posted on 2018-07-25, 08:51authored byElliott M. Hoey, Elizabeth Stokoe
This paper examines how delivering bad news may be avoided in conversations where rejection is common. We collected ∼2000 recordings of telephone calls from prospective students to a UK university contact centre during an annual process called ‘Clearing and Adjustment’. Applicants call to secure a place on a degree programme but are often ineligible due to insufficient grades. Based on a sample of 200 calls analyzed using conversation analysis, we show that call-takers determined applicants’ eligibility in two main ways: call-takers could (1) solicit applicants’ grades, or (2) inform applicants about the course's entry requirements. Following solicitations, call-takers’ next action was to reject applicants. However, following informings, students deduced their own ineligibility and explicit rejection was avoided. The relationship between method (‘solicit’ v. ‘inform’) and the occurrence of overt rejection was highly significant (p < 0001). We discuss the implementation of our findings in call-taker training to enable them to avoid giving out rejections.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies
Published in
Linguistics and Education
Volume
46
Pages
91 - 101 (10)
Citation
HOEY, E.M. and STOKOE, E., 2018. Eligibility and bad news delivery: How call-takers reject applicants to university. Linguistics and Education, 46, pp.91-101.
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Linguistics and Education and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.linged.2018.07.001.