ARTICLE
TITLE

A data-driven learning experiment in the legal English classroom using the FLAX platform

SUMMARY

This research presents a data-driven experiment in the legal English field where the FLAX, an open-source self-learning online platform, is assessed as regards its efficacy in aiding a group of legal English non-native undergraduates (divided into an experimental and a control group) to use legal terminology more consistently, amongst other language items. The experimental group were instructed to only resort to the FLAX and to exploit all the functionalities offered by it. Conversely, the control group could access any information source at hand except for the learning platform for the completion of the same task.  Two learner corpora were gathered and analysed on a lexical and pragmatic level for the evaluation of term usage and distribution, lexical diversity, lexical fundamentality and the use of discourse markers. The results display a tendency on the part of the experimental group towards a more consistent usage of legal terminology, which also appears to be better distributed than the terms in the non-FLAX corpus. In contrast and on average, the lexicon in the FLAX-based corpus tends to be slightly more basic. Concerning the use of MD markers, the experimental group appears to use, though marginally, a greater number of evidentials, endophoric and interactional markers.

 Articles related

Nazmat Surajudeen-Bakinde, Nasir Faruk, Abdulkarim Oloyede, Abubakar Abdulkarim, Lukman Olawoyin, Segun Popoola, Emmanuel Adetiba    

Today, the world is technology-driven and so of these technologies are driven using wireless systems. Signal coverage and quality of service are pertinent for network providers and path loss prediction is very important in the design and planning of thes... see more


Rina Wahyu Setyaningrum,Slamet Setiawan,Syafiul Anam,Pratiwi Retnaningdyah    

COVID-19 outbreak that has shifted face-to-face (f2f) to force­d remote learning challenged the CLIL Science teacher to thrive in a new teaching form. The f2f adaptation of the virtual meeting using video conferencing software has driven the teacher to h... see more


Khusnul Khotimah,Utami Widiati,Mutmainnah Mustofa,M. Faruq Ubaidillah10.17509/ijal.v9i2.20234   Abstract views: 1092          

This study aims at investigating teachers’ and students’perceptions of autonomous learning in English language teaching and to what extent the teachers foster students’ autonomous learning. A set of questionnaire was distributed to 30 English teachers an... see more


Asma’a Abdulrazzaq Al-Mahbashi,Noorizah Mohd Noor,Zaini Amir    

Over the past decades, the potential for the direct use of corpora known as data driven learning (DDL) has gained great prominence in English language classrooms. A substantial number of empirical studies demonstrated that DDL instruction positively affe... see more


Ana Bocanegra-Valle    

Needs analysis is a relevant issue in language teaching as its final aim is to enhance the language learning process by setting realistic course objectives. This paper briefly reviews past and present approaches to the concept of “needs” and “needs analy... see more