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ANALYSIS OF COOPERATIVE PRINCIPLES IN CLASSROOM
INTERACTION
Annisaa’ Nur Kamila
Abstract
Trying to understand the meaning of the speaker’s words in the context of
communication can be included in Pragmatic scope. This study investigated on how
often students and teachers violate the maxim of cooperative principles in the
classroom interaction and the reason why students and teacher violate those maxims.
The purpose of this study is to know how far students and the teacher violate the
maxim of cooperative principles and to what extent they violate those maxims. This
study is based on the Grice theory about cooperative principles (1989). For this study,
the data was taken by recording the whole conversation in a class and analyzing
which conversation violates the maxim of cooperative principles. After analyzing the
data, the next step is identifying and classifying the data into four types of maxim
violations. The result of this study showed that in the classroom interaction, violations
happen to only two maxims of cooperative principles. What happens the most in the
violation in classroom interaction is violation maxim of relevance. After violation
maxim of quantity, violation maxim of quality comes up. Violation of maxim of
quantity and maxim of manner did not occur in this study. The reasons for violating
maxims are different for each violation. Reasons for violating the maxim of relevance
and quality is to liven up the situation in classroom and to make a joke.
Key words: Cooperative Principles, Classroom Interaction, Maxim of Cooperative
Principles.
INTRODUCTION
When we read, or hear a language, we usually try to understand the meaning
of the words and what the speaker or writer intends to say in the context of
communication. It means that both the speaker and the listener must be able to deliver
their intended message clearly, so that both parties can understand each other. The
study on intended speaker’s meaning in context is called pragmatics (Yule, 2006).
Central to the context of communication is the interaction between the
speakers and hearers. Based on Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary, the word
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“interaction”, which comes from the root word “interact”, means “~ (with sb/sth) (of
people) act together or co-operatively, esp so as to communicate with each other.”
For the word “interaction” itself, the meaning is “~ (among between sb/sth); ~ (with
sb/sth) interacting; co-operation.” From this meaning, we can conclude that anything
which has an action and reaction can be considered as an interaction.
In terms of communication, generally can be recognized by the speaker’s
utterances. It includes ‘requesting’, ‘commanding’, ‘questioning’, and ‘informing’.
When we want to understand the speaker’s utterance, usually we look at the function
of those requesting, commanding, questioning and informing (Yule, 2006). In the
classroom, there are many types of interaction between “students and teacher” or
“students and students”. This interaction can be a conversation, discussion,
explanation, or question – answer session.
Interaction can happen when both the speaker and the listener hold a
cooperative principle in doing conversations. Grice’s theory (1989) on cooperative
principles provides how to have a cooperative conversation by designating
conversational maxims, which will be discuss in the next section. A violation of a
maxim may lead to an uncooperative conversation. However, this violation of maxim
is often done deliberately with a specific reason or purpose.
In a classroom interaction, sometimes found that some misunderstanding
happened between the teacher and students or among students. Grice said that
violation of cooperative principles can lead speakers and hearers into uncooperative
conversation and misunderstanding about the message delivered (Grice, 1898). By
looking at that theory, an investigation about violation of maxim cooperative
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principles in the classroom interaction should be done to know how often teacher and
students violate the maxims. The reason why should find this is because in a
classroom interaction, it is important to deliver the message clearly in order to transfer
the knowledge.
There are some previous studies for this field. However, almost all of them are
on the conversations of films and talk shows. One of these studies, which was done
by Dornerus (2005), addressed the violations of maxims in in Desperate Housewives
and That 70’s Show”. In this study, Dornerus compared and contrasted how maxims
are violated in drama and comedy situations. The result of this study was the violation
of maxim of relevance was the one that most frequently appeared in these two
dramas, with percentage 31,8% for That 70’s Show and 36,8% for Desperate
Housewives. Following this were violations of the maxims of manner, quantity, and
then quality. She said that the violation of relevance was most often done because the
characters avoid the other characters that would embarrass them or put them in
unpleasant situations. The other reason was they do not want to be straight out when
they talk to other characters.
A study by Tupan and Natalia in Indonesia (2008), identified the characters in
Desperate Housewives, who violated maxims more than one maxim. The finding
showed that almost all the characters violate Cooperative maxims. The characters
combine those maxims to tell lie. They were lying to other characters in order to save
face, hiding the truth, satisfying the hearer, etc. Tupan and Natalia said in their
conclusion that when people do multiple violations, people have reasons for doing
violation deliberately.
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Another study was also done in Indonesia; this study was about a pragmatic
analysis in one of talk shows in Indonesia. This study analyzed the implicature that
appear in this conversation script pragmatically. The result showed that the violation
maxim of relevance appeared most frequently. The next most occurring violations
were those of quantity, manner, and quality. The percentage for each violation were
80,95% for relevance violation, 76,19% for violations of quantity, 47,61% for
manner, and 9,52% violations of quality. Sukrianto (2011) said in their paper that
although people sometimes abandoned maxims, they were not really abandoned the
maxims, they leads that violation into implicatures.
There were some similarities when we look at those studies above, although
they had different context. The first similarity is the result of each studies show that
the violation of the maxim of relevance appeared most frequently. Secondly, they
argued that when people violate Cooperative Principles, there are some reasons
behind it. The last is the methodology that they used. They used the same
methodology; they used transcription, classification data and the result of analyzing
data.
Based on the previous study that has been explained, in this study, the topic
that will be raised is the application of Cooperative Principles in classroom
interaction. The main question is how do students and teacher interact in the
classroom in the light of the Cooperative Principles. This study aims to investigate
what kind of violations the students and teacher do in the classroom and what
meanings they intend to achieve in their implicatures by doing the violations. An
implicature is what speaker mean in his conversation implicitly (Murtisari, 2011).
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Implicature is not stated clearly in a conversation. By doing this implicature, speaker
has meaning but he does not want it stated clearly. The speaker wants the hearer to
know the meaning of his utterances or his conversation without make it state clearly.
The hearer has to catch the meaning correctly.
The most important thing in this study is how the students and teacher do
cooperative principles in the classroom interaction. In order to find out about this, this
study will see in several cases; the most violated maxims happened in the classroom
interaction, the way students and teacher violate the maxims, and the purpose of doing
the violations. The purpose of this study is to know how far students and teacher
violate the maxim of cooperative principles and to what extent they violate those
maxims. Uncooperative conversation can make some misunderstanding in a class. In
order to avoid this misunderstanding, the finding of this study can make students
aware about the cooperativeness conversation in a classroom interaction and know
how to create a cooperative conversation during the teaching and learning activities in
a classroom.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
The theory foundation that underlies this research is Grice’s theory about
Cooperative Principles.
“Make your contribution such as required, at the stage at which it
occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in
which you are engaged”
Grice (1989:26)
In the Cooperative Principle, there is a special term, Implicature. Implicature
comes before the Grice’s Maxims. Implicature is the capacity of interlocutors to make
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sense of the utterances they exchange in spite of some missing elements, is that such
elements are often implicated and such implicatures are made possible by cooperation
between speaker and listener (Grice, 1989).
The concept of “implicature”, based on the Grice’s theory, implies that the
hearer of the message is able to hypothesise about the speaker’s meaning, based on
the meaning of the sentence uttered, on background or contextual assumptions and on
general communicative principles which speakers are expected to understand. What is
implied by the speaker should be able to be understood by the hearers.
Based on Cooperative Principles by Grice (1989), there are four maxims that
make conversation work:
1. Maxim of Quality
“Try to make your contribution one that is true.”
Do not say what you believe to be false
Do not say for which you lack adequate
2. Maxim of Quantity
“Maxim of quantity related to the quantity of information to be provided.”
Make your contribution as informative as is required (for the current
purposes for the exchange)
Do not make your contribution more informative that is required
3. Maxim of Relevance
Be relevant
4. Maxim of Manner
“… as relating not to what is said, but rather, to how what is to be said..”
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Avoid obscurity of expression
Avoid ambiguity
Be brief
Be orderly
What has been explained about cooperative principles are the “rules” in order
to create a flow conversation. Grice also said that there is a violation of maxims.
Violation is defined as the unpretentious or “quiet” non-observance of a maxim. A
speaker who violates a maxim “will be liable to mislead” (Grice 1989:30).
Even though Grice (1989) presents the cooperative principles in a
communication, in a certain situation with a certain condition, people tend to violate it
deliberately. When people violate these cooperatives principles, they seemed to have
their own reason for doing it. There are many reasons why people tend to violate
maxims. Christoffersen (2005) in Tupan and Natalia’s thesis (2008) said that when
people violate maxim of quality, there are some reasons for it. They may hide the
truth from the hearer, save face, feel jealous about something, satisfy the hearer, cheer
the hearer, avoid to hurt the hearer, build one’s belief, or convince the hearer.
Violating can happen to the four maxims; violation of the maxim of quality,
violation of the maxim of quantity, violation of the maxim of relevance, and violation
of the maxim of manner.
The first is Violation of the Maxim of Quality. Based on the explanation about that
maxim, a speaker violates this maxim because the speaker does not tell the truth. For
example:
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Anna had a bad score in her last exam. She got 20 points out of
100 points. At home, her mother asked her about her score.
Mom : How is your mark for this last exam, Anna?
Anna : Well, not really bad, Mom.
From the excerpt above, we can say that Anna violates maxim of quality, because
Anna does not say the truth of her point in her last exam. Instead of said “I got 20
points, Mom”, she says, “not really bad”. In this example, a possibility reason why
Anna violates maxim is she is afraid that her Mom will be angry to her because her
bad mark on her last exam.
The second type of violation is violation in maxim of quantity. Grice has
explained that violation in maxim quantity may happen if the speaker gives
information more or less than the listener expects. For further understanding, we can
look at the example below:
A and B accidentally met in a store. They talked about where are their
destinations next.
A: Where are you going after this?
B: Well, I will go to the market and buy some fruits using my dad’s
new car.
From the example above, B violates maxim of quantity. B told more information than
A expected. The information that A wants “I will go to the market and buy some
fruits”. However, B adds some unwanted information “using my dad’s new car”. B
gives A information more than required. Moreover, from that example, the possibility
implicature behind B’s talk is B wanted A know that B dad’s car was new.
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The next violation type is violation of the maxim of relevance. In this violation,
the second speaker does not give a relevant answer toward the first speaker. An
example of violating this maxim is Mr. John and Mrs. John have to present their
assignment today.
Mr. John : Have you done your assignment today?
Mrs. John : I have to drive back to Los Angeles and I did
not sleep.
Mrs. John violates maxim of relevance, because when Mr. John asks her whether she
has done her assignment, she does not answer it with yes or no. In here, Mr. John
expects that Mrs. John will answer with yes or no, because Mr. John asks her with yes
or no question. Rather says with yes or no, Mrs. John answers it in irrelevance way.
She says, “I have to drive back to Los Angeles and I did not take sleep.” The
irrelevance of Mrs. John’s answer may because she has not done her assignment for
today and she is afraid that Mr. John will angry with her. Another possibility
implicature for this case is Mrs. John already done her assignment, but she does not
have time to check it give it to Mr. John. In addition, Mrs. John is tired of her long
journey and she may want Mr. John know that she is tired.
The last type is violation in maxim of manner. In this violation, more inclined
to how the utterances said or how the word said.
Jenny walked out with her dog want to see a vet. In a way, she met
with her friend, Diana.
Diana : Where are you going with your dog?
Jenny : We are going to V-E-T (spelled the word VET).
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Jenny violates maxim of manner when she talks to Diana. In here, Jenny spells the
word vet become V-E-T. Jenny does not speak the word VET bluntly. Implicature for
this transcript is Jenny’s dog will be afraid if Jenny says “VET” briefly. Jenny’s dog
will become wilder, because the dog is afraid with vet. In order to make her dog stay
calm, she uses “V-E-T” instead of saying “VET” clearly.
Based on the examples of violating of maxims that have been explained, we
can say in other words that speakers make choices not only in WHAT they say, but
also in HOW they say it. They perform what they say in particular time, place, and
manner at the right moment, for the right duration, originating from and directed to
the right locations, at the right amplitude, with the right gestures (Clark, 2004).
In my study, the conversation is taken from classroom interaction. The term
“classroom interaction” refers to the interaction between teacher and learners in the
classrooms (Kalantari, 2009). From the theory above, it is very important to see
cooperative principles in the classroom interaction. The reason is it should be clear
about what happen in the class, what is being talked about, and what the main topic in
this classroom is. A classroom is where the knowledge is transferred from the lecture
to the students. If there is an ambiguity in the explanation, questions, or information
the transfer of knowledge may fail.
THE STUDY
Context of the Study
The context of the study is a tutorial class of Faculty of Information
Technology (Fakultas Teknologi Infomasi-FTI), Salatiga. The reason for choosing
this tutorial class was that in classroom interactions between student and students
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or students and teacher occurred. By using the class that had many interactions in
it, there was a potential occurrence maxim violation. Besides that, the language
that is used in classrooms is Bahasa Indonesia, so it can reduce the bias when
researcher get the data, because when the language is in English, there is a
possibility of bias because of the second language use.
Participants
Participants for this study were students and teacher from FTI. The reason for
choosing FTI’s students and teacher was because in FTI, students and teachers are
required to use Bahasa Indonesia for conversation in a classroom that is suitable
for this research. By using Bahasa Indonesia as the medium of communication,
there will be no bias in analysing the data.
The teacher for this class was one of the students in FTI because this class was
a tutorial class. The teacher was a senior student of 2010 (fourth year student) that
taught students Statistical Product and Service Solutions (SPSS) in 2013 class.
The number of students in the classroom was 40 students. These students were
angkatan 2013 who were studying SPSS.
Method of Research
This study was a descriptive research, which used the qualitative data.
Qualitative methodology is a research procedure which contains a descriptive data
from written or oral data (Brikci, 2007). Because of this study was about
pragmatics that has a connection with utterances or oral data, therefore, the data
collected were in words, utterances, sentences, and transcription.
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Instrument and Data Collection
In collecting the data, observation and recording methods were used in this
study. The researcher only became the outside observer; the researcher did not
take part in the conversation that happens in the teaching and learning situation in
the classroom interaction. The second method of collecting the data was using
recording. Recording the conversation and transcribe the recording was the second
method to collect the data. All conversation that occurred in the classroom was
recorded.
Because of this study was about interaction and utterances that happens in a
classroom, recording the classroom interaction was used to analyse and classify
the data. To support the analyzing and classifying data, transcription was also
used. The detailed transcription of taped interaction was the approach that deals
with the conversation or interaction that had been recorded (Crystal, 2008).
Data Analysis
The data was recorded, transcribed, classified, and analyzed descriptively. The
First step was the conversation was recorded, then transcribed. Second step was
the transcription to identify the violations in maxim of cooperative principles.
After the identification, the data were classified based on the violations, whether
violation in maxim of quality, quantity, relevance, or manner. After finding out
the most occurring violation, the next analysis was describing how the students
violate the maxim and the possible purposes and consequences for classroom
interactions.
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FINDINGS AND DISCUSSIONS
Three times classroom observations were done in two weeks. Nine violations
were found and those violations only happened in maxim of quality and maxim of
relevance with different frequency. Table 1 is a table of frequency violation of
cooperative principles happened during classroom observations.
Table 1. Frequency Violation of Cooperative Principles in Classroom Interaction
Type of Violation Number Percentage
Violation Maxim of Quality 2 22.2%
Violation Maxim of
Quantity
0 0%
Violation Maxim of
Relevance
7 77.8%
Violation Maxim of
Manner
0 0%
Total 9 100.0%
Many violations that happened during the classroom interaction is violation
maxim of relevance, with the percentage 77.8% and happened for seven times.
Violation maxim of quality happened twice, with percentage 22.2%. 0% for violation
of maxim of quantity and maxim of manner. These two violations of maxims shall be
discussed in details.
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Violation of the Maxim of Relevance
Violation of the maxim of relevance in classroom interaction has 7 utterances
among 9 utterances, more than 50% from the data taken. The reason why this maxim
happened many times is that the speakers wanted to liven up the atmosphere in the
classroom.
Excerpt 1
In a classroom, teaching and learning situation. Teacher was
explaining about Statistical Product and Service Solutions (SPSS). In
a classroom, teacher used projector and every student had one
computer.
Teacher : Nanti kalian di rumah instal SPSS ya, SPSS nya yang
versi 16. Lebih dari itu boleh sih. Tapi jangan yang 20 ya. Nanti kan
tampilannya seperti ini (mengacu ke tampilan yang ada di proyektor,
SPSS program). SPSS itu ada 2 tampilan, yang pertama view,
tampilan datanya. yang satu tampilan output. Statistika tentang apa?
(After this class, you have to install SPSS program, SPSS version
16th
. If you want the latest version, it’s okay. But, don’t install the
20th
version. Oke, the view will be like this. SPSS has two type of
views, the first view is the data view and the other one is output view.
What is statistic about?)
Student 1: Tau (I know)
Teacher : apa? (What?)
Student 2: ya itu statistika mbak. (students laughed) (It is about
statistics, mbak)
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Teacher :eii, statistika tentang apa hayo? (Eiii, what is statistics
about?)
Student 1: perhitungan mbak (calculation, Mbak)
In an excerpt above, that conversation violates maxim of relevance. When the
teacher asked about “what is statistics?” to the students, one of the students in
that classroom answered with “It is about statistic, Mbak.” The student’s
answer was not relevant toward the question, because it was not the answer to
the question. The appropriate answer for that question was shown by student
2, who answered with “calculations, Mbak.”
From the excerpt above, student 1 violated maxim of relevance,
because his answer was not the answer that was expected. When student 1
answered it, the answer was a repetition of the question. When we looked at
the teacher’s respond toward student 1’s answer, it was not the answer. There
was a reason why student 1 violated the maxim of relevance in this condition.
The respond from the classmates after he violated that maxim was laughter.
There is the evidence that the reason for violated this maxim is to liven up the
atmosphere in that classroom.
Excerpt 2
In a classroom, in a teaching learning situation. Teacher was
explaining about SPSS. There was a question – answer session
during teaching learning situation.
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Teacher : Ini kenapa kalian belajar SPSS, tau gak gunanya
buat apa? (This is why you learn about SPPS, do you know the
purpose of learn this thing?)
Student 1 : Biar lulus lah, Mbak. (To be graduate from this
course, Mbak)
Other students : (laughed)
Teacher : Ngawur. Ini gunanya untuk skripsi kalian. Nanti
kalian skripsi kalian akan butuh yang namanya SPSS. (It is not like
that. The purpose of learn this SPSS is because you need this in
doing you essay).
In that excerpt, student answered the teacher’s question, but the answer was not
something that teacher’s wanted. However, the student’s answer was logical, it was
true that they have to take SPSS course to be graduate from that course, because that
course is a must for them. Although it was logical, the answer was not the expected
one. The way student answer the teacher’s question was violating maxim of
relevance, because student’s answer was not relevant with the question. The relevant
answer toward the question was when the teacher said, “the purpose of learn this
SPSS is because you need this in doing you essay.” Actually, that kind of answer that
expected by the teacher, but the student did not answer it in that way.
The implicature of the student’s answer was to make a joke during teaching –
learning situation. In order to answer the question with a correct answer, the student
answered it with irrelevant answer. In a reality, student knew the answer for that type
of question, but to liven up the atmosphere in that classroom, student made a joke
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with that answer. After student answered with that answer, teacher responded it with
“it is not like that.” It was clear enough to show that the answer was to liven up the
classroom atmosphere.
Violation of the Maxim of Quality
This violation happened twice among nine occurrences during three times
observation. The percentage is 22.2%. Based on what happened in the observation,
this violation happened because students wanted to liven up the classroom, avoiding
boredom in the classroom. In this point, the implicature of the students is to make a
joke. It is clear that they were making joke with violated maxim of quality. From this
phenomenon, violating maxim of quality can give an implicature to make a joke.
Because of this observation based on the class interaction, there is only a plenty of
violation in this maxim.
Excerpt 3
Teacher was explaining about how SPSS works. Teacher was
explaining with projector in front of the class.
Teacher : SPSS ini tentang perhitungan matematika ya. Nah,
karena ini perhitungan matematika ini, makanya nanti kalian
ditampilan datanya ini, dimasukin datanya terus diproses. nah
diproses nanti, nanti keluarnya di output ini. jadi dikotak yang
berbeda. Nah, kalau kalian pake java, itukan langsung keluar
tampilannya, tampilan yang kalian buat. tapi kalau di SPSS itu
cuman output datanya, hasil datanya itu ditampilin, jadi bukan
seperti yang di java ya. misal nih, 1 + 1 hasilnya berapa? (So, SPSS
is about calculating. Because this is about calculating, later on, in
this data view, you can add the data and then you can process it.
After the processing the data, the output will be like this. In a
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different column. If you use Java, the view will be like this, but if
you use SPSS, the view only the output view. The result of the data
will be shown, it is different with the Java. For example, 1 + 1,
how’s the result? )
Student : 3 mbak (student laughed)(three, Mbak)
Teacher : Hey, mosok 1 + 1 = 3? (Really? Is it true that 1 +
1 = 3? )
Student : 2 mbak 2. (Two, Mbak, 2)
Teacher : jadi 1 + 1 itu masukin di sini, nanti keluarnya 2 itu
di sini. (So, 1 + 1 you can input that in here, the output 2, will be
here.)
Excerpt 4
Teaching and learning situation. Teacher was explaining about
SPSS using projector and every student got one computer for each.
Teacher : Di kelas dosen sudah ngapain aja? (In the colleage
teacher’s class, what you have been learnt?)
Student 1 : Ngitung IPK, Mbak! (class laughed)(We learnt
how to count GPA, Mbak!)
Teacher : Mosok ngitung IPK? Serius ah. (Is that true that
you were counting GPA? Seriously?)
Student 2 : Belum sampai SPSS kok, Mbak. Masih
perkenalan. (Have not touch SPSS, Mbak. We just introduced with
the course).
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In those two excerpts above, those two excerpts was violating maxim of quality. All
students violated that maxim. In the first excerpt, student said that 1+1 equals to
three. We all knew that 1 + 1 equals to two, not three. It was clear that student
violated maxim of quality in answered the question given by the teacher. The second
excerpt, excerpt 4, student 1 did violate maxim of quality. Student 1 answered with
“We learnt how to count GPA”, although in the reality they did not do that thing. In
reality, they did not count GPA, but they just introduced with the course. The proof
for this evidence is when student 2 answer teacher’s question with, “Have not touch
SPSS, Mbak. We just introduced with the course.”
From the excerpt 3 and 4, there are two reason why student violated maxim of
quality. For the excerpt 3, the implicature that we can see is to make a joke during
teaching and learning situation. The proof for it is when student laughed after heard
that answer. For excerpt 4, the implicature for violating that maxim is to liven up the
teacher, because if student 1 did not give answer, the class will be boring. Cheering
up the classroom during teaching and learning activity is needed to create a good
atmosphere to study (Gregory and Chapman, 2007).
The finding why students violate maxim of quality is different with
Christofersen (2005) in Tupan and Natalia (2008), Christofersen said that in the real
life people tend to lie because they want to hide the truth, save face, feel jealous about
something, satisfied the hearer, cheer the hearer, avoid to hurt the hearer, build one’s
belief, and convince the hearer. In this study, students violate maxim of quality
because they want to liven up the atmosphere in the classroom.
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CONCLUSION
From the analysis above, it can be concluded that violation of maxim that
mostly happened in the classroom interaction is violation toward maxim of relevance
with 7 occurrences or 77.8%. After violation of maxim of relevance, violation of
maxim of quality came up with twice occurrences, with 22.2%.
The ways speakers violate the maxim are different from others. When
speakers violate maxim of relevance, speakers give irrelevant answer or statement
from previous question or statement. Student answers the teacher’s question with
something irrelevant and the answer has no connection with the question. In violation
of maxim of quality, speakers tell a lie to the hearers, but the hearers understand and
know that it is a lie.
From those phenomenons that happened during observation, there are some
reasons for the violating maxims. The reason that can be seen clearly, when the
speaker violates maxim of relevance is to make a joke during classroom activity and
to liven up the situation in the classroom, in order not to make the classroom become
boring. In contrary, the reasons from Christofersen (2005) in Tupan and Natalia
(2008) did not appear in this study. He said eight reasons why people violate maxims,
hide the truth, save face, feel jealous about something, satisfied the hearer, cheer the
hearer, avoid to hurt the hearer, build one’s belief, and convince the hearer. In this
study, especially Indonesia context, the reason why people tend to violate maxim is to
liven up the atmosphere in the classroom.
This study is limited to only looking at violation maxim of cooperative
principles, without looking at flouting and opting maxim of cooperative principles.
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Besides that, the time limit for the investigation is one of the limitations for this
research. In further study, it is better to have more time to investigate in order to get
the richer data. For further study, it is suggested to investigate also in those areas to
see how far students and the teacher break the rules for cooperative principles in the
classroom interaction. Further research is suggested to investigate how far students
and teachers can apply cooperative principles in the classroom interaction to make the
teaching – learning activity goes smoothly.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
First, I would like say thank to God Almighty for his grace to let me finish this
study. This study would have been impossible without the support, help and
suggestion of my supervisor, friends, colleagues and family. I would like to sincerely
thank to my second reader for this study who helped me to achieve this study.
I would like to express my deep gratitude to my great supervisor, Christian
Rudianto, M.Appling, thank you for the advice, support, and encouragement to finish
this study. Thanks also go to Dr. Elisabet Titik Murtisari, MTransStud for her advice
and care to make this study possible to be done.
I wish to express my heartfelt thank to my family that always taking care of
me during the process of this study. Thanks to all friends that always support me
every time I needed their help.
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