Surveying pragmatic performance during a study abroad stay: A cross-sectional look at the language of spoken requests

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<jats:p>This paper documents a cross-sectional look at L1 transfer and L2 contact for learners of English in a UK study abroad (SA) context. The study employed an instructional experimental design over a 6-month period with 34 Chinese students assigned to either an explicitly instructed group or a control group receiving no instruction. Instruction took place prior to departure for the UK and performance was measured based on a pretest-posttest design using an oral computer-animated production test (CAPT). This paper explores the data in two specific ways. Firstly, the request data were analysed at the pre-and delayed test stages (six months into the study abroad period) to analyse the extent to which participants’ reliance on L1 request strategies and language changes over time. Secondly, we measured the amount and type of contact with English which participants reported prior to and six months into the study abroad period. Results show that instruction facilitated development of pragmatically appropriate request language over time, with instructed learners showing significantly less reliance on L1 transfer than non-instructed learners. Contact with English increased significantly for both groups on all measures of language production but not all receptive contact with English. When compared, there was no significant difference between the groups’ contact with English at each stage, suggesting that instruction did not result in significantly more interaction with English during the study abroad period.</jats:p>

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10.29140/ice.v2n2.162

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Halenko, Nicola, Christian Jones, Laura Davies and Joseph Davies (n.d.). Surveying pragmatic performance during a study abroad stay: A cross-sectional look at the language of spoken requests. Intercultural Communication Education, 2(2). pp. 71–87. 10.29140/ice.v2n2.162 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31510.

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Scholars@Duke

Davies

Laura Jane Davies

Senior Lecturer of English Language at Duke Kunshan University

Laura Davies is the Assistant Director of English for Academic Purposes (EAP), and Senior Lecturer of English Language in the Language and Culture Center at Duke Kunshan University. She holds an MA in TESOL with Applied Linguistics and a DELTA, specializing in higher education English language teaching management. She is also a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA). Her research interests include assessment literacy, social justice, and inclusive pedagogical and curriculum design. Laura’s current research projects focus on examining and enhancing assessment literacy in Higher Education contexts. Her current teaching innovations include community-based learning, intercultural engagement across diverse populations and the use of dialogic feedback to enhance inclusion and feedback effectiveness. 

Davies

Joseph Arthur Davies

Senior Lecturer of English Language at Duke Kunshan University

Joseph Davies is Senior Lecturer of English Language and Assistant Director for Graduate English for Academic Purposes at Duke Kunshan University's Language and Culture Center. Joseph's current research interests are in higher education assessment, focusing on feedback, specifically second language student feedback literacy, teacher feedback literacy, and feedback culture within Sino-foreign higher education contexts. His research has been published in academic journals such as Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. Joseph is also a founding core lab member of Duke Kunshan University's Institute for Global Higher Education (IGHE) pedagogical research and practice lab. He holds a First Class B.Sc. (honors) in forensic science and an M.A. in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages with Applied Linguistics. He also holds a University of Cambridge DELTA qualification and is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (SFHEA). Joseph has over 15 years' experience designing, managing and teaching academic and professional English-language and teacher training courses throughout China and in the UK. Joseph has lectured at New York University Shanghai and previously served as business development lead for one of the UK's largest universities, establishing, maintaining, and enhancing academic partnerships throughout China.


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