Introduction To Discourse Analysis
Introduction To Discourse Analysis
IN TR O D U CT IO N
In the previous semesters, I‟m sure that you have already been
introduced to syntax, grammar, and linguistics. Now as you have had a
strong foundation to go further, in this subject you will be introduced to
analysis of language beyond sentences. To help you understand the subject
comprehensively, this module will present basic concepts and the scope of
study and be the basis for your learning the other five modules. Now are you
ready to go to more inspiring exploration of the beauty of language use? All
right.
In the first part, you will be introduced to various definitions of discourse
and discourse analysis. In other words, definitions from different perspectives
will be presented in the first part. The discussion is expected to help you get a
comprehensive view of discourse analysis so that you will be able to analyze
discourse in appropriate contexts and perspectives. This will avoid
unnecessary confusions that are normally experienced by novel discourse
analysis students. The next portion of this part will be devoted to explore the
scope discourse analysis can cover. In this part, you will be expected to
understand topics and discussions that may be found under this subject. It
does not mean that you will be expected to do all the topics and discussions.
In this part, you will also be given the scope that might be covered in your
study.
The second part will be used to introduce to you various systems of
analysis. This is expected to help you strengthen your understanding of the
definitions and the scope of study covered in this subject. By the presentation
of various systems of analysis, you will be able to understand how the
analyses are to be done as well as how each definition brings with it different
choices of level of analysis complexity. As you go along the discussion you
1.2 Discourse Analysis
Learning Activity 1
DEFINITIONS OF DISCOURSE
introduction, buying a train ticket, booking a hotel, etc., while in the written
form it can be writing essays, stories, and descriptions; or sending a letter, an
sms, or even business contract. In other words, a discourse can be an spoken
communication or a written one.
Now, let‟s see other definitions, for example, that, which is given by
Gumperz. Gumperz (1977: 17) defines discourse as “certain communication
routines which are viewed as distinct wholes, separated from other types of
discourse, characterized by special rules of speech and non-verbal behavior,
and often distinguished by clearly recognized openings and closings.” Clearly
this definition gives more detailed and specific hints on what a discourse is.
For Gumperz, a discourse is not only a kind of communication, but also a
routine. It should be a communication that is part of our routines.
Furthermore, as explicitly stated, it should also be a distinct whole. It means
that it should be easily distinguished from other routines. In other words, the
difference from other routines should easily be identified usually, as
Gumperz said, through clearly openings and closings. Hence, if in a meeting
or an encounter, more than two discourses involved, it will be easy for us to
see when a discourse starts and when it ends. In addition, it will also be easy
to see when other discourse starts and when it ends. Seeing the elaboration of
Widdowson‟s definition, for example, has a distinguished opening, normally
in the form of greeting, e.g. “Good morning.” At its end, it normally has
parting as the closing, e.g. “See you then.” Likewise, a story is opened with
an orientation and ends up with a resolution. To give you clearer idea, an
instance of introduction and a story will be presented here.
B: See you.
In the conversation, we can see when the conversation starts and when it
ends. We can say that there are three parts in the discourse, i.e. an opening,
an exchange of information, and a closing. Now let‟s have a look at the
structure of a story.
Again, look at the story. It has three parts: orientation, complication, and
resolution. In the orientation, the writer tells us who were involved in the
story, where they took their roles, and when it happened. In other words, it
tells us the context. The second part, the complication, tells us the problems
the heroine was faced with. The last part tells us how the problems were
solved.
With the illustrations, you are expected to have clearer picture of how
the structure of a discourse distinguish a discourse from other discourses. All
in all, you are expected to get initial understanding of what a discourse is.
However, discourse may also take very formal and complicated forms.
Fairclough (1992) identifies that in social theory and analysis, discourse has
been used to refer to different ways of structuring areas of knowledge and
social practice. In this perspective, discourse has been analyzed for its role as
a tool of expressing ideologies, power, dominance, inequality, and bias (Van
Dijk, 1998). In this definition, discourse has been defined in a very broad
sense. It covers not only daily communication, but also political
communication. It may cover communication of ideology, power,
dominance, and even inequality and biases in society.
From the three definitions discussed in the previous sections, we can see
that a discourse should be a process of communication through interaction
(Widdowson, 1984), distinct routines and characterized by clear openings
and closings (Gumperz, 1977), and can be used to communicate political as
well as daily topics.
Ex er c is e s
Exercise 1
Now as you have been introduced to different definitions of discourse, try
to formulate an alternative definition in your own word.
straightforward hints on what a discourse is. I‟m sure you are familiar with
newspaper contents such as editorials, news items, articles, etc. You are also
familiar with advertisement both in written forms and in electronic forms on
TVs or electronic billboards. Are they different from each other? Are they
also different from classroom dialog between a teacher and his/her students?
How about a dialog between a doctor and his/her patients? Are they all
different? Again, to help you get clearer picture, look at the following
examples!
This is the example of newspaper news item, taken from The Jakarta
Post, Saturday, June 13, 2009. As you will see, the way the text is organized,
the words chosen, and the grammatical items used are different from other
texts that follow.
1.8 Discourse Analysis
Now, look at another kind of discourse, i.e. classroom discourse. For that
purpose, look at the segment of a classroom discourse (taken from Suherdi,
1994). In the segment, we can see that the segment has an observable
structure. At least, we can see it as consisting of teacher‟s question, student‟s
answer, teacher‟s request to repeat, student‟s repeated answer, teacher‟s
second request to repeat, student‟s silent, teacher‟s explanation. In the
segment, we see the teacher‟s insistence in asking questions. This is because
the teacher, as normally happens in the classroom, is the real source of
information. Besides, the teacher‟s responsibility does not lie in asking
questions, but rather in explaining the concept being asked. However, before
explaining the materials, it is imperative for teachers to, first of all, check if
the students already know the materials.
Again, through the illustrations, you are expected to get a clear picture of
various discourses commonly found in our society. At this point, it is hoped
that you have had an appropriate understanding of the nature of discourse.
However, a brief discussion of the place of discourse in the plane of social
interaction will be presented at the end of this section. In systemic linguistics,
especially in the systemiotic approach (See Suherdi, 2006) discourse has
been considered to be one of the three strata on the language plane in social
interaction (Ventola, 1988, cf. Martin, 1992). To make it simple, a schematic
representation is presented here.
Genre
Register
Language
Figure 1.1
The Place of Discourse on the Language plane
discourse, i.e. (1) it must be “language in use”; (2) it must involve the
communication of beliefs; (3) it must be coupled with interaction, and (4) it
must justify itself to other discourses. In other words, discourse must be
authentic language, not invented one, in an interaction and communicate
what the interlocutors think, believe, feel, want, etc. Still in this relation,
Schiffrin (1994) emphasizes that discourse must be a collection of inherently
contextualized units of language use, and not merely a collection of de-
contextualized units of language structure.
Exercise 2
Again, as you have been given illustrations of discourse, list spoken and
written discourses that you are familiar with.
Exercise 1
It can be formulated in many alternative wordings, among others:
1) Discourse is a language communication in a real situation.
2) Discourse is a communicative activity in systematic way.
3) Discourse is a communication using language with certain rules of
opening, talking/writing, and closing.
4) Etc.
Exercise 2
1) Spoken discourse may include:
Conversations, storytelling, spoken announcement, debate, spoken
invitation, warning, etc.
2) Written discourse may include:
Newspaper contents, magazine, announcement, memo, advertisement,
letters, leaflet, etc.
Such as:
Discourse analysis is the examination of texts from various disciplines in
order to give light to interpreting of those texts within the contexts of
each discipline or combination of disciplines.
1.13
Exercise 3
Again, as you have been given a comprehensive review of historical
background discourse analysis, list the names of scholars contributing to
the developments of discourse analysis up to this point of our discussion.
There are at least five points that can be further discussed in relation to
the definition, including:
1. Discourse analysis is the examination of language use by members of a
speech community
This point means that discourse analysis deals with the examination of
language use, i.e. language as it is used, not language as a dormant
system. In addition, this also suggests that the users are the members of a
speech community. This might mean that the examination criteria should
include those aspects of use in its natural settings as really used by the
members of a speech community. To illustrate this, you might
remember that once in our classroom, there were some cases in which
we were taught to construct sentences in isolation without even thinking
of whether these sentences were really used in their life. Discourse
1.17
analysis does not deal with this kind of language exercises, but rather the
real language as used by doctors and patient in a medical consultation, or
teacher-students dialog in real classrooms or by a letter writer when
he/she sends a letter, an essay writer when he/she writes essays, etc.
2. It involves looking at both language form and language function
It is clear from that statement that discourse analysis concerns with both
language form, including the expressions and the structures. In one
sense, your memory of analyzing a sentence structure is, though very
minimum, helpful to understand how discourse analysis concerns with
the language form. Of course, in discourse analysis, it is not as simple as
is in the sentence structure. It more deals with text grammar or text
linguistics.
The second object of analysis is the function, the language function.
Hence, it is not enough to analyze the form, but rather you should go
further to see the functions the texts do in the communication. In many
cases, the same sentences serve different functions, depending on the
speech act futures of the utterances they use in the communication. For
example, this sentence “Do you understand English?” may mean that the
speaker is asking whether you speak or understand English. But, in other
cases, it may mean that the speaker is getting angry because you are
insisting doing or not doing something that he/she wants you to/not to
do. Evidently, this interrogative sentence is serving two different
functions.
3. It includes the study of both spoken interaction and written texts
Our review of the historical background of discourse analysis has given
you some hints that it deals with not only written texts, but also spoken
interaction or spoken text. In this respect, we may say that we can have
spoken discourse as well as written discourse analyses. That‟s why this
module has been organized in this perspective, i.e. spoken (modules 2
and 3) and written discourses (4 and 5).
4. It identifies linguistic features that characterize different genres as well
as social and cultural factors that aid in our interpretation and
understanding of different texts and types of talk.
This point clearly means that discourse analysis identifies linguistic
features that are particular to certain genres or text types. For example,
texts in descriptive genres are characterized by simple present tense,
especially linking verbs, modifiers + noun constructions, etc.; while
1.18 Discourse Analysis
those in recount genres by past tense, adverb of places and manners, etc
(For detailed discussion of these genres in Indonesian curricula, see
Suherdi, 2009 and Permendiknas No. 22 Tahun 2006). In addition, it also
deals with social and cultural factors pertained to the texts analyzed.
Every text has its own social and cultural contents and constraints. A
descriptive normally socially functions to describe something or
someone. In a case of lost child, for example, police will need a
description of the child in order for them to be able to seek to find the
child. In the meantime, a recount functions to tell somebody past events
or experiences. With the same case, the parents of the child need to tell
the police what they were doing or did the last time he and she saw the
child.
5. A discourse analysis of written texts might include a study of topic
development and cohesion across the sentences; and
With this point, it means that in analyzing written texts, discussions
usually include a study of topic: how a topic is developed, where it is
located in the sentence, and what the writer intends to do with that way
of placing, etc. Besides the topic, discourse analysis also deals with
cohesion, that is, how components of text interrelate to each other to
build a whole unity.
6. An analysis of spoken language might focus on these aspects plus turn
taking practices, opening and closing sequences of social encounters, or
narrative structure.
In the meantime, in analyzing the spoken discourse, apart from those
aspects, it also deals with turn taking practices, i.e. how each speaker
take their turn to speak; opening and closing, i.e. how speakers open and
close their conversation in different social activities or encounters; and
how each encounter is structured.
Exercise 4
Now, before closing, as you have been given a definition discourse
analysis and the elaboration of the key points, write (1) important points of
discourse analysis definition in your own words, and (2) find other
definitions of discourse analysis that other scholars made in other sources
or references.
1.19
As for the scope of the study, we will be talking about two sub-topics:
the scope of discourse analysis study and that of which this module will
cover. In relation with the former, you will be introduced to the realm of field
study that might be and has been covered by discourse analysis. In the
meantime, in discussing the latter, you will be invited to a discussion of the
coverage of this module, i.e. the delimitation that we will make in order to
put this module in a realistic and productive perspective.
As we have seen in the review of discourse analysis historical
background and definition, discourse analysis is closely related and owes
many areas of studies supports and contributions in its development into its
nowadays status as we know it as an in dialog paragraphendent discipline. On
the other sides of its existence, discourse analysis also contributes much to
many areas of discipline such as law, history and historiography, mass
communication, poetics, clinical psychology, social psychology, and political
analysis. To give you a clear idea of how it contributes to those disciplines,
again, what van Dijk (1985) has presented will be summarized and presented
here.
In the field of law, van Dijk considered that discourse analysis has been
contributive in much of its object domain such as laws, legal (inter-)action,
and legal documents; in history and hitoriography, in its texts and spoken
discourse forms; and in mass communication, it deals with mass-mediated
messages and their condition of production and perception, and in developing
media texts and talks. In addition, the relation between discourse and
pictures, photographs, or films are also analyzed through this the use of
discourse analysis. In the meantime, poetics, interested in literary texts and
dramatic dialogs, has been closely associated with the structuralist discourse
analysis; while clinical psychology has paid attention to therapeutic
discourse, and social psychology to the interaction of cognitive and social
aspects of persuasive communication and attitude change, to the situational
analysis of verbal interaction, and to discourse-mediated formation of social
representations and attributions. At last, in politics, it deals with political
analysis of discourse.
Of course what has been presented above is only parts of what really can
be covered by discourse analysis. As van Dijk himself admitted, ”there are
more disciplines involved in discourse analysis than could be represented
here.” It suffices, however, for the purpose of this module, to end this
1.20 Discourse Analysis
Exercise 5
Now, before going on to discuss the scope of this module, as you have
been given a brief summary of how discourse analysis relate to other
disciplines, (1) write important points of the relationship covered by the
scope of study of discourse analysis, and (2) try to develop your own
definitions of discourse analysis in a multidisciplinary perspective.
1.21
Exercise 3
Such as van Dijk, Bremond, Todorov, Metz, Barthes, Hymes, Boas,
Greenberg, Berstein, Gumpers, Widdowson, Halliday and Sinclair and
Coulthard.
Exercise 4
1) Discourse analysis is the examination of language use by members of a
speech community, meaning it is the language that is actually used
which becomes the concern of discourse analysis, not a dead language,
or segments of texts which are not used.
2) It involves both language form and function, meaning that discourse
analysis is concerned not only with the structure or grammar or
expressions of language but also the functions they carry in the real
communication.
3) It includes the study of spoken and written texts, meaning discourse
analysis covers all forms of texts, spoken or spoken and written ones.
4) It identifies linguistic features characterizing the genres, meaning that
each genre has its own linguistic feature. Discourse analysis is able to
indentify those features.
Exercise 5
It can be formulated in many alternative wordings, among others:
1) With law, it can be used in analyzing legal actions, interactions, and
documents.
2) With history, in analyzing historical spoken discourse and texts.
3) With mass communication, in analyzing mass-mediated messages, the
development of texts.
4) With poetics, in analyzing literary texts.
5) Etc.
Such as:
Discourse analysis is the examination of texts from various disciplines in
order to give light to interpreting of those texts within the contexts of
each discipline or combination of disciplines.
1.22 Discourse Analysis
S U M M A R Y
FOR M AT I V E TE S T 1
Check your answer with the Key which is provided at the end of this
module, and score your right answer. Then use the formula below to know
your achievement level of the lesson in this module.
1.24 Discourse Analysis
If your level of achievement reaches 80% or more, you can move to the
next Unit. Good! But if your level of mastery is less than 80%, you have to
study again this unit, especially parts you haven‟t mastered.
PBIS4317/MODULE 1 1.25
Learning Activity 2
I n this learning activity, you will be invited to see and learn the systems of
analysis commonly used in discourse analysis. In other words, after
finishing this activity, you are expected to be able to explain the system of
analysis. However, as has been explicitly stated at the end of Learning
Activity 2, our focus will be on discourses involved in English classrooms.
For that reason, discussion on the system of analysis of natural discourse will
be confined to some introductory remarks. The majority of this activity will
be devoted to discussion on classroom discourse.
The writers argue that there is a “preferred expectations about the way
information should be organized.” This expectation, in their opinion (p. 109),
can be examined and the resulting description can form the basis of
pedagogic materials.
The third is corpus-based studies which are concerned with the
collection, structuring, and analyzing large amounts of discourse, usually
with the assistance of computers. Processing includes the operations of
quantifying (counting the number of words or phrases), concordancing
(producing lists of given linguistic items with sufficient context to determine
syntactic, semantic, and paradigmatic properties), and parsing (syntactic
analysis). Avalaible works include, among others, Sinclair and Collin
Cobuild project (Sinclair, 1991).
The last is ethnography, or more broadly, naturalistically influenced
approaches view texts as only one of many features of social situation, which
includes equally the values, roles, assumptions, attitudes, and pattern of
behavior of the participants, or texts producers or receivers (Flowerdew and
Miller, 1996;l Van Lier 1988; Candlin and Plum, 1999). Ethnography
emphasizes direct observation, interview, and other modes of analyzing the
situational context, in addition to textual analysis.
PBIS4317/MODULE 1 1.27
SPEAKER HEARER
Mental Act Action Action Mental Act
ACT 1 N1 U
~U
N3 ACT 2
N2
„Pre-Reject‟
„Ground‟ ACT 3
N4
~U U
ACT 4 „Accept‟
ACT 4 1 ~U
„Reject‟
Question – Answer
Remark – Evaluation
Proposal – Response
PBIS4317/MODULE 1 1.29
EXER CI SE S
Exercise 6
Now, before going on to discuss Sinclair and Cluthard‟s system of
analysis and its problematic issues, (1) write important systems put
forward by Flowerdew (2002) and Edmondson (1981) and (2) give brief
explanation for each of them.
Sinclair and Coulthard‟s (1975) work has been seminal and widely
adopted, adapted, and further developed to accommodate various phenomena
in a variety of teaching learning situations. This may be partly because of the
“pioneering way in which it draws attention to systemic organizational
properties of dialogue and provides ways of describing them” (Fairclough,
1992: 15) with progressively greater precision (Larsen-Freeman, 1980: 19).
In addition, compared to that Flander‟s, it allows for more complex analysis
of classroom discourse (Love, 1991: 3). These, at least in systemic tradition,
put Sinclair and Coulthard‟s work in the center of many similar studies.
Further review of the work shows, however, that when applied to more
informal classroom situations, Sinclair and Coulthard‟s (1975) system and its
various adaptation such as Coulthard and Brazil‟s (1981) and Stubbs (1981)
appear to be inappropriate. This is mainly due to their failure to distinguish
what Labov (1972) called A-events, in which the first interactant is also the
Primary Knower; and B-events in which the first interactant is the Secondary
Knower. In more informal classroom interaction, this A/B-event distinction is
essential. In such interaction, the occasions in which the students serve the
function of the Primary Knower might occur in significant number (for more
the tailed explanation of A- and B-events, and the Primary and Secondary
Knower, see Suherdi, 2006).
In addition, Sinclair and Coulthard‟s (1975) system and its various
adaptations seem to have been developed only to account for synoptic moves.
It is not equipped with any tools to deal with the dynamic moves (to be
explained later). This has rendered it less than complete. In other words,
some system which describes these dynamic moves is required. For example,
in classroom situation where there is no response from the students or when
there is a misunderstanding, many dynamic moves will be inevitable. The
interaction between the teacher and the student does not always flow in a
predicted, synoptic way. At times, the flow of interaction goes off the track,
or otherwise is stuck at a certain stage on the track. When this happens, some
unpredicted, dynamic moves are required to get the flow back to the expected
track or sustain the flow of discourse. In some classroom situations, the
incorporation of the dynamic moves is inevitable.
In the aforementioned classroom interactions, for example, where
interaction is by no means neat and linier, handling these kinds of moves and
recognizing the distinction of A- and B-events as well as the synoptic moves
are essential if an appropriate analysis is being aimed at. Possible problems in
PBIS4317/MODULE 1 1.31
1. The Rules
Sinclair and Coulthard (1975) has provided useful basis for discourse
analysis, classroom discourse in particular. They developed a comprehensive
system of analysis treating classroom discourse as comprising five ranks,
namely: lesson transaction, exchange, move, and act. To help clarify the
hierarchy, a diagram adapted from their work is presented in Figure 1.1.
As shown by the diagram, a lesson typically consists of an unordered
series of transactions, whereas a transaction normally consists of several
exchanges, which manifest in three elements of structure, i.e. preliminary,
medial, and terminal. Exchanges which realize preliminary and terminal
elements are selected from the same move called Boundary, whereas those
which realize the medial element are a class of exchange called Teaching.
Hence, there are two major classes of exchanges, Boundary and Teaching.
The former functions to signal the beginning or end of what the teacher
considers to be a stage in the lesson: the latter comprises the individual steps
by which the lesson progresses.
The Boundary exchanges consist of two moves, framing and focusing.
The two moves often occur together. However, the framing move frequently
occurs on its own, the focusing move does so only rarely.
The Teaching exchange comprises eleven sub-categories, six of which
are Free and five Bound. The function of bound exchanges is fixed because
they either have no initiating move, or have initiating move without a head,
which simply serves to reiterate the head of the preceding free initiation.
1.32 Discourse Analysis
Lesson
Coulthard‟s (1975) chart, the acts labels are placed in columns next to each
move column.
Figure 1.2.
Example of Analyzed Text Using Sinclair and Coulthard’s
Framework of Analysis
2. Some Problems
Exploring some different kinds of data, Coulthard and Brazil identified
some problematic points in exchange structuring system proposed by Sinclair
and Coulthard (1975). This has been evolving around the fact that in some
cases, it is not unproblematic to distinguish in the first place between eliciting
1.34 Discourse Analysis
and informing, and between initiations and replies. To exemplify, they cited
an example drawn from Sinclair and Coulthard (1975):
Only after the secondary knower did K2 did the primary knower do K1
which was then followed by the secondary knower did the K2f.
If in developing the interpersonal layer, she managed to reflect the view
of discourse as knowers‟ transmitting and receiving information, in
developing the textual layer, she tried to reflect the view of discourse as
speakers‟ taking turns (p. 131). Based on such view, she maintained that
there must be at least one speaker and this speaker must make at least one
contribution to the exchange. She labeled the first contribution of the first
speaker ai, and underlined it to show that it is obligatory. In addition, she
labeled the first contribution of the second speaker bi; and as it is not
obligatory, she did not underline it. To exemplify, using the same example
above we can have:
Dk1 K2 K1 Kf
Ai Bi Aii Bii
In the example, we can see that the first speaker was the primary knower,
and the second speaker was the secondary knower. The first slot shows ai, the
second slot shows bi, the third shows aii, and the fourth shows bii.
In the two layers above, the knowers of the information and the speakers
of the information have been discussed. The last layer of Berry‟s approach to
exchange structure is the ideational, which is concerned with the information
itself.
In this respect, she suggested that the minimum amount of information
for an exchange is a completed proposition. This completed proposition
might be presented straight away by the first speaker, or be left to the second
speaker to complete the proposition (p. 139-40). Exploring various possible
functions at this layer, she came to the following:
Again, to exemplify, the example cited above will be used. Using this
layer to complete the representation of the exchange structure of the example,
we can have:
PBIS4317/MODULE 1 1.37
Dk1 K2 K1 K2f
Pb Pc Ps
Ai Bi Aii Bii
In the example, the first speaker provided a pb for the second speaker to
complete the proposition, pc. As pc is predicted, when it is successfully
completed, the first speaker provide a ps to support the proposition.
To sum up, suffice it to say that the two aims mentioned earlier have
successfully been achieved. From the point of view of coding texts, she
claimed to have been able to show more similarities and more differences
between the exchanges of the texts than that would have been possible with
an approach based on a single linear structure (p. 144). Moreover, she has
been able to show the similarities and the differences at the same time. The
following examples given by Berry might help clarify the statement:
Exercise 7
Now, before closing, as you have been given a brief introduction to the
systems of analysis given by Sinclair and Coulthard (1975) and Berry
(1981), write brief explanation for each of their system.
1.38 Discourse Analysis
Exercise 6
Flowerdew (2002) identified four approaches to discourse analysis:
Genre analysis analysis of different use of language and its relevant
contexts.
Corpus-based studies analysis through quantifying, concordancing, and
parsing.
Contrastive rhetoric analysis of differences and similarities between L1
and L2 and the effect of L1 on L2 learning.
Ethnographic/naturalistic approaches analysis through the use of data
from observations and interviews.
Edmondson (1981: 54-74) identified four systems of analysis of spoken
discourse: Speech acts sequences consider speech acts as not rigid
structures but rather depends on whether the understanding can be
constructed by both speakers and hearers.
Tagmemic model is concerned with the internal structure of different
types of dialog paragraphs (Dialog paragraphs).
Rank-scale model views discourse as a rank-scaled structure starting
with the highest, i.e. lesson, to transactions, exchanges, moves, and end
up with act as the lowest.
Exercise 7
This may include:
1) In teaching, including analysis of teacher-students interaction patterns,
questioning techniques, etc.
2) In learning, including students position in classroom interactions,
students‟ verbal contribution, and students‟ written texts.
SUMMARY
FOR M AT IV E TE S T 2
Check your answer with the Key which is provided at the end of this
module, and score your right answer. Then use the formula below to know
your achievement level of the lesson in this module.
If your level of achievement reaches 80% or more, you can move to the
next module. Good! But if your level of mastery is less than 80%, you have
to study again this unit, especially parts you haven‟t mastered.
1.42 Discourse Analysis
References
Hartmann, P. (1964). Language in culture and society. New York: Harper &
Row.