Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom

This paper reports on a quasi-experimental study investigating the effect of cognitive linguistics-grounded instruction on learning the prepositions in, on, and at, which are known to pose tremendous difficulty to English language learners due to their language-specific features and polysemous natur...

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Main Authors: David Wijaya, Gabriella Ong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia 2018-05-01
Series:Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11456
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spelling doaj-d1a41a109e394822aab6e90146291e9f2020-11-25T03:22:05ZengUniversitas Pendidikan IndonesiaIndonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics2301-94682502-67472018-05-018111010.17509/ijal.v8i1.114567178Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroomDavid Wijaya0Gabriella Ong1Universitas Katolik Indonesia Atmajaya, Jakarta, IndonesiaUniversitas Katolik Indonesia Atmajaya, Jakarta, Indonesia and SMA Santa Ursula BSD, IndonesiaThis paper reports on a quasi-experimental study investigating the effect of cognitive linguistics-grounded instruction on learning the prepositions in, on, and at, which are known to pose tremendous difficulty to English language learners due to their language-specific features and polysemous nature. The participants (N = 44) were adolescent learners at a school in Indonesia. They were assigned into the cognitive group and the rule group. The cognitive group was presented with pictorial representations of the prepositions and cognitive tools used to motivate non-spatial uses, while the rule group was provided with rules. Participants’ performance on the three uses (i.e. spatial, temporal and abstract) was measured with pre-, post-, and delayed post-tests in a form of gap filling. The study yielded mixed results. The findings demonstrate that the cognitive group outperformed the rule group in the overall immediate and delayed post-tests. The cognitive group improved significantly in the immediate post-test; however, the positive effect did not last until the delayed post-test. On the other hand, the rule group gained a little in the immediate post-test, but the group’s performance decreased significantly in the delayed post-test. Although there was no indication of long-term effects of the cognitive instruction, the results still indicate a value of applying cognitive linguistics to teaching the prepositions, and thus lend support to the applicability of cognitive linguistic theory in second language instruction.https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11456english prepositionscognitive linguisticsindonesian efl learnersspatial configurationspolysemy network analyses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Wijaya
Gabriella Ong
spellingShingle David Wijaya
Gabriella Ong
Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
english prepositions
cognitive linguistics
indonesian efl learners
spatial configurations
polysemy network analyses
author_facet David Wijaya
Gabriella Ong
author_sort David Wijaya
title Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
title_short Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
title_full Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
title_fullStr Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
title_full_unstemmed Applying Cognitive Linguistics to teaching English prepositions in the EFL classroom
title_sort applying cognitive linguistics to teaching english prepositions in the efl classroom
publisher Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
series Indonesian Journal of Applied Linguistics
issn 2301-9468
2502-6747
publishDate 2018-05-01
description This paper reports on a quasi-experimental study investigating the effect of cognitive linguistics-grounded instruction on learning the prepositions in, on, and at, which are known to pose tremendous difficulty to English language learners due to their language-specific features and polysemous nature. The participants (N = 44) were adolescent learners at a school in Indonesia. They were assigned into the cognitive group and the rule group. The cognitive group was presented with pictorial representations of the prepositions and cognitive tools used to motivate non-spatial uses, while the rule group was provided with rules. Participants’ performance on the three uses (i.e. spatial, temporal and abstract) was measured with pre-, post-, and delayed post-tests in a form of gap filling. The study yielded mixed results. The findings demonstrate that the cognitive group outperformed the rule group in the overall immediate and delayed post-tests. The cognitive group improved significantly in the immediate post-test; however, the positive effect did not last until the delayed post-test. On the other hand, the rule group gained a little in the immediate post-test, but the group’s performance decreased significantly in the delayed post-test. Although there was no indication of long-term effects of the cognitive instruction, the results still indicate a value of applying cognitive linguistics to teaching the prepositions, and thus lend support to the applicability of cognitive linguistic theory in second language instruction.
topic english prepositions
cognitive linguistics
indonesian efl learners
spatial configurations
polysemy network analyses
url https://ejournal.upi.edu/index.php/IJAL/article/view/11456
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