As the effort to have the insight into the existing status of a local language in
Indonesia, especially in the academic setting viewed as the respected discourse,
this current study aims to delineate the attitudes of millennial students towards
lecturers’ code mixing to Sundanese during courses. 42 responses reflecting
respondents’ perspectives towards the issue were collected via a qualitative
questionnaire. To reveal the view of participants on the issue under the context of
higher education, responses in the forms of 62 clauses were analysed by the
transitivity framework of Halliday and Matthiessen. The findings of this SFL study
shows that lecturers’ code mixing to Sundanese during courses were viewed by
74% of Sundanese and non-Sundanese participants in positive ways while the rest
addressed it with negative attitudes. The positive attitudes were respectively
represented in material, mental, relational, and existential processes while the
negative attitudes were constructed sequentially in relational, material and mental,
verbal, and existential clauses. The main reasons in the positive attitudes as
revealed by the transitivity analysis are associated with the need to maintain and
preserve local language especially Sundanese via the academic channel.
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