Winning an interviewer's trust in a gatekeeping encounter

发布者:系统管理员发布时间:2012-12-18浏览次数:385

JULIE A. KEREKES

Abstract

This study examines the co-construction of five successful gatekeeping encounters. Drawing from a database of employment interviews, the emically derived concept of trustworthiness is identified as a key determiner in the success or failure of job candidates. Three critical, potentially problematic moves are identified: supplying inappropriate references, demanding too high a salary, and failing to account for gaps in one's work history. What distinguishes the successful from the failed interviews is not the frequency of these potentially damaging occurrences but the compensatory characteristics of those encounters in which trust (and subsequent success) is established. The successful candidates vary widely in terms of second language ability (in the case of nonnative speakers of English) and work experience. What they share, however, is the ability to present themselves positively, to establish rapport/solidarity with their interlocutor, and to demonstrate flexibility regarding job requirements and preferences. Both linguistic and nonlinguistic features are examined.

Key Words: comembership; cross-cultural communication; cross-talk; employment interviews; gatekeeping encounters; institutional discourse; intercultural communication; interlanguage pragmatics; rapport.

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