Abstract:
Foreign language teaching in China, including teaching English as a foreign language (EFL), has shifted its instructional focus to a more communication-oriented pedagogy, influenced by Hymes’s (1972) “communicative competence” and the widely-recognised communicative language teaching (CLT) approach. However, research shows that some of the key teaching practices do not always align with the requirements of CLT during classroom interaction. Teachers’ questions are a key manifestation of such classroom interaction. In foreign language (FL) classrooms, the teacher’s questioning practice plays an important role in facilitating students’ comprehension and production in the target language. Due to the significance of teachers’ questions, this study investigates EFL teachers’ use of questions, particularly their functions in the classroom. The study also seeks to reveal students’ perceptions of their teacher’s questioning practice. A comprehensive review of current taxonomies of teachers’ questions shows key distinctions among various question types. And it also exposes problems in existing classification criteria as they involve both form and function considerations of questions. Therefore, in order to take a snapshot of the teacher’s questioning behaviour, a taxonomy of teachers’ questions by their discoursal functions is utilised in this study. Drawing on the techniques of discourse analysis, this research documents teacher-student interaction in English classes with distinct objectives, with a primary focus on exchanges initiated by the teacher’s questions. Foster, Tonkyn and Wigglesworth’s (2000) AS-units have been adopted for analysing the spoken data quantitatively. In an attempt to triangulate methods, data and theory, this case study has been designed to identify issues with a teacher’s questioning practice. This study attempts to offer insightful empirical evidence, both quantitatively and qualitatively, through analysing classroom observations, interview and survey data of how the teacher’s implementation of questions with different discoursal functions influenced the communication level of the observed EFL classes. The results show that the participating teacher is aware of using questions to elicit students’ oral responses, however, even if the focus is on promoting the development of speaking skills, her questions are assessment-oriented rather than communication-oriented. In addition, teacher questioning is found to be an indispensable tool for dealing with reading comprehension. Findings also reveal that increased use of informative or referential questions is not necessarily associated with extended students’ responses; other factors, such as allowing sufficient wait time after questioning and encouraging group discussion, also contributed to the length and complexity of students’ oral production. Finally, it seems that students are quite clear about the nature of the instruction in the teacher’s questions, though the teacher does not realise that students have trouble formulating answers to her questions. Rather, she attributes such difficulty to students’ lack of understanding of her questions.