This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of pragmatically appropriate requests in L2 Chinese in a study abroad context. The participants were 31 American learners of Chinese studying in China. Fifteen learners came from intermediate level classes (Intermediate group) and the remaining 16 from advanced level classes (Advanced group). The participants completed a Computerized Oral Discourse Completion Test (CODCT) at the beginning and toward the end of their sojourn. The participants\u27 oral request production was analyzed in terms of appropriateness rating, planning time, and speech rate. The results showed that the Intermediate and Advanced groups made comparable gains in appropriaten...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
Session 1: Survey of pragmatic development in multiple learning contexts: study abroad, virtual, a...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated the effects of input‐based and output‐based practice on the development of a...
This study explores the impact of task-based language teaching (TBLT) on Chinese oral development in...
This study examined the effects of input‐based practice on developing accurate and speedy requests i...
Drawing on Speech Act Theory, this dissertation examined whether pragmatic task features, PDR (i.e.,...
This study investigated the effects of input‐based and output‐based practice on the development of a...
The present study investigates the effect of study abroad on Chinese learners' L2 pragmatic developm...
This paper documents a cross-sectional look at L1 transfer and L2 contact for learners of English in...
This study explores task effects on fluency development in second language (L2) Mandarin during stud...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
Session 1: Survey of pragmatic development in multiple learning contexts: study abroad, virtual, a...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...
This study examined the effects of different levels of linguistic proficiency on the development of ...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated whether and how foreign language (FL) aptitudes interacted with different in...
This study investigated the effects of input‐based and output‐based practice on the development of a...
This study explores the impact of task-based language teaching (TBLT) on Chinese oral development in...
This study examined the effects of input‐based practice on developing accurate and speedy requests i...
Drawing on Speech Act Theory, this dissertation examined whether pragmatic task features, PDR (i.e.,...
This study investigated the effects of input‐based and output‐based practice on the development of a...
The present study investigates the effect of study abroad on Chinese learners' L2 pragmatic developm...
This paper documents a cross-sectional look at L1 transfer and L2 contact for learners of English in...
This study explores task effects on fluency development in second language (L2) Mandarin during stud...
The speech act of requesting has attracted a lot of attention in recent research. Previous studies ...
Session 1: Survey of pragmatic development in multiple learning contexts: study abroad, virtual, a...
This study examines how Australian learners of Chinese make requests as compared to those made by na...