THE DEVELOPMENT OF SELF-DETERMINATION ACROSS THE LANGUAGE COURSE: TRAJECTORIES OF MOTIVATIONAL CHANGE AND THE DYNAMIC INTERPLAY OF PSYCHOLOGICAL NEEDS, ORIENTATIONS, AND ENGAGEMENT

Research suggests that students put more effort into language learning when they feel that it is a voluntary and self-relevant activity or they enjoy the process of mastering that language (i.e., they have a more self-determined orientation). This orientation is fostered when learners feel autonomou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Studies in second language acquisition 2019-09, Vol.41 (4), p.821-851
Hauptverfasser: Noels, Kimberly A., Lascano, Dayuma I. Vargas, Saumure, Kristie
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creator Noels, Kimberly A.
Lascano, Dayuma I. Vargas
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description Research suggests that students put more effort into language learning when they feel that it is a voluntary and self-relevant activity or they enjoy the process of mastering that language (i.e., they have a more self-determined orientation). This orientation is fostered when learners feel autonomous, competent, and related to others in their learning environment. We followed 162 university students of French across one semester to examine these causal claims longitudinally. Latent growth curve modeling showed that feelings of autonomy, competence, and relatedness and self-determined motivation increased across the semester while engagement declined. Parallel processes growth curve modeling showed that declines in engagement across the semester were attenuated to the extent that self-determined motivation increased. Auto-regressive cross-lagged analysis showed that, contrary to expectation, more engagement as the semester started predicted greater self-determination mid-semester (instead of vice versa), but these relations became reciprocal from mid-semester on. These findings are consistent with a dynamic model of motivation that emphasizes the reciprocal interplay between motivational constructs over the duration of a language course. The implications of these findings for motivation theory and instructional practices are discussed.
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identifier ISSN: 0272-2631
ispartof Studies in second language acquisition, 2019-09, Vol.41 (4), p.821-851
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects Attitude Change
Attribution Theory
Classrooms
College Students
Correlation
French
French as a second language learning
Language
Learner Engagement
Learning
Learning environment
Learning Motivation
Learning Processes
Learning Theories
Linguistics
Longitudinal Studies
Mastery Learning
Motivation
Personal Autonomy
Prediction
Psychological Needs
Research Article
Researchers
Second Language Instruction
Second Language Learning
Self Concept
Self Determination
Student Attitudes
Student Motivation
Teaching Methods
Theory
title THE DEVELOPMENT OF SELF-DETERMINATION ACROSS THE LANGUAGE COURSE: TRAJECTORIES OF MOTIVATIONAL CHANGE AND THE DYNAMIC INTERPLAY OF PSYCHOLOGICAL NEEDS, ORIENTATIONS, AND ENGAGEMENT
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