We want to know what you think. How do you define the community in your life and how does the community define your community? Is it a real world or a virtual world? Has your community awareness changed over the years?
I promise to tell stories and exciting work to promote the growth of the local community. But community based work is not easy. How do you define the community? What is the limit? When you "cooperate" with the community, who will you talk to? What are its leaders and key figures? How can you tell if you truly represent the community and are communicating with the community? Speaking of my own project, I am developing a multi-year theater project to build a house in Santa Barbara. Santa Barbara is not such a big place, but its community network can still be as complex as the nervous system. I can spend a lot of time researching neurons but I still do not know how to move my legs (eg). What should I do. Please select a neuron and follow it
This project places you at the center of discussing how to define the discourse community to you. You need to use the project source and your reasoning to help you develop effective case for the discourse community. You will develop your own theory of the discourse community and explain it in examples. Instead of presenting the work in traditional paper form, we create a verbal presentation using screen recording software. Screen recording has become an important tool for presenting information to others. This task gives you the opportunity to learn valuable writing skills using software.
Text author John Swales, "The Discourse Community Concepts" uses six definition functions to determine whether a group of people is considered a discourse community. Swales offers examples through his articles to truly understand the discourse community. He explained the differences between the language community and the discourse community and used many authors to support his view. "And the community of speech is basically defined as a community, knowledge of words and acts, and sharing rules of interpretation" (Swales, 219). He describes the speech community as someone with similar language rules