Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
8.1 Motivation for L2 learning
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
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- Focusing questions
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8.1 Motivation for L2 learning integrative motivation: learning the language in order to take part in the cul- ture of its people instrumental motivation: learning the language for a career goal or other prac- tical reason Keywords ● Why did you learn a second language? Have you succeeded? ● Evaluate these statements: Studying a foreign language is important to my students because they will be able to participate more freely in the activities of other cultural groups. strongly slightly neither agree slightly strongly agree agree nor disagree disagree disagree ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ Studying a foreign language can be important for my students because it will some day be useful in getting a good job. strongly slightly neither agree slightly strongly agree agree nor disagree disagree disagree ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ ❑ Focusing questions One reason for some L2 learners doing better than others is undoubtedly because they are better motivated. The child learning a first language does not have good or bad motivation in any meaningful sense. Language is one means through which all children fulfil their everyday needs, however diverse these may be. One might as well ask what the motivation is for walking or for being a human being. In these terms, the second language is superfluous for many classroom learners, who can already communicate with people and use language for thinking. Their mental and social life has been formed through their first language. The usual meaning of motivation for the teacher is probably the interest that something generates in the students. A particular exercise, a particular topic, a par- ticular song, may interest the students in the class, to the teacher’s delight. Obvious enjoyment by the students is not necessarily a sign that learning is taking place – people probably enjoy eating ice cream more than carrots, but which has the better long-term effects? ‘What interests the students is not necessarily in the students’ interests’ (Peters, 1973). Motivation in this sense is a short-term affair, from moment to moment in the class. Vital as it is to the classroom, SLA research has as yet paid little attention to it, as Crookes and Schmidt (1991) point out. So why do people learn languages? A survey of schools in six countries of the European Union (Bonnet, 2002) found that 94 per cent of children thought that learning English was an advantage for ‘communication abroad’, 86 per cent for ‘facilitation of computer work’ and ‘comprehension of music texts’, down to 64 per cent ‘sounds better in English’, and 51 per cent ‘no expression in national lan- guage’. The inclusion of musical lyrics is interesting, showing the continuing influ- ence of pop music sung in English. Another survey shows the nine most popular reasons across the EU for learning a new language (EuroBarometer, 2006), shown in Figure 8.1; a UK report came up with 700 reasons for studying modern languages (Gallagher-Brett, n.d.). Clearly the reasons why people learn new languages are far wider than for their personal careers. Motivation for L2 learning 137 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% To be able to study in another country To know a language that is widely spoken around the world To meet people from other countries To be able to understand people from other cultures To get a better job in your own country To be able to work in another country For personal satisfaction To use for work including travelling To use on holidays abroad Figure 8.1 Reasons for learning a new language held by Europeans 2005 (Eurobarometer 243) Motivation in L2 learning, however, has mostly been used to refer to long-term stable attitudes in the students’ minds, in particular integrative and instrumental motivation, introduced by Robert Gardner and Wallace Lambert in a series of books and papers (Gardner and Lambert, 1972; Gardner, 1985, 2007). A discussion of the socio-educational model within which these two factors are crucial is pro- vided in Chapter 12. The integrative motivation reflects whether the student ident- ifies with the target culture and people in some sense, or rejects them. The statement in the Focusing questions at the beginning of this section, ‘Studying a foreign language is important to my students because they will be able to partici- pate more freely in the activities of other cultural groups’, was taken from one used by Gardner for testing integrativeness in the AMTB (Attitudes and Motivation Test Battery), which can be found in full online; a short version is also on the website. The more that a student admires the target culture – reads its literature, visits it on holiday, looks for opportunities to practise the language, and so on – the more suc- cessful they will be in the L2 classroom. Instrumental motivation means learning the language for an ulterior motive unrelated to its use by native speakers – to pass an examination, to get a certain kind of job, and so on; the statement in the Focusing questions, ‘Studying a for- eign language can be important for my students because it will some day be use- ful in getting a good job’ also comes from Gardner’s test battery. I learnt Latin at school because a classical language was at the time an entry requirement for uni- versity, and for no other reason. Some people want to learn a second language with an integrative motivation such as ‘I would like to live in the country where it is spoken’, or with an instru- mental one such as ‘For my future career’, or indeed with both, or with other motivations entirely. The relative importance of these varies from one part of the world to another. In Montreal, learners of French tend to be integratively moti- vated, in the Philippines learners of English tend to be instrumentally motivated (Gardner, 1985). I have been using the Gardner questionnaire with L2 learners in different coun- tries, as seen on the website. English schoolchildren learning French, for example, score 77 per cent for integrative motivation and 70 per cent for instrumental; adult English students score 87 per cent for integrative motivation and 66 per cent for instrumental. Whether the country is Belgium, Poland, Singapore or Taiwan, the integrative motive comes out as more important than the instrumental. Surprisingly, the highest scores for integrative motivation are Taiwan with 88 per cent; the lowest Belgium with 74 per cent. In other words, people want to learn a language for getting on with people more than they do for job opportunities. Coleman (1996) too found that students did better with integrative motivation than with instrumental. The distinction between integrative and instrumental motivation has been used as a point of reference by many researchers. Zoltan Dornyei (1990) argues that it is biased towards the Canadian situation where there is a particular balance between the two official languages, English and French. He therefore tested the motivation of learners of English in the European situation of Hungary. He found that an instrumental motivation concerned with future careers was indeed very powerful. Though an integrative motivation was also relevant, it was not, as in Canada, related to actual contact with native groups, but to general attitudes and stereo- types; it became more important as the learners advanced in the language, as was the case in England. In addition, he identified two factors relating to classroom learning. One was the need for achievement – trying to improve yourself in gen- eral, more specifically to pass an examination; the other, attributions about past failures – whatever else the learners blame their failures on. Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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