Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study

Modality is a salient notion in language, manifested through modal verbs. However, modal verbs are complex grammatical units since they have multiple functions and meanings. Previous studies have shown mismatches between actual language use and its presentation in textbooks, including modal verb rep...

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Main Authors: Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur, Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan, Bambang Widi, Pratolo, Surono, ., Tri Rina, Budiwati, Aisyah, Shifak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Syiah Kuala University 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/1/Modal%20verbs%20in%20Indonesian%20and%20Malaysian%20English%20textbooks.pdf
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author Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur
Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan
Bambang Widi, Pratolo
Surono, .
Tri Rina, Budiwati
Aisyah, Shifak
author_facet Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur
Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan
Bambang Widi, Pratolo
Surono, .
Tri Rina, Budiwati
Aisyah, Shifak
author_sort Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur
building UMP Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Modality is a salient notion in language, manifested through modal verbs. However, modal verbs are complex grammatical units since they have multiple functions and meanings. Previous studies have shown mismatches between actual language use and its presentation in textbooks, including modal verb representation in both EFL and ESL contexts. This study explored the distributional frequencies of modal verbs in Indonesian EFL textbooks compared to those in Malaysian ESL textbooks. It compiled the textbook conversation corpora from secondary education levels in Indonesia and Malaysia: two Indonesian EFL textbooks (IET) and two Malaysian ESL textbooks (MET), which are nationally endorsed. The corpora comprised 4,548 tokens collected from the conversations in the textbooks. Data collection involved corpus queries focusing on nine core/central modal verbs: ‘can’, ‘could’, ‘may’, ‘might’, ‘shall’, ‘should’, ‘will’, ‘would’, and ‘must’. The results show that Indonesian and Malaysian textbooks shared the same most frequent modal verb distribution; however, other distributions differed. Besides, English modal verbs in Indonesian textbooks are more static with one-to-one correspondence, while Malaysian textbooks present more dynamic modal verb meanings. Notably, Indonesian EFL textbooks have complete modal meaning representation, which is absent in Malaysian textbooks. Interestingly, the modal verb distributions in both textbooks differ from those in a native corpus, representing actual English use. These results highlight the need for more careful consideration when designing and developing teaching materials, especially in ESL and EFL contexts.
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spelling ump-440622025-03-13T03:38:42Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/ Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan Bambang Widi, Pratolo Surono, . Tri Rina, Budiwati Aisyah, Shifak LB1603 Secondary Education. High schools LT Textbooks PE English Modality is a salient notion in language, manifested through modal verbs. However, modal verbs are complex grammatical units since they have multiple functions and meanings. Previous studies have shown mismatches between actual language use and its presentation in textbooks, including modal verb representation in both EFL and ESL contexts. This study explored the distributional frequencies of modal verbs in Indonesian EFL textbooks compared to those in Malaysian ESL textbooks. It compiled the textbook conversation corpora from secondary education levels in Indonesia and Malaysia: two Indonesian EFL textbooks (IET) and two Malaysian ESL textbooks (MET), which are nationally endorsed. The corpora comprised 4,548 tokens collected from the conversations in the textbooks. Data collection involved corpus queries focusing on nine core/central modal verbs: ‘can’, ‘could’, ‘may’, ‘might’, ‘shall’, ‘should’, ‘will’, ‘would’, and ‘must’. The results show that Indonesian and Malaysian textbooks shared the same most frequent modal verb distribution; however, other distributions differed. Besides, English modal verbs in Indonesian textbooks are more static with one-to-one correspondence, while Malaysian textbooks present more dynamic modal verb meanings. Notably, Indonesian EFL textbooks have complete modal meaning representation, which is absent in Malaysian textbooks. Interestingly, the modal verb distributions in both textbooks differ from those in a native corpus, representing actual English use. These results highlight the need for more careful consideration when designing and developing teaching materials, especially in ESL and EFL contexts. Syiah Kuala University 2025 Article PeerReviewed pdf en cc_by_4 http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/1/Modal%20verbs%20in%20Indonesian%20and%20Malaysian%20English%20textbooks.pdf Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur and Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan and Bambang Widi, Pratolo and Surono, . and Tri Rina, Budiwati and Aisyah, Shifak (2025) Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study. Studies in English Language and Education, 12 (1). pp. 20-33. ISSN 2355-2794. (Published) https://doi.org/10.24815/siele.v12i1.35258 https://doi.org/10.24815/siele.v12i1.35258
spellingShingle LB1603 Secondary Education. High schools
LT Textbooks
PE English
Oktavianti, Ikmi Nur
Noor Raha, Mohd Radzuan
Bambang Widi, Pratolo
Surono, .
Tri Rina, Budiwati
Aisyah, Shifak
Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title_full Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title_fullStr Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title_full_unstemmed Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title_short Modal verbs in Indonesian and Malaysian English textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
title_sort modal verbs in indonesian and malaysian english textbooks for secondary schools: a corpus-driven study
topic LB1603 Secondary Education. High schools
LT Textbooks
PE English
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/44062/1/Modal%20verbs%20in%20Indonesian%20and%20Malaysian%20English%20textbooks.pdf