上課時間
修課班級
課程資訊
選課分析
| Class attendance/focus/attitude | 15 | |
| Group discussion and self-reflection | 30 | Group discussion on chapter content & self-reflection on learning process |
| Midterm exam | 20 | |
| Situational theater performance | 25 | Designing and presenting situation theater in groups |
| Flexible learning | 10 |
On completing this course students will 1.understand major pragmatics theories/models related to language communication and interpretation; 2.foster pragmatic competence in designing and analyzing Discourse Completion Tasks; and 3.gain critical insight into both theoretical aspects and practical applications of meaning construction in communication.This course explores pragmatics issues in terms of 1) How do people communicate more than what the words or phrases of their utterances might mean by themselves, and how do people make these interpretations? 2) Why do people choose to say and/or interpret something in one way rather than another? 3) How do people’s perceptions of contextual factors influence the process of producing and interpreting language?
I. Required Textbook:
Yule, G. (2008). Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
II. Supplementary Reading Materials:
1) Overview of pragmatics
Spencer-Oatey, H., & Zegarac, V. (2010). Pragmatics. In N. Schmitt (Ed.), An introduction to
applied linguistics (2nd edition, Chapter 5, pp. 70-88). London: Hodder & Stoughton Ltd.
Chapman, S. (2011). Pragmatics. New York: Macmillan.
2) Activities of speech acts
Tatsuki, D. H, & Houck, N. R. (Eds.). (2010). Pragmatics: Teaching speech acts. Crofton, Maryland: Capitol Communication Systems, Inc.
III. Reference
Scott, K. (2023). Pragmatics in English. Cambridge University Press.