Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian

This study investigates the politeness/impoliteness of supervisees’ request e-mails to their supervisors at a research university in Malaysia. It aimed at determining how Iranian post-graduate students formulate requests when writing e-mails to their Malaysian supervisors. The research aimed to de...

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Main Author: Hallajian, Ali
Format: Thesis
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/1/CD%2D_Ali_Hallajian.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/
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spelling my.um.stud.56722015-07-24T02:56:50Z Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian Hallajian, Ali PE English This study investigates the politeness/impoliteness of supervisees’ request e-mails to their supervisors at a research university in Malaysia. It aimed at determining how Iranian post-graduate students formulate requests when writing e-mails to their Malaysian supervisors. The research aimed to determine if these requests were direct or indirect and if internal/external modification was used. These modifiers are used to mitigate or aggravate the imposition force of a request. The aim of the research was to determine how polite or impolite Malaysian supervisors perceived these requests. This data consists of 128 emails from 20 Iranian post-graduate students to their Malaysian supervisors. 20 supervisors were provided a questionnaire which was designed, pilot-tested. To achieve the objectives of the study, the move structures in request e-mails to their supervisors were first identified (Baugh, 2011). Next, Economidou-Kogetsidis’s (2011) framework which is based on Blum- Kulka et al. (1989) and Biesenbach-Lucas (2006, 2007) was used to determine the level of directness of requests and the internal and external modifications used. The results show that 14 types of generic elements might occur in the e-mails. The findings suggest that request e-mails usually composed of 4 moves which comprise of obligatory and optional steps within them. This result is in sharp contrast with the findings of Bough (2011). Iranian students mostly tend to use ‘Direct’ and ‘Conventionally Indirect’ requests in their e-mails. More specifically, the use of ‘Query Preparatory’ was very prevalent. However, the analysis of the questionnaire indicates that Malaysian supervisors perceive ‘Conventionally Indirect’ strategy as polite whereas ‘Direct’ strategy as an impolite one. ‘Politeness Marker ‘please’’, ‘Downtoners’ and ‘Time intensifier’ were the most used internal modification. In this case, supervisors confirm that if a student uses internal modifications (especially ‘Consultative devices’ and ‘Politeness Marker ‘please’’) in their e-mails they would be considered polite. Students employ ‘Salutation’, ‘Closing’ and ‘Pre-closing/ Thanks’ external modifications to a great extent which were in line with supervisors’ perception of politeness. 2014 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/1/CD%2D_Ali_Hallajian.pdf Hallajian, Ali (2014) Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian. Masters thesis, University of Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Student Repository
url_provider http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/
topic PE English
spellingShingle PE English
Hallajian, Ali
Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
description This study investigates the politeness/impoliteness of supervisees’ request e-mails to their supervisors at a research university in Malaysia. It aimed at determining how Iranian post-graduate students formulate requests when writing e-mails to their Malaysian supervisors. The research aimed to determine if these requests were direct or indirect and if internal/external modification was used. These modifiers are used to mitigate or aggravate the imposition force of a request. The aim of the research was to determine how polite or impolite Malaysian supervisors perceived these requests. This data consists of 128 emails from 20 Iranian post-graduate students to their Malaysian supervisors. 20 supervisors were provided a questionnaire which was designed, pilot-tested. To achieve the objectives of the study, the move structures in request e-mails to their supervisors were first identified (Baugh, 2011). Next, Economidou-Kogetsidis’s (2011) framework which is based on Blum- Kulka et al. (1989) and Biesenbach-Lucas (2006, 2007) was used to determine the level of directness of requests and the internal and external modifications used. The results show that 14 types of generic elements might occur in the e-mails. The findings suggest that request e-mails usually composed of 4 moves which comprise of obligatory and optional steps within them. This result is in sharp contrast with the findings of Bough (2011). Iranian students mostly tend to use ‘Direct’ and ‘Conventionally Indirect’ requests in their e-mails. More specifically, the use of ‘Query Preparatory’ was very prevalent. However, the analysis of the questionnaire indicates that Malaysian supervisors perceive ‘Conventionally Indirect’ strategy as polite whereas ‘Direct’ strategy as an impolite one. ‘Politeness Marker ‘please’’, ‘Downtoners’ and ‘Time intensifier’ were the most used internal modification. In this case, supervisors confirm that if a student uses internal modifications (especially ‘Consultative devices’ and ‘Politeness Marker ‘please’’) in their e-mails they would be considered polite. Students employ ‘Salutation’, ‘Closing’ and ‘Pre-closing/ Thanks’ external modifications to a great extent which were in line with supervisors’ perception of politeness.
format Thesis
author Hallajian, Ali
author_facet Hallajian, Ali
author_sort Hallajian, Ali
title Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
title_short Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
title_full Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
title_fullStr Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
title_full_unstemmed Politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / Ali Hallajian
title_sort politeness in requests to supervisors in emails / ali hallajian
publishDate 2014
url http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/1/CD%2D_Ali_Hallajian.pdf
http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/5672/
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