Abstract
In the past decades, implicature has been recognized as an indispensable topic in L2 pragmatics research. While various instruments have been used to test implicature knowledge, scant research has verified their construct validity of implicature items by examining test takers’ cognitive processes while responding to them. In response to this research gap, Roever, Carsten. 2005. Testing ESL pragmatics: Development and validation of a web-based assessment battery. Frankfurt am Main, Germany: Peter Lang implicature test was scrutinized. Twelve L2 test takers with high and low proficiency levels were asked to verbalize their thoughts retrospectively. Content analyses were employed to examine whether their cognitive processes were (ir)relevant to what the test intended to elicit and how well their processes aligned with the test results. The findings revealed that relevant processes were associated with idiosyncratic implicature questions, while irrelevant processes were related to formulaic implicature ones. The high-proficiency test takers generally reported engaging in relevant processes, whereas the low-proficiency test takers reported using for the most part irrelevant processes. Moreover, test takers’ cognitive processes aligned with the test results on the whole. In other words, when the respondents’ cognitive processes corresponded to those the test designed to elicit, the test results were normally correct. One the other hand, when the cognitive processes deviated from the expected ones, the test results were generally incorrect. However, fourteen misalignments were identified and classified as irrelevant conceptual blending, contextual judgment, insufficient effort responding, intuition, and wild guessing. These misalignments were seen as construct irrelevant variance and pose potential threats to the construct validity.
Funding source: The Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, R.O.C
Award Identifier / Grant number: MOST 108-2410-H-167-005
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Michael Rau for his kind assistance in this study.
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Research funding: This study was funded by the corresponding author’s research grants from the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ROC (MOST 108-2410-H-167-005).
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© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Investigating the impact of task complexity on uptake and noticing of corrective feedback recasts
- Consequences of the comparative fallacy for the acquisition of grammatical aspect in Spanish
- Incorporating peer feedback in writing instruction: examining its effects on Chinese English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) learners’ writing performance
- Listener engagement: the missing link in research on accented speech
- Enhancing English spatial prepositions acquisition among Spanish learners of English as L2 through an embodied approach
- Lexical and grammatical collocations in beginning and intermediate L2 argumentative essays: a bigram study
- When concept-based language instruction meets cognitive linguistics: teaching English phrasal verbs with up and out
- Validation of a multiple-choice implicature test: insights from Chinese EFL learners’ cognitive processes
- A longitudinal study of topic continuity in Chinese EFL learners’ written narratives
- Miscommunicated referent tracking in L2 English: a case-by-case analysis
- Rule-based or efficiency-driven processing of expletive there in English as a foreign language
- When are performance-approach goals more adaptive for Chinese EFL learners? It depends on their underlying reasons
- Teaching L2 Spanish idioms with semantic motivation: should this be done proactively or retroactively?
- Role of individual differences in incidental L2 vocabulary acquisition through listening to stories: metacognitive awareness and motivation
- Measuring and profiling Chinese secondary school English teachers’ language mindsets: an exploratory study of non-native teachers’ perceived L2 proficiency loss
- The role of working memory in the effects of models as a written corrective strategy
- Comparing motivational features between feedback givers and receivers in English speaking class
- Examining resilience in EFL contexts: a survey study of university students in China
- High school EFL teachers’ oral corrective feedback beliefs and practices, and the effects of lesson focus
- L3 acquisition of aspect: the influence of structural similarity, analytic L2 and general L3 proficiency
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Investigating the impact of task complexity on uptake and noticing of corrective feedback recasts
- Consequences of the comparative fallacy for the acquisition of grammatical aspect in Spanish
- Incorporating peer feedback in writing instruction: examining its effects on Chinese English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) learners’ writing performance
- Listener engagement: the missing link in research on accented speech
- Enhancing English spatial prepositions acquisition among Spanish learners of English as L2 through an embodied approach
- Lexical and grammatical collocations in beginning and intermediate L2 argumentative essays: a bigram study
- When concept-based language instruction meets cognitive linguistics: teaching English phrasal verbs with up and out
- Validation of a multiple-choice implicature test: insights from Chinese EFL learners’ cognitive processes
- A longitudinal study of topic continuity in Chinese EFL learners’ written narratives
- Miscommunicated referent tracking in L2 English: a case-by-case analysis
- Rule-based or efficiency-driven processing of expletive there in English as a foreign language
- When are performance-approach goals more adaptive for Chinese EFL learners? It depends on their underlying reasons
- Teaching L2 Spanish idioms with semantic motivation: should this be done proactively or retroactively?
- Role of individual differences in incidental L2 vocabulary acquisition through listening to stories: metacognitive awareness and motivation
- Measuring and profiling Chinese secondary school English teachers’ language mindsets: an exploratory study of non-native teachers’ perceived L2 proficiency loss
- The role of working memory in the effects of models as a written corrective strategy
- Comparing motivational features between feedback givers and receivers in English speaking class
- Examining resilience in EFL contexts: a survey study of university students in China
- High school EFL teachers’ oral corrective feedback beliefs and practices, and the effects of lesson focus
- L3 acquisition of aspect: the influence of structural similarity, analytic L2 and general L3 proficiency