| dc.description.abstract | In  daily  communication,  people  sometimes  fail  to  understand  what  others 
mean,  and  this  leads  to  confusion  or  misunderstanding  between  the  two  parties. 
However, there is a way to avoid this confusion or misunderstanding that may occur 
during  the  conversation,  which  is  described  by  Grice  as  Cooperative  Principle  with 
four conversational maxims. Considering the phenomenon above, this thesis analyzes 
the  use  of  Cooperative  Principle  in  an  English  teaching  classroom,  in  which  the 
students  are  children  of  10-15  years  old.  A  qualitative  research  is  conducted  as  the 
method  to  analyze  the  sentences  that  either  follow  or  break  the  conversational 
maxims, while the field research type is used to collect the data by recording five of 
24 meetings at Eddy‟s English Centre. There are two main focuses of this thesis. First 
is the discussion of how the communication between the teacher and the students go 
during  the  teaching  process,  and  the  second  focus  is  on  what  impacts  the  use  of 
Cooperative Principle contributes to the English teaching process. The writer begins 
the  discussion  by  elaborating  types  of  conversational  maxims  that  are  used  in  the 
English  classroom,  and  as  the  follow-up  elaboration,  explores  the  impacts  that  the 
Cooperative  Principle  brings  to  the  teaching  process  itself.  To  support  the 
argumentation, some sentences are presented in the discussion as  proofs that the use 
of Cooperative Principle occurs during the conversation between the teacher and the 
student. The result of the discussion proves that the use of conversational maxims by 
the  teacher  influences  the  understanding  of  the  students  about  the  material  given  in 
the class. When the teacher violates the maxim, for example, the students fail to see 
what the teacher mean. | en_US |