'Learning to Say 'No' in Different Ways': Tracking EFL Learner Performance and Percpetions of Pragmatics Instruction in Mexico

Flores-Salgado, Elizabeth and Halenko, Nicola orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-9906-6418 (2022) 'Learning to Say 'No' in Different Ways': Tracking EFL Learner Performance and Percpetions of Pragmatics Instruction in Mexico. In: Pragmatics in English Language Learning. Cambridge University Press, pp. 173-199.

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Official URL: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/pragmatics-in...

Abstract

This quasi-experimental study tracks the efficacy of a planned explicit intervention with an EFL learner group in Mexico, using the under-researched speech act of refusals as the pragmatic target. Thirty university students were recruited to an Experimental (n=15) or Control group (n=15) to measure instructional effects of a ten-hour training programme which employed a pre-test, post-test design. Performance results were enhanced with semi-structured interviews to identify learners’ cognitive processes when producing refusals and their perceptions of the benefits of pragmatics training. The findings revealed the pragmatic instruction facilitated more elaborate refusals which showed increased sensitivity to sociopragmatic aspects. Both the frequency and variety of indirect strategies and adjuncts were markedly different to those produced by their non-instructed counterparts. This positive trend in the quantitative findings was also corroborated in the qualitative data. The interview data highlighted the instructed group’s cognitive processes when carrying out the pragmatic tasks and showed the learners’ planning and thought processes when performing refusals were different before and after receiving instruction.


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