穨Review. Pdf
Figure 4.2 Reactions to Others’ Silence
Download 453.46 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Thesis Liang Tsailing
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Table 4.13 Reactions to One’s Own Silence
Figure 4.2 Reactions to Others’ Silence
.1.3.2 Reactions to One’s Own Silence In addition to the analysis of the students’ reactions to their partners’ silence, qualitative examinations on how students reacted to their own silence were also performed. The ability to fix the communication breakdown caused by one’s own silence is considered important in real life communication. Communication breakdown might happen very often when EFL learners are actually talking to foreigners due to the lack of vocabulary or problems in listening comprehension. Therefore, in the evaluation of the participants’ strategic competence, this reaction strategy was taken as another important indicator of the acquisition of communicative competence. The analysis of this section was based on the students who paused longer than seven seconds, with 10 students in the control group and eight students in the experimental group. The comparisons of the strategic competence with regard to how one responded to one’s own silence were illustrated in Table 4.13. 98 Table 4.13 Reactions to One’s Own Silence Strategic competence II (unit: person) Reactions to one’s own silence Control(n= 10) Experimental(n= 8) A. Smiling and saying “I am sorry” 1 6 B. Smiling without saying anything 0 1 C. Looking nervously at their partner and saying nothing 3 1 D. Looking at one’s feet without saying anything 6 0 These four reactions were listed according to their appropriateness and the degree of effort to maintain the conversation. The best choice for these EFL learners at such beginning level seemed to be smiling and saying “I am sorry.” The second best choice was a simple smile as a sign of begging for forgiveness. The third alternative was looking at the partners without saying anything. The least desirable reaction was complete avoidance by lowering one’s head without saying anything. The first three reactions still showed some signs of effort to maintain the communication. They varied in the degree of their appropriateness. The last one was a sign of total resignation to fix the conversation. The door of communication was entirely shut with the last reaction. In the analysis of the eight students in the experimental group who caused communication breakdown during their conversation with their partners, Table 4.13 showed that six of them said, “I am sorry,” to their partners with smiles. As a sharp contrast, there was only one student out of ten that managed to say, “I am sorry” in the control group. Three students looked at their partners nervously without saying anything. And six of them simply lowered their heads silently. These six students’ partners were the same six persons listed in Table 4.12 who gave up their task due to their partners’ silence. Figure 4.3 showed the comparisons of the control group and the experimental group’s reactions to their own silence. 99 0 2 4 6 smiling & apologizing no eye contact and no apology reactions to one's own silence control experimental Download 453.46 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling