The Inbox - Understanding and Maximizing Student-Instructor E-mail - Jennifer Ewald

The Inbox - Understanding and Maximizing Student-Instructor E-mail - Jennifer Ewald

Complaints

The Inbox - Understanding and Maximizing Student-Instructor E-mail - Jennifer Ewald

Jennifer Ewald [+-]
Saint Joseph's University
Jennifer D. Ewald is an Associate Professor of Spanish and Linguistics at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, PA, where she teaches undergraduate courses at all levels of instruction. She has published in the areas of applied linguistics, pragmatics, and second language pedagogy.

Description

This chapter analyzes these students’ least frequent use of e-mail: complaining. The analysis begins with a description of previous work on complaints (Olshtain & Weinbach, 1987) and reports on other complaint studies carried out in both naturalistic and laboratory settings. The analysis of the present data reports on the actual topics of students’ complaints, grades being the most common, and applies Laforest’s (2002) previously-recognized complaint patterns to explore these students’ complaint e-mails including related areas such as mitigated and intensified complaints and arguments. To explore these patterns, this chapter makes uses of a series of particular e-mail exchanges with a student. This chapter concludes with specific pedagogical implications and areas of future research related to complaints.

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Citation

Ewald, Jennifer. Complaints. The Inbox - Understanding and Maximizing Student-Instructor E-mail. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 114-127 Feb 2016. ISBN 9781781791141. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=22359. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.22359. Feb 2016

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