Personality Factors Personality Factors and Second Language Acquisition
Dec 14, 2015
Personality Factors Personality Factors and Second Language Acquisition
Personality Personality CharacterisiticsCharacterisiticsSelf-esteemInhibitionAnxietyRisk-takingMotivation
Risk-TakingRisk-Taking• Learners must be willing to ‘gamble’
a bit, to guess, and try out hunches, and take the risk of being wrong.
• Risk-taking is an important characteristic of successful learning of second language.
• What prevents some learners from taking risks?
• A bad grade in the course• Failing an exam• Reproach from the teacher• A smirk from classmates• Embarrassment imposed by
oneself• Looking ridiculous• A blank look from a listener• Fear of being alienated
Self-esteem is closely related to willingness to take risks.
How?A person with high global self-
esteem is not usually deterred by the possibility of being laughed at or ridiculed if he makes foolish mistakes.
Consequences of Low Risk-Consequences of Low Risk-TakingTaking
What do you think will be the consequences of unwillingness to take risks?
A silent student Fossilization of errors
What Can a Teacher Do?What Can a Teacher Do?• Teachers should create a comforting
climate where students feel more confident
- to experiment with the second language,
- to allow themselves to take risks without feeling embarrassed.
What are some suggestions?Role playingGamesCooperative activities (i.e. group tasks)
Link to Age of LearnerLink to Age of LearnerWe know intuitively that children tend
to learn a second language more easily than adults. One explanation lies in the critical age hypothesis
Another explanation may lie in their willingness to take risks more than adults.
Because they are young, they are less conscious of their ego.
They can be engaged more easily into role-playing, games, and other fun tasks.
MotivationMotivationMany studies and experiments in
human learning have shown that motivation is a key to learning in general.
Motivation can be instrumental (school or career oriented) or integrative (socially or culturally oriented).
It can also be intrinsic or extrinsic.
Instrumental Motivation Integrative Motivation
• Acquiring a language as a means for attaining instrumental goals:
furthering a career (getting a promotion)
reading technical material
getting accepted in a program
translating
Acquiring a language because the person wants to integrate himself into the culture of the second language group and become involved in social interchange with that group.
Claim: Integratively-motivated learners are more successful language learners:
A significant study conducted by Gardner and Lambert (1972) (on language learners in Canada, the US, and the Philippines) reported that learners who are integratively-motivated scored higher on proficiency tests in a foreign language.
Counterclaim: Instrumentally-motivated learners are more successful
Lukmani (1972) reported that Indian students learning English, with instrumental orientation, scored higher on English proficiency tests.
Intrinsic Motivation Extrinsic MotivationThere is no apparent
reward except the activity itself.
Inner feeling of competence and self-realization are the rewards.
A reward is anticipated from outside and beyond the self:
Money prizes Grades Positive feedback Avoiding punishment
Which one is more powerful?Which one is more powerful?
Most of the research points to the direction of intrinsic motivation, especially for long-term retention.
Piaget and others suggest that human beings normally seek out a reasonable challenge (e.g. Krashen’s “i + 1”)
See (Brown, p.173)
Implications for TeachingImplications for TeachingCan we do without extrinsic
motivation?How can we, as teachers, build
intrinsic motivation?o Developing a relationship with
learnerso Building learners’ self-confidence
and autonomyo Personalizing the learning processeso Increasing learners’ goal-orientation