Directive speech acts in trilingual students' classroom interactions at Pondok Modern Al-Aqsha

Pratiwi, Wulan Sri Ratna Diva (2026) Directive speech acts in trilingual students' classroom interactions at Pondok Modern Al-Aqsha. Jurnal ONOMA Pendidikan, Bahasa, dan Sastra, 12 (2). pp. 1159-1178. ISSN 2715-4564

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Official URL: https://e-journal.my.id/onoma/article/view/8381

Abstract

The evolution of Indonesian Islamic boarding schools (pesantren) toward a trilingual education model (Arabic, English, and Indonesian) has created a complex communicative landscape in which directive speech acts serve as a primary pedagogical tool. This study aims to: (1) identify the types of directive speech acts employed in trilingual classroom interactions at Pondok Modern Al-Aqsha; (2) analyze their pragmatic functions in teacher-student and student-student interactions; and (3) examine how these functions differ between Arabic-dominant Islamic studies lessons and Indonesian/English-dominant general education lessons. Adopting a qualitative descriptive approach with a sociopragmatic lens, data were collected from 12 hours of non-participant observations, audio-visual recordings, and semi-structured interviews with three subject teachers and approximately 90 junior high school students (Grades 7–9) at Pondok Modern Al-Aqsha. Data were analysed using Searle’s (1979) directive taxonomy and Miles and Huberman’s (1994) interactive flow model, with researcher triangulation and data source triangulation (inter-rater reliability: Cohen’s Kappa = 0.87) applied to ensure credibility. Seven directive types were identified commanding (38%), requesting (22%), suggesting (12%), inviting (10%), prohibiting (8%), begging (6%), and advising (4%) distributed unevenly across languages. Commands and prohibitions dominated Arabic-medium Islamic studies (42% of all directives), while requests, suggestions, and invitations predominated in English and Indonesian general education lessons (58%). Peer directives were genuinely trilingual, with Indonesian as the primary medium (61%). The study concludes that directive speech acts at Pondok Modern Al-Aqsha perform a “dual-identity” function, balancing traditional religious authority with modern pedagogical facilitation, demonstrating that pragmatic competence is essential for effective multilingual educational communication.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Directive Speech Acts; Trilingual Classroom; Teacher-Student Interaction; peer student interaction
Subjects: English Literatures
Divisions: Fakultas Adab dan Humaniora > Program Studi Bahasa dan Sastra Inggris
Depositing User: Wulan Sri Ratna Diva Pratiwi
Date Deposited: 04 Jun 2026 03:37
Last Modified: 04 Jun 2026 07:06
URI: https://digilib.uinsgd.ac.id/id/eprint/132141

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