1. DISCOURSE MARKING IN SPOKEN INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION BETWEEN BRITISH AND TAIWANESE ADOLESCENT LEARNERS.
- Author
-
Yen-Liang Lin
- Subjects
- *
DISCOURSE markers , *DISCOURSE analysis , *ENGLISH as a foreign language , *ENGLISH language education , *LANGUAGE research , *ORAL communication , *CROSS-cultural communication - Abstract
This study investigates and compares the use of discourse markers (DMs) by native speakers and learners of English based on a corpus of adolescent intercultural exchange students. The study employs a discourse analytical approach, in which Fung and Carter's (2007) multi-category framework is applied with a view to examining DMs used by a group of Taiwanese and British adolescents in an intercultural setting. The analytical framework contains four main functional categories: Interpersonal, referential, structural and cognitive DMs. Each DM was analysed qualitatively and quantitatively in order to identify the functions it serves in its original context and to further reveal the different uses of DMs between Taiwanese and British participants. The findings demonstrate that the DMs used by both groups of participants serve the four central functions, and in particular Taiwanese participants display a significant use of interpersonal (e.g., yeah, oh) and structural DMs (e.g., so, okay), while British participants have a significantly higher usage of referential (e.g., coz/because, and) and cognitive DMs (e.g., like, well). The results of this study have direct pedagogical implications that can enhance the teaching of English as a Foreign Language (EFL) to better prepare learners for real life communication scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF