Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus

Language serves as a mirror reflecting our understanding of the world and mirrors the world of literature. Pragmatics extends beyond mere literal interpretation, delving into comprehending subtle implications, varying expressions and lexical ambiguities. This deepens our exploration and appreciation...

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Main Authors: Ebru Munir, Mehmet Ali Yavuz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-11-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024155892
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author Ebru Munir
Mehmet Ali Yavuz
author_facet Ebru Munir
Mehmet Ali Yavuz
author_sort Ebru Munir
collection DOAJ
description Language serves as a mirror reflecting our understanding of the world and mirrors the world of literature. Pragmatics extends beyond mere literal interpretation, delving into comprehending subtle implications, varying expressions and lexical ambiguities. This deepens our exploration and appreciation of the world of literature. It is worth investigating whether pragmatic instruction can improve students' language awareness and competence. To this end, a quasi-experimental study involving the students of two English language teaching (ELT) classes was conducted to determine whether pragmatic treatment could enhance students' comprehension skills and to identify how effectively the pragmatic understanding of literature through Shakespeare's language could aid the development of receptive and productive skills in ELT students. Participants took two pre-tests: multiple-choice discourse completion task (MCDCT) and discourse completion task (DCT) based on Othello. After the treatment, the same tests were administered as post-tests. Results showed that the experimental group outperformed the control group in comprehension skills. Cohen's D effect size calculation confirmed the practical usefulness of the treatment and the significant difference between the two groups. The study concludes that pragmatic training using literary texts contributes to developing ELT students' pragmatic competence.
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spelling doaj-art-22f539c44f0a479d9c9ef4d03f88e0762024-11-15T06:12:55ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402024-11-011021e39558Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North CyprusEbru Munir0Mehmet Ali Yavuz1Cyprus International University (Department of ELT), Haspolat, Mersin, Turkey; Corresponding author.Cyprus International University (HOD of ELT), Haspolat, Mersin, TurkeyLanguage serves as a mirror reflecting our understanding of the world and mirrors the world of literature. Pragmatics extends beyond mere literal interpretation, delving into comprehending subtle implications, varying expressions and lexical ambiguities. This deepens our exploration and appreciation of the world of literature. It is worth investigating whether pragmatic instruction can improve students' language awareness and competence. To this end, a quasi-experimental study involving the students of two English language teaching (ELT) classes was conducted to determine whether pragmatic treatment could enhance students' comprehension skills and to identify how effectively the pragmatic understanding of literature through Shakespeare's language could aid the development of receptive and productive skills in ELT students. Participants took two pre-tests: multiple-choice discourse completion task (MCDCT) and discourse completion task (DCT) based on Othello. After the treatment, the same tests were administered as post-tests. Results showed that the experimental group outperformed the control group in comprehension skills. Cohen's D effect size calculation confirmed the practical usefulness of the treatment and the significant difference between the two groups. The study concludes that pragmatic training using literary texts contributes to developing ELT students' pragmatic competence.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024155892Pragmatic competenceReceptionProductionSpeech actsIntentionImplication
spellingShingle Ebru Munir
Mehmet Ali Yavuz
Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
Heliyon
Pragmatic competence
Reception
Production
Speech acts
Intention
Implication
title Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
title_full Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
title_fullStr Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
title_full_unstemmed Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
title_short Study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of ELT students’ receptive and productive skills: A case of North Cyprus
title_sort study of pragmatic analysis of literature on the development of elt students receptive and productive skills a case of north cyprus
topic Pragmatic competence
Reception
Production
Speech acts
Intention
Implication
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844024155892
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