Liu, Chianing (2007-12). Pragmatics in foreign language instruction: the effects of pedagogical intervention and technology on the development of EFL learners' realization of "request". Doctoral Dissertation. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • This study investigated the effectiveness of explicit pragmatic instruction on the
    acquisition of requests by college-level English as a Foreign Language (EFL) learners in
    Taiwan. The researcher applied quantitative and qualitative approaches to determine first
    whether the use of explicit pragmatic instruction had a positive effect on EFL learners'
    pragmatic competence. Second, the relative effectiveness of presenting pragmatics
    through two delivery systems--face-to-face, in-class activities and computer-mediated
    communication (CMC) via e-mail and WebCT--was compared.
    One hundred and eighteen Taiwanese undergraduate students who made up three
    intact classes in an "English for Tourism" course completed the entire study. The three
    groups were: (1) the control group, in which students received no explicit instruction on
    pragmatics but received instructor-led lessons from the textbook's teacher's manual, (2)
    the experimental/Teacher Instruction (TI) group, in which students learned pragmatics in
    a face-to-face classroom setting with explicit instruction on pragmatics, and (3) the
    experimental/CMC group, in which students learned pragmatics explicitly through e-mail
    and WebCT discussions with their partners at Texas A&M University. There were 40 Taiwanese students in the control group, 36 Taiwanese students in the
    experimental/Teacher Instruction group and 42 Taiwanese students in the
    experimental/CMC group. Treatment types (Control/TI/CMC) were randomly assigned to
    the intact classes.
    The results showed that explicit pragmatic instruction had a positive impact on the
    EFL learners in both the Teacher Instruction and CMC groups. Learners who received
    explicit pragmatic instruction performed better on the Discourse Completion Task
    posttest than those who did not. The findings also indicated that technology can be a
    valuable tool for delivering pragmatics instruction.

publication date

  • December 2007