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The use of interactional metadiscourse markers by Saudi EFL male and female college students: the case of a gender-sensitive topic

Linguistics and Languages

The use of interactional metadiscourse markers by Saudi EFL male and female college students: the case of a gender-sensitive topic

G. M. Al-otaibi and A. A. Hussain

This fascinating study by Ghuzayyil Mohammed Al-Otaibi and Abeer Abdulhadi Hussain delves into the interactional metadiscourse markers used by Saudi male and female EFL college students in essays on the sensitive topic of driving. Discover how gender influences writing style and the implications this holds for EFL instruction.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
A few studies have explored the use of interactional metadiscourse markers in argumentative writing by male and female college students, and none with respect to gender-sensitive topics. This study examines how Saudi male and female EFL college students exploit interactional metadiscourse markers when writing about the topic “Who are Better Drivers, Men or Women?”. Using a corpus of student essays divided into four sub-corpora (men favouring men; men arguing for women; women arguing for men; women writing in favour of women) and adopting a mixed-methods approach with AntConc and Hyland’s (2005) model, results show that female writers employed attitudinal lexis, hedges, self-mentions and boosters more than male writers. By gender and stance, females arguing for men’s driving significantly utilised hedges more than the other three groups, and females supporting female drivers used self-mentions significantly more than males arguing for men’s driving. The study suggests sensitive topics may affect the distribution of metadiscourse markers across genders and offers pedagogical implications for EFL instruction and curriculum design.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Aug 01, 2024
Authors
Ghuzayyil Mohammed Al-Otaibi, Abeer Abdulhadi Hussain
Tags
interactional metadiscourse
EFL students
gender differences
writing styles
metadiscourse markers
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