Abstract

This paper intends to provide a range of possibilities for testing learners’ interlanguage pragmatic competence of request speech acts. A request speech act has scarcely been understood in the context of the sequences of talk that involve the pre-request, the request, and the post-request stages. Request speech acts unfold over multiple turns in conversation and are co-constructed by the interlocutors engaged in the conversation. Previous studies have provided robust sources for assessing learners’ request abilities. Some assessment tools such as the discourse completion test, both oral (ODCT) and written discourse completion test (WDCT), and role play (RP) are among the most popular tools generally used to test learners’ comprehension and production of English requests. While these tools suggest a promising outlook of learners’ interlanguage pragmatic competence, their lack of authenticity remains questionable, except for role plays based on carefully planned scenarios of learners’ daily experiences and interests. Current development of interlanguage measures has taken advantage of technology such as the use of role-play computer-based tasks (RPCBT), role-play virtual reality tasks (RPVRT), and computer-animated production tasks (CAPT). Hence, it is likely that an interactive form of assessment device that can unfold every move and act of learners’ performance during interaction may become a better alternative to resolve the problems of testing learners’ interlanguage pragmatic competence covering knowledge, comprehension, and production of pragmalinguistic and sociopragmatic abilities. However, the use of ODCT or WDCT, despite the drawbacks, remains a reasonable choice for eliciting learners’ off-line knowledge of normative conventions of pragmatic language use.

 

Keywords

  • interlanguage pragmatic competence
  • request speech acts
  • discourse completion tests
  • WDCT

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