Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study

The paper sets out to investigate the potential advantages of applying insights from the field of cognitive linguistics to teaching prepositions in business English over an approach relying on the traditional linguistic framework. For the study, three of the English prepositions were chosen: to, for...

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Main Author: Trninić Zora
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Novi Sad - Faculty of Economics, Subotica 2023-01-01
Series:Anali Ekonomskog fakulteta u Subotici
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-2120/2023/0350-21202349037T.pdf
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author Trninić Zora
author_facet Trninić Zora
author_sort Trninić Zora
collection DOAJ
description The paper sets out to investigate the potential advantages of applying insights from the field of cognitive linguistics to teaching prepositions in business English over an approach relying on the traditional linguistic framework. For the study, three of the English prepositions were chosen: to, for, and at. Study participants were divided into two groups: an experimental group, which received a cognitive treatment of the three prepositions; and a control group, which received an instruction relying on traditional accounts. The participants were administered three tests in total: a pretest, an immediate posttest, and a delayed posttest. Their scores were taken on all three tests and then compared within each group and between the groups. To calculate the results, descriptive statistics, t-test of independent means and one-way ANCOVA were used. Grounding the expected results in expert literature, it was anticipated to obtain the results indicative of the advantage of the cognitive approach. According to the study results, the experimental group outperformed the control group at all levels of statistical analysis. The results suggest that a strategic incorporation of a cognitive view of the structure of language into the foreign language classroom could facilitate better understanding, more effective learning and long-term retention of the language points taught.
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spelling doaj.art-574939e165734e72bf88d3de01aeb0862023-08-14T09:06:10ZengUniversity of Novi Sad - Faculty of Economics, SuboticaAnali Ekonomskog fakulteta u Subotici0350-21202683-41622023-01-0120234937500350-21202349037TApplying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case studyTrninić Zora0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2857-5207University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Economics in Subotica, Subotica, SerbiaThe paper sets out to investigate the potential advantages of applying insights from the field of cognitive linguistics to teaching prepositions in business English over an approach relying on the traditional linguistic framework. For the study, three of the English prepositions were chosen: to, for, and at. Study participants were divided into two groups: an experimental group, which received a cognitive treatment of the three prepositions; and a control group, which received an instruction relying on traditional accounts. The participants were administered three tests in total: a pretest, an immediate posttest, and a delayed posttest. Their scores were taken on all three tests and then compared within each group and between the groups. To calculate the results, descriptive statistics, t-test of independent means and one-way ANCOVA were used. Grounding the expected results in expert literature, it was anticipated to obtain the results indicative of the advantage of the cognitive approach. According to the study results, the experimental group outperformed the control group at all levels of statistical analysis. The results suggest that a strategic incorporation of a cognitive view of the structure of language into the foreign language classroom could facilitate better understanding, more effective learning and long-term retention of the language points taught.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-2120/2023/0350-21202349037T.pdfapplied cognitive linguisticsprepositionsbusiness englishsemantic networkconceptual metaphor
spellingShingle Trninić Zora
Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
Anali Ekonomskog fakulteta u Subotici
applied cognitive linguistics
prepositions
business english
semantic network
conceptual metaphor
title Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
title_full Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
title_fullStr Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
title_full_unstemmed Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
title_short Applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business English: A case study
title_sort applying cognitive approach to teaching prepositions in business english a case study
topic applied cognitive linguistics
prepositions
business english
semantic network
conceptual metaphor
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-2120/2023/0350-21202349037T.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT trniniczora applyingcognitiveapproachtoteachingprepositionsinbusinessenglishacasestudy