Home Linguistics & Semiotics 8 The DCT as a data collection method for L2 humor production
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8 The DCT as a data collection method for L2 humor production

  • Nancy Bell , Maria Shardakova and Rachel L. Shively
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Abstract

Humor is a pervasive feature of everyday interaction among friends, in the workplace, and in the classroom. Although previous research indicates that L2 users do, indeed, understand and employ humor in various settings, no previous studies have elicited L2 humor data with a large number of participants, which, in turn, would facilitate making broader generalizations regarding L2 humor use. A method that may lend itself to large-scale collection of L2 humor data is the discourse completion task (DCT). This study sought to develop a DCT to elicit humor, explore when L2 users employ humor in the DCT, and evaluate the DCT as a method for collecting L2 humor data. The results indicate that the instrument was effective in eliciting humor from L2 speakers, that perception of humor encouraged creation of humor, and that target language, mother tongue, and humor directionality (i.e., self- vs. other-directed) affected humor perception and production.

Abstract

Humor is a pervasive feature of everyday interaction among friends, in the workplace, and in the classroom. Although previous research indicates that L2 users do, indeed, understand and employ humor in various settings, no previous studies have elicited L2 humor data with a large number of participants, which, in turn, would facilitate making broader generalizations regarding L2 humor use. A method that may lend itself to large-scale collection of L2 humor data is the discourse completion task (DCT). This study sought to develop a DCT to elicit humor, explore when L2 users employ humor in the DCT, and evaluate the DCT as a method for collecting L2 humor data. The results indicate that the instrument was effective in eliciting humor from L2 speakers, that perception of humor encouraged creation of humor, and that target language, mother tongue, and humor directionality (i.e., self- vs. other-directed) affected humor perception and production.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface V
  3. Acknowledgements XI
  4. Contents XIII
  5. List of contributors XVII
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Part I: Learning and teaching speech acts
  8. 1 Pragmatic competence and speech-act research in second language pragmatics 11
  9. 2 Systemic functional linguistics applied to analyze L2 speech acts: Analysis of advice-giving in a written text 27
  10. 3 Learning about L2 Spanish requests abroad through classroom and ethnography-based pragmatics instruction 58
  11. 4 Effectiveness of a post-study abroad pedagogical intervention in learning compliments and compliment responses in L2 Spanish 81
  12. 5 ¡Madre mía de mi alma!: Pragmalinguistic variation and gender differences in perception of piropos in Badajoz, Spain 103
  13. Part II: Assessing pragmatic competence
  14. 6 Assessing L2 pragmatic competence 131
  15. 7 Testing of L2 pragmatics: The challenge of implicit knowledge 142
  16. 8 The DCT as a data collection method for L2 humor production 156
  17. 9 Strategic competence and pragmatic proficiency in L2 role plays 179
  18. Part III: Analyzing discourses in L2 digital contexts
  19. 10 Researching digital discourse in second language pragmatics 197
  20. 11 Pragmalinguistic variation in L2 Spanish e-mail requests: Learner strategies and instructor perceptions 208
  21. 12 Affordances of game-enhanced learning: A classroom intervention for enhancing concept-based pragmatics instruction 236
  22. Part IV: Current issues in L2 pragmatics
  23. 13 Explicit knowledge in L2 pragmatics? 255
  24. 14 Studying speech acts: An expanded scope and refined methodologies 270
  25. 15 Converging agendas of rationalist and discursive approaches for the development of a pedagogy of L2 pragmatics 286
  26. 16 From a native-nonnative speaker dichotomy to a translingual framework 300
  27. 17 An introduction to discourse markers 314
  28. Epilogue: A personal tribute to Andrew Cohen 336
  29. Index 339
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