| This qualitative study investigates communication issues in English as a second/foreign language. This study investigated how communicatively competent three Hispanic international graduate assistants were with four evaluators in a performance test at a university in the American Midwest. This study explored the nature of communicative competence using conversational, critical discourse, and sociolinguistic analyses in the same setting.; Conversational analysis of the discourse patterns of the three Hispanic international students revealed that their conversational competence is observed when they make eye-contact, limit their participation to answering what is asked of them, use clarification questions, introduce themselves to their audiences, and talk about class objectives, class requirements, textbooks and grading policy.; Critical discourse analysis of the data showed that these three test-takers embedded into their conversational frames issues related to social class, national and cultural origin, teacher talk, and language of control.; From a sociolinguistic perspective, the data showed that the two female and the one male participant used language differently. The women tried to connect with their audiences, whereas the male participant remained detached from his audience creating a status difference between him and his audience.; This qualitative study suggests that aspects of conversational competence and the use of language as indicators of power typical of American academic interviews be included in our current conceptualization of communicative competence. Both of these aspects of language use were observed repeatedly in the discourse of the participants in this study. Pedagogical, assessment, and research implications are included. |