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Reflection Of A Discourse Community

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John Swales (1990), professor of linguistics, defines a discourse community as an exclusive group of people brought together by a common goal. According to John Swales (1990), every discourse community has six characteristics that makes them a discourse community. Overall the group must have a shared goal, in which they communicate with each other through different genres and lexis they have developed; genres are different types of communication that the group employ and lexis is the specialized language utilized by that particular discourse community. They also tend to have a hierarchy within the group and require individual group members to truly participate to be counted as a part of the discourse community. (p. 471-73)
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It was easier to figure out the functions and the mechanisms of this group because there were only about eleven students. I focused more on the interactions between the students, instead of looking farther into the communication between the TA and the students. Students usually are concentrated more on getting the TA’s opinion on their problems, I wanted to see what was happening in a small group without the TA’s input. There shared goal was obviously to pass their chemistry class, especially because chemistry is known to be a very rigorous and difficult course to pass. This particular TASL workshop required the students come to every meeting because it counted for a portion of their overall grade in their actual chemistry class. They were given a packet of chemistry problems by the TA to complete together by assigning each member a portion of the assignment. Each of the packet’s five problems were broken into smaller parts to be assigned to each group member for them to get everyone’s input and perspective. It forced the other people in the group to participate or at least pay attention to each person completing a part of the problem because if they didn’t it would throw the rest of the problem off. This gave them the opportunity to see from each other’s different perspectives to get a better understanding of chemistry. By making the students participate in completing the packet together to get feedback and answers

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