Title of article
Willingness to Communicate, Learner Subjectivity, Anxiety, and EFL Learners' Pragmatic Competence
Author/Authors
Hosseinpur, Rasoul Mohammad University of Qom, Qom , Bagheri Nevisi, Reza University of Qom, Qom
Pages
20
From page
319
To page
338
Abstract
Individual learner differences play an integral role in second language acquisition and interested researchers and practitioners cannot get a full appreciation of second language learning if they ignore these significant variables. This study investigated how willingness to communicate (WTC), learner subjectivity, and anxiety in learning the L2 correlate with Iranian students’ English pragmatic knowledge. To this end, a total of 140 participants received instruction on request strategy types and their internal and external modification devices for seven weeks through consciousness-raising tasks. The data were obtained through WTC questionnaire, learner subjectivity questionnaire, foreign language classroom anxiety scale, and discourse completion test. The findings indicated that WTC and learner subjectivity correlated positively with the participants’ L2 pragmatic competence. However, no relationship was observed between the learners’ anxiety and their pragmatic achievement. The results suggest that some personal characteristics such as WTC and learner subjectivity are significant contributors to success in acquiring L2 pragmatic knowledge.
Keywords
Willingness to communicate , learner subjectivity , anxiety , request , pragmatic competence
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year
2017
Record number
2443319
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