Proceedings of the First International Conference on Economics, Business and Social Humanities, ICONEBS 2020, November 4-5, 2020, Madiun, Indonesia

Research Article

Discourse Markers in EFL Student Presentations

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/eai.4-11-2020.2304554,
        author={Titik  Rahayu and Muhyiddin  Aziz and Ita  Permatasari and Alief  Sutantohadi and Yulius Harry Widodo},
        title={Discourse Markers in EFL Student Presentations},
        proceedings={Proceedings of the First International Conference on Economics, Business and Social Humanities, ICONEBS 2020, November 4-5, 2020, Madiun, Indonesia},
        publisher={EAI},
        proceedings_a={ICONEBS},
        year={2021},
        month={2},
        keywords={discourse markers student presentations spoken discourse},
        doi={10.4108/eai.4-11-2020.2304554}
    }
    
  • Titik Rahayu
    Muhyiddin Aziz
    Ita Permatasari
    Alief Sutantohadi
    Yulius Harry Widodo
    Year: 2021
    Discourse Markers in EFL Student Presentations
    ICONEBS
    EAI
    DOI: 10.4108/eai.4-11-2020.2304554
Titik Rahayu1,*, Muhyiddin Aziz1, Ita Permatasari1, Alief Sutantohadi1, Yulius Harry Widodo1
  • 1: State Polytechnic of Madiun, Serayu St. 84th Madiun City
*Contact email: titikrahayu@pnm.ac.id

Abstract

Discourse Markers (DMs) have a significant role both in oral and written communication. DMs particularly in spoken language support the audience in interpreting meanings. In a discourse, all segments indicate distinct connections. The relations of the segments vary from changing topics, contrasting, elaborating, to inferring. By the use of DMs, the hearers can guess the signal of connections among segments. Despite various choices of DMs that can be used, EFL learners had a tendency to use only common DMs. The use of DMs in an EFL context is interesting to discuss to reveal the students’ ability in building cohesion and coherence in their speaking performances. Therefore, this current research is aimed to find out the most frequently used variants of DMs and to investigate the appropriate and inappropriate uses of DMs in student presentations. The discourse analysis was applied to analyze 86 presentation videos produced by students enrolling in Intermediate Speaking Course. The results revealed that the most frequently used DMs are and, also, but, so, and however. The misuses of DMs were mostly pertinent to the overuse and surface logicality.