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JUNKO UENO (UNION COLLEGE)NYS TESOL 35TH ANNUAL APPLIED LINGUISTICS
WINTER CONFERENCE MARCH 1ST,2014
ESL Learners’ Autonomous Development of Communication Strategies Through Conversation
Exchange
Purpose of this study
To examine the learning process of ESL learners through the conversation exchange
How the conversation exchange contributes to their autonomy
To explore a possible way to help learners get engaged in a more active and independent learning
Beliefs of natural language acquisition abroad
Learners’ beliefs in general – an extended time abroad is a necessity for successful language learning (Ryan & Mercer, 2011).
Spending time in a country of the target language -> the ultimate, autonomous, independent learning experience (Amuzie & Winke, 2009; Malcome, 2011).
Attributing agency to the learning environment (i.e. being abroad) may demotivate and dispower learners (Ryan & Mercer, 2011).
Natural language acquisition abroad
Study abroad program’s positive impact on students’ language development (Reynolds-Case, 2013; Yager, 1998)
The quality of interaction with the native speakers -> within chance encounters (Allen, 2010; Kinglinger, 2008)
The key of success in an immersion setting -> interacting with native speakers
Conversation exchange project
ESL participants – 3 native speakers of Japanese
Conversation exchange (Japanese – English) based on short readings over the period of ten weeks
A weekly meeting with a partner (30 minutes to an hour) with a submission of a weekly reflection journal (1 page long)
An exit interview
Interview Questions
How have you been studying English besides this conversation exchange?
In your opinion, what are the overall gains from the conversation exchange?
How did the conversation exchange session help you in terms of your nervousness about interacting with native speakers?
How do you think the conversation exchange has changed your self-confidence in using the language?
How has this experience affected you with regard to your engagement with native speakers outside of this conversation exchange?
Have you noticed any change in terms of your speaking/listening skills and your use of speaking/listening strategies over the course of the conversation exchange sessions?
What suggestions do you have regarding how to improve this conversation exchange project in the future?
ESL participants’ backgrounds
Spouses of Japanese engineers Temporary stay in the U.S. (6 months to two
years)Children go to an American school.Receiving some ESL instruction that mainly
focused on grammarParticipant A – ESL class (once a week) +
informal conversation class (once a week)Participant B – ESL tutorial (once a week)Participant C - ESL class (three times a week)
+ informal conversation class (once a week)
Findings and discussion (1)
Overall gains from the projectAn opportunity to speak with a native speaker
(all)Having an ‘imperfect’ partner (participant A)Increased motivation towards reading and
speaking (participant C)Confidence/nervousnessNervousness decreased slightly (all)More confident (participant A), no change in
confidence (participants B and C)More confidence and less anxiety -> a possible
foundation on building learner autonomy
Findings and discussion (2)
Finding communication strategies they want to continue using beyond this conversation exchange
Requesting to repeat (all)Stopping translating from Japanese to English
(participants A and C)The use of shorter sentences (participant A)Rephrasing/ circumlocution (all)Guessing the meaning by connecting the words they
understood (participants B and C)Focusing on key words in listening (participants B and
C)Autonomous process of developing their own strategiesEnhanced metacognition -> stand back and assess
their learning and how they go about it (Ridley, 1997)
Conclusion and pedagogical implications
The importance of an environment where learners need to be independent
Creating opportunities for the learners to experiment with the target language and to assess themselves (Ridley, 2003)
Learner collaboration may also be helpful to certain students – a need to consider cultural variation in the concept of autonomy (MacIntyre et al, 2009)
Learner anxiety may be a factor that hinders student autonomous learning.