On pragmatic perception do learners of Russian perceive the sociocultural weight of the address pronouns? /
Abstract (Summary)
This project deals with the sociocultural and pragmatic aspects of second
language acquisition. Most current research in this field examines the ability of second
language learners to produce socioculturally appropriate utterances in simulated speech
settings. Researchers are interested in whether students can interact adequately within the
confines of both their linguistic competence and the foreign culture’s interactional norms.
Analyses of learners’ speech routines are quite valuable to our understanding of their
ability to enact conversational routines. However, they do not indicate to use what the
learners understand; that is, they do not tease apart what learners understand to be true
about the language from what they can do under the pressure of performance. The
purpose of this dissertation is to determine whether learners of Russian perceive the
sociocultural weight of the two personal pronouns for ‘you,’ ty (informal/intimate) and
Vy (formal/polite). In this project, the term understand is used in two ways, each of which
is tested empirically. First, understanding implies knowledge about the pragmatic impact
of the pronouns. Do learners correctly indicate which pronoun is appropriate in context?
Second, understanding is listening ability. Do learners utilize their pragmatic knowledge
when they listen to native speech? Or do proficiency factors, individual learner
characteristics, syntactic saliency (overt pronoun vs. pro-drop), and overall attentional
limitations affect their listening ability? Students at Middlebury College and at the
University of Iowa participated in two experimental tasks evaluating their pragmatic
knowledge and listening ability with the ty / Vy feature: (a) a metapragmatic judgment
task and (b) a listening task using video clips from famous Russian films. Results indicate
that pragmatic knowledge is not significantly different across proficiency levels, nor is
perception of the pronouns in a listening task; that is, beginning learners and advanced
learners demonstrate similar ability with the understanding of the feature. Furthermore,
female learners outperformed male learners on the listening task, although performance
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on the pragmatic knowledge task did not vary by gender. These results add to the body of
knowledge in second language acquisition and, more specifically, to our knowledge of
how pragmatic features of a language are acquired.
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School:University of Iowa
School Location:USA - Iowa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:second language acquisition russian sociolinguistics united states
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