEW JURNAL
Journal
of Linguistics
Abstract
This journal is written in order to understand the more specific content of linguistic journals I will invite you to consider some of the problems that arise When certain types of objects exist in our everyday world, , The so-called social facts "Language" is epistemically reconstituted with a disciplinary agenda that focuses on Select the number of its features as extracted fractions, and, by taking them as objects Research, looking performative to establish themselves as a unified discipline. I argue that the "extractionist" impulses are to replace language studies With the language-fraction-study running as a thread\
This journal is written in order to understand the more specific content of linguistic journals I will invite you to consider some of the problems that arise When certain types of objects exist in our everyday world, , The so-called social facts "Language" is epistemically reconstituted with a disciplinary agenda that focuses on Select the number of its features as extracted fractions, and, by taking them as objects Research, looking performative to establish themselves as a unified discipline. I argue that the "extractionist" impulses are to replace language studies With the language-fraction-study running as a thread\
in the "linguistic discipline During
most of the twentieth century, especially in the dominant
"departmentalized” form; Which together with certain corollaries
(discussed below) the impulse Is a language ideology (and its disciplinary mode
of study) for many Leading linguists of the period, including Saussure,
Bloomfield, Chomsky, and them Followers; Which continues to re-direct the
energy of the practitioner caught in his Grip toward smaller and smaller
fractions of the language as usually understood.
Preliminary
In this section the
researcher writes the notion of linguistic trajectories in the coming decades
likely to be formed by how to formulate the object of the study (either as a
language or some narrowly defined aspect of language) and by its corresponding or
narrow extent to that which articulated its own epistemic project in
twenty-first century academies . This article discusses two epistemic
projects that have formed linguistics in the previous century, both of which
survive in institutional zones that are somewhat different from today's
academies. I diagnose some of the assumptions underlying this linguistic narrow
conception in the first of these traditions. I argue that the
"linguistic turn" in the academy, on the other hand, is oriented to a
wider language study comprehended. This creates difficulties for any narrowly
understood linguistics, the difficulty that a broader vision of language as a
learning object and of any discipline that learns things must seek to overcome.
Keywords: linguistics; language; The sociology of knowledge; Linguistic
history; Ihave discipline formation has been requested by The
organizers of this conference to address two rather paradoxical questions,
namely (quoting now from letters of invitation) to discuss the "linguistic
future direction" and to comment on the "possibility of unified
discipline" Paradox put forward by their suppositions. The first Question
assumes that an integrated discipline called linguistics exists and goes
somewhere; But the second, by calling attention to the present lack of
integration, implies some possibly mutually exclusive goals. We
can not approach these questions by taking preformary discipline as our topic,
or assuming that the question of the future has an independently meaningful
choice of purpose. And, we can not understand (or choose) where linguistics is
going without a principled understanding of why and when something is
considered "Linguistic" or what "discipline integration"
might mean, and how it comes about, or not. Linguistics is not just "any
linguist do." In fact most of the activities in which linguists engage
(eg, driving for work, paying taxes) are never counted as linguistic. Activities
that are counted as linguistic are activity-oriented to a particular object of
study, institutionalized audience (journal, conference), affiliate units
(departments, associations), and tradition of inquiry (literature reference).
This reference from "linguistics" is a scope of activity involving
the study of language (and its products).
Problem
Results
In this journal
examined the level of awareness of metacognitive listening strategies in
learning English as foreign among Iranian university students and high school
students. The results show that in general the level of awareness of
metacognitive listening strategies is satisfactory. These
findings are in line with findings from other studies showing that Iranian
students have a high metacognitive awareness in general (Pishghadam, 2009;
Lachini, 1997; Tajedin, 2001; Akbari, 2003) and in listening strategies (Rahimi
and katal, 2010; ShiraniBidabadi and Yamat, 2010, 2011) as well as other
reading skills (Mahmoudi and Khonamri, 2010) and vocabulary (Chari, Samavi and
Kordestani, 2010) in particular. In-depth analysts researchers show that
students are more aware of problem solving strategies than other types of
strategies. These findings suggest that Iranian students
generally use well-known words and overviews of texts to infer the meaning of
unknown words, using their experience and general knowledge in interpreting
texts, adjusting their interpretations for realizing that it is not true,
monitoring the accuracy Conclusions for congruence with evolving
interpretations, and compare the evolving interpretations with their knowledge
of the topic (Vandergrift, et al., 2006). However, researchers have also found
that Iranian students are unaware of their people's knowledge strategy.
People's knowledge refers to students' self-efficacy and the ability to assess
the perceived difficulty of learning tasks. This supports the fact that
metacognitive knowledge and self-efficacy are closely related (Vandergrift,
2005). The findings of this study can be explained taking into account the fact
that it is rare that Iranian students have an opportunity to evaluate their own
strength with the assignment given in the language classes because most of the
course-time languages in Iran focus on traditional techniques and
teacher-centered methods ( Rahimi and Nabilou, 2009). Researchers
argue that the concept of self-assessment, self-awareness, and peer-assessment has
not really expanded among Iranian students, while the most practical essence
for improving metacognitive skills is to engage students in collaborative
activities such as peer assessment, collective reflection, and Modeling
metacognitive processes (Choi, Land, and Turgeon, 2005). As students plan,
monitor and reflect on their work can be applied to encourage metacognitive
thinking and development, the need for formation in the EFL curriculum in Iran
is highlighted by these findings.
Conclusion
The researcher
found that In what follows, I use the specific expression determinants
"language," "that language," 'language,' 'multiple
languages,' 'language'-as well as plural "Language" to refer to one
or more of the types of socio-historical formations that are We usually refer
to as Spanish, Arabic, Chinese, or Tagalog. It has important
consequences that the study of the aspects of human affairs can be illuminated
by language studies, provided we have a useful set of models that serve
analytically as "bridging construction" -that is, provide a revealing
link or connection between some observable features of the language and the
human realm Affairs that inform. Thus,
the way the grammatical category modeling allows us to relate the facts of
formal constituents to semantic and cultural classifications. The model of the
deixis clarifies the principles by which the utterances of choosing an existing
entity (whether independent or performative), and which, after choosing, come
to fill the discourse as "reference."
The model styles and lists feature discourse links for social identity
affairs, relative status, and social relationships in institutionalized balls
of any kind, including those defined by law, medical, educational, ceremonial,
or scientific practices of language use (Agha 2007). The model of how the
language ideology works enables us to see how the discourse reshapes social
formation-nationalism, gender relations, and even the scientific constitution.
Critical Analysis
My interest in this
epistemic project lies in the manner in which the epistemic constitution of its
object of study motivates the sociological boundaries of the discipline. I do not
care about the question of whether the discipline should have boundaries; I
take it for granted that it must. And I do not
care about every aspect of
The Saussurean epistemic project, or, from the point of view of this
discussion,
With Saussure's theories about how language works. My interest lies in the
reflexive organization of the Saussure epistemic project, his proposal on how
objects are
The three features of this project are evident in Saussure's proposal.
Deficiency
1 Bibliography written by researchers
is complete but some of the references are considered too long so it is not up
to date.
2 Other studies of different outcomes
are not clarified further than previous versions.
3 The number of participants who are
not balanced between the two groups so it looks less fair.
4 Too many quotations, so the thought
of the researchers themselves is less visible.
5 Not displayed questionnaire, so the
reader does not know clearly what is being questioned therein.
6 There is no explanation of the
steps of the metacognitive listening strategy itself so that the lay reader is
difficult to understand.
Advantages
1 Researchers are able to see the gap
is interesting enough to be investigated further.
2 Long-term research results
facilitate students to better self-correcting the awareness of listening to
metacognitive to improve learning achievement.