• Title of article

    Process of EFL Learners’ Politeness Markers Development: A Sociocultural Perspective

  • Author/Authors

    Hosseinpur ، Rasoul Mohammad Assistant Professor of TEFL; University of Qom , Hosseinpur ، Rasoul Mohammad Assistant Professor of TEFL; University of Qom , Bagheri Nevisi ، Reza Assistant Professor of TEFL; University of Qom , Bagheri Nevisi ، Reza Assistant Professor of TEFL; University of Qom

  • Pages
    21
  • From page
    109
  • To page
    129
  • Abstract
    In spite of the crucial function of the politeness markers in the appropriate communication of the language learners, teachability of these markers has not received due attention in the pragmatic studies. Drawing upon House and Kasper’s (1981) influential taxonomy of politeness markers, the present study addressed teachability as well as the underlying process or microgenetic development of these markers in an EFL context. A population of 56 undergraduate participants underwent instruction through consciousnessraising (CR) tasks for nine sessions. The data were obtained through repeated measurements during the first, third, fifth, seventh, and ninth sessions. The findings highlighted the effectiveness of the politeness markers instruction and suggested that the learners’ heavy reliance on some structures like “please” and consultative devices such as “willingness” and “ability” structures at early stages of data collection was mostly due to their unawareness of other politeness structures. This reliance decreased over time and was replaced by “playdowns” especially “progressive aspect + past tense” structure in the course of the instruction.Likewise, a wider range of simple politeness markers such as hedges, understaters, and downtoners which were absent in the learners’ early data increased steadily in their subsequent data. The findings highlight the acquisitional difficulty of pragmatic features and provide researchers, practitioners as well as language learners with information concerning the acquisitional sequence and order of pragmatic features in an EFL instructional context.
  • Journal title
    Journal of Modern Research in English Language Studies
  • Serial Year
    2017
  • Journal title
    Journal of Modern Research in English Language Studies
  • Record number

    2466664