Prior processing, foreign language classroom anxiety, and L2 fluency

Author(s):  
Susana Pérez Castillejo

Abstract This study examines the role of prior processing (understood as L2 use earlier in discourse) in moderating the contributions of foreign language classroom anxiety (FLCA) and proficiency to L2 utterance fluency. Two groups with comparable FLCA and proficiency scores performed the same narrative task. One group completed it in the absence of any other L2 task, and one group completed it immediately after responding to a similar but not identical prompt. The participants’ speech was analyzed using breakdown, speed, and repair fluency measures. Results showed that prior processing can reduce FLCA’s interference during L2 production. Unexpectedly, prior processing did not produce significant fluency gains associated with lexical retrieval and syntactic encoding. Instead, the patterns of variation revealed that more attention was paid to message conceptualization. This finding implies that prior processing can moderate FLCA’s role in L2 production because it alters the way attentional resources are allocated in subsequent performance.

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Dewaele ◽  
Taghreed M. Al-Saraj

The present study focuses on the link between psychological, sociobiographical and linguistic variables and Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety of 348 Arabic learners of English (250 females, 98 males). Data were collected using the Arabic Foreign Language Anxiety Questionnaire (AFLAQ; Al-Saraj, 2011, 2014) and an Arabic version of the Multicultural Personality Questionnaire-Short Form (MPQ-SF; van der Zee, van Oudenhoven, Ponterotto & Fietzer, 2013). Multiple regression analyses revealed that self-perceived proficiency in oral English and frequency of use of English explained over a third of variance in FLCA: More proficient and frequent users felt less anxious. Two personality traits, Emotional Stability and Social Initiative explained a further fifth of variance in FLCA, with emotionally stable and more extraverted participants scoring lower on FLCA. Age was the final predictor of a small amount of variance, with older participants feeling less anxious. Degree of multilingualism, sex and education level had no effect on FLCA.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Armineh Martirossian ◽  
Anahid Hartoonian

<p>Foreign language classroom anxiety (FLCA) and self-regulated learning strategies (SRLSs) are two important factors that influence language learning process in negative and positive ways respectively. The aim of this study was to explore the relationship between FLCA and SRLSs. To this end, 100 university students majoring in TEFL were selected. For collecting data, Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety Scale (Horwitz, Horwitz, &amp; Cope, 1986) and Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire (Pintrich &amp; De Groot, 1990) were used. To analyze the data, Kendall correlation was run. The results revealed that there is a negative relationship between FLCA (communication apprehension, test anxiety, &amp; fear of negative evaluation) and SRLSs (cognitive strategy use &amp; self-regulation).</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 207-225
Author(s):  
Laurane Jarie ◽  
Carlos Salavera Bordás ◽  
Abel Merino Orozco ◽  
Pablo Usán Supervía

La ansiedad ante el aprendizaje de las lenguas extranjeras es una de las variables más influyentes en el aprendizaje de idiomas extranjeros.  Horwitz y Cope (1986, 1991) desarrollaron un marco teórico alrededor del constructo específico  de ansiedad lingüística que consigue explicar el rol de esta variable dentro del proceso de enseñanza – aprendizaje de las lenguas extranjeras. Los autores elaboraron una escala estadísticamente fiable y válida para poder medir  los niveles de ansiedad lingüística. La presente investigación pretende estudiar  la validación y la confiabilidad del instrumento Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety Scale traducido al idioma francés  para su aplicación con estudiantes  franceses de secundaria  así como repetir el análisis factorial de la FLCAS realizado por Aida (1994), Pérez y Martínez (2001).   La adaptación del instrumento, se distribuye, tras el análisis con rotación Varimax, en cuatro factores que explican el 58,78% de la varianza total y un alpha de Cronbach de ,77.


2019 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marc Dewaele ◽  
Cemal Özdemir ◽  
Durmuş Karci ◽  
Sinem Uysal ◽  
Elif Derya Özdemir ◽  
...  

AbstractThe present study focuses on foreign language enjoyment (FLE) and foreign language classroom anxiety (FLCA) of 592 learners of Turkish as a foreign language (FL) in Kazakhstan. Mean levels of FLE and FLCA were found to be similar to previous studies in different settings with different target languages. In contrast with previous literature, a weak positive correlation was found between FLE and FLCA and the gender effect went in the opposite direction, with male participants reporting more FLCA than female participants. Multiple regression analyses revealed that FLE and FLCA were more strongly predicted by learners’ attitude toward Turkish and teacher-related variables than by learner-internal variables, confirming previous research outside Kazakhstan. Attitude toward the FL, teacher’s friendliness, strictness and frequency of use of the FL, attitude toward the teacher, participant’s age and FL exam result explained a total of 25% of variance in FLE. Differing slightly from previous studies, FLCA was found to be only weakly predicted (6% of variance) by some learner-internal variables (FL exam result, attitude toward the FL) as well as teacher-centred variables (friendliness, strictness). The findings suggest that variation in FLE and FLCA among Kazakh learners of Turkish is quite similar to that established in other contexts.


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