Although the speech act of request is universal, request patterns, especially the level of directness and request perspective, entail cross-cultural differences. The present study examines the differences and/or similarities in request perspectives performed by 140 participants (70 Russian and 70 Algerian students) in classroom discourse. The data collected by a Discourse Completion Task (DCT) were analyzed based on models of Blum-Kulka et al. [1989]. Algerian and Russian students preferred conventionally indirect requests with their teachers. The hearer-oriented requests were the most used by Russians compared to Algerians, who preferred the speaker-oriented perspective. The results proved that conventional indirect requests are used when the hearer's (H) power is high, which requires the speaker-oriented perspective in Algerian culture. The hearer-oriented perspective is preferred by Russian participants the most since directness is more polite in such a culture. This study provided new data for cross-cultural studies from the request perspective.