Motivation, Self‐confidence, and Group Cohesion in the Foreign Language Classroom
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Language Learning
- Vol. 44 (3) , 417-448
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-1770.1994.tb01113.x
Abstract
Defining the motivational basis of second and foreign language acquisition has been at the center of much research and controversy for many years. The present study applied social psychological constructs to the acquisition of English in the unicultural Hungarian setting. A total of 301 Grade 11 students from the region of Budapest answered a questionnaire assessing their attitude, anxiety, and motivation toward learning English, as well as their perception of classroom atmosphere and cohesion. In addition, their teachers rated each of the students on proficiency and a number of classroom behaviors and evaluated the relative cohesion of each class group. Factor and correlational analyses of the results revealed that xenophilic (M=4.22on a 1–6 scale), sociocultural (M=3.96), instrumental (M=3.78), and media‐use reasons (M=3.79) were most strongly endorsed by the students whereas an identification orientation (M=1.8l)was rejected. Factor analysis of the attitude, anxiety, and motivation scales confirmed the existence of attitude‐based (integrative motive) and self‐confidence motivational subprocesses and revealed the presence of a relatively independent class‐ room based subprocess, characterized by classroom cohesion and evaluation. Correlational analyses of these clusters further revealed that, while all subprocesses were associated with achievement, self‐confidenceand anxiety showed no relationship to classroom atmosphere. We discuss these findings in the context of current theories of second and foreign language acquisition and with reference to their applied implications.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- The sociocultural dimension of TEFL education: The Omani fileJournal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1992
- The Dynamics of the Language LessonTESOL Quarterly, 1992
- The Measurement of Cohesion and its Relationship to Dimensions of Self-Disclosure in Classroom SettingsSmall Group Behavior, 1989
- The Relationship Between Anxiety and Foreign Language Oral Proficiency RatingsForeign Language Annals, 1986
- Preliminary Evidence for the Reliability and Validity of a Foreign Language Anxiety ScaleTESOL Quarterly, 1986
- Ethnolinguistic vitality, self‐confidence and second language proficiency: An investigation1Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1986
- Social and individual factors in second language acquisition.Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement, 1980
- INTELLIGENCE AND LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY AS SOURCES OF VARIANCE IN SELF‐REPORTED AFFECTIVE VARIABLES1Language Learning, 1978
- Motivational variables in second language acquisition: A study of Francophones learning English.Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement, 1977
- The Scree Test For The Number Of FactorsMultivariate Behavioral Research, 1966