International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Culture
Available online at https://sloap.org/journals/index.php/ijllc/
Vol. 4, No. 2, March 2018, pages: 24~45
ISSN: 2455-8028
https://sloap.org/journals/index.php/ijllc/article/view/72
24
Speech Acts of Classroom Interaction
Ahmad Syaifudin Azhari
a
Priono
b
Nuriadi
c
Article history: Abstract
Received: 10 August 2017
Revised: 25 February 2018
Approved: 28 February 2018
Published: 6 March 2018
Speech acts of classroom interaction have been an interesting topic both in
ESL and EFL context. Little research, however, has been held in analyzing
speech acts of classroom interaction and its relation to strategies used in EFL
context. This paper aims at investigating the types and frequency of speech
acts performed in terms of teacher-student interactions. It also focuses on
analyzing strategies used by teachers and students in performing the
illocutionary act of imperatives. Qualitative method is used by means of
mixed pragmatic-discourse approach. The data were collected through
observation and recording. Three English teachers and 30 male students
grade IX of MTs NW Putra Nurul Haramain are participants for gathering the
data. The study reveals that four types of speech acts performed are
imperatives, assertive, expressions, and commissives. Of those speech acts
performed, the very dominant type of speech acts performed, about 120 acts
or 43% is imperatives. Assertions about 117 acts or 42% are dominant acts.
Expressions about 34 acts or 12% area less dominant category and
Commissives about 7 or 2,5% are not dominant. In relation to strategies used
in realization of imperatives, the study recognizes that requests as strategies
used in realization of request are (a) formal completeness (propositional
completeness and modification), (b) level of directness (mood derivable,
performative, hedged performative, locution derivable, and conventionally
indirect), (c) point of views, (d) context, and (e) mood. The study reveals that
imperatives as the most type of illocutionary act performed in classroom
interaction. Furthermore, it also indicates the lack of students’ pragmatic
competence in performing such an act. For that reason, teachers need to
expose the learners with communication strategies in order to speak
accurately and appropriately in different context. It needs a further study
about pragmatic competence needed in EFL context and material designs for
teaching such competences.
Keywords:
Speech Acts;
Pragmatic Competence;
Communication Strategies;
2455-8028
©
Copyright 2018. The Author.
This is an open-access article under the CC BY-SA license
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)
All rights reserved.
a
English Graduate Department, Post Graduate Program, Mataram University-Indonesia
b
English Graduate Department, Post Graduate Program, Mataram University-Indonesia
c
English Graduate Department, Post Graduate Program, Mataram University-Indonesia