Title of article :
Instructed Second Language Pragmatics for the Speech Act of Apology in an Iranian EFL Context: A Meta-Analysis
Author/Authors :
Shakki, Farzaneh Department of English Language Teaching - Islamic Azad University - Aliabad Katoul Branch - Aliabad Katoul, Iran , Naeini, Jila Department of English Language Teaching - Islamic Azad University - Aliabad Katoul Branch - Aliabad Katoul, Iran , Mazandarani, Omid Department of English Language Teaching - Islamic Azad University - Aliabad Katoul Branch - Aliabad Katoul, Iran , Derakhshan, Ali Department of English Language and Literature - Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences - Golestan University - Gorgan, Iran
Abstract :
Considering one of the earliest calls for applying pragmatics in the second language, Kasper and Rose’s (2002) study “Is Pragmatic Teachable?”, pragmatic features have been analyzed during the last 20 years in EFL/ESL contexts. The amalgamation of studies has been conducted on many speech acts around the world within the two decades, among which apology is considered as the second most-appreciated speech act in Iran. The aim of the present meta-analysis study is twofold: first, to unravel the overall effectiveness of the instruction in an Iranian EFL context on the speech act of apology, and second, to explore whether treatment types and research designs moderate this effectiveness. To this end, out of a total number of 31 studies, 12 papers were chosen based on the exclusion and inclusion criteria, which were coded for the analysis. The studies were published from 2000 to 2020 on the speech act of apology in which the sufficient data for calculating the effect size exist were chosen to be added in this study. The results of the study revealed that the instruction of apology is effective for this speech act, and it documented a medium effect size. Furthermore, it was found that research design is a good predictor for this effectiveness, and the quasi-experimental group displayed a large (g = 2.39) and positive effect. Although treatment types (e.g., explicit and non-explicit) produced medium and large effect sizes, they are not a suitable predictor for the overall effectiveness of instruction on the aforementioned speech act. The study concludes with pedagogical implications and suggestions for future studies.
Keywords :
Iranian Context , Speech Act , Meta-Analysis , Pragmatics , Apology , Instruction
Journal title :
Applied Research on English Language