factors affect lls

24
GGGE 6533 LANGUAGE LEARNING STRATEGIES INSTRUCTION SITI MARIAM ZAKARIA P79125 PROF. DR. MOHAMED AMIN EMBI

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Page 1: Factors  affect lls

GGGE 6533

LANGUAGE LEARNING

STRATEGIES INSTRUCTION

SITI MARIAM ZAKARIA

P79125

PROF. DR. MOHAMED AMIN EMBI

Page 2: Factors  affect lls

5 FACTORS AFFECTING

LANGUAGE LEARNING

STRATEGIES USE

Page 3: Factors  affect lls

BELIEFS

GENDERLEARNING

STYLES

MOTIVATION

LANGUAGE

PROFICIENCY

FACTORS

AFFECT

LLS

Page 4: Factors  affect lls

MOTIVATION

Page 5: Factors  affect lls

MOTIVATION

Oxford and Nyikos (1989)

motivation proved to be the most powerful

influence on the use of learning strategies

highly motivated students tended to use

more strategies from formal rule-related

strategies, functional practice strategies,

general study strategies and

conversational strategies.

Page 6: Factors  affect lls

.

Kaylani (2006)

male students in Jordan seem to be

more integratively motivated while

females were instrumentally

motivated

Park (2005)

Korean high school students –

extrinsic motivation was stronger

than intrinsic motivation

highly motivated students possessed

a richer repertoire of strategies

Page 7: Factors  affect lls

(Oxford & Nyikos, 1989; Ehrman & Oxford

1990)

Highly motivated learners employ more

strategies frequently than less highly

motivated learners.

Page 8: Factors  affect lls

GENDER

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GENDER

Oxford and Nyikos (1989)

Carried out a study with foreign language

students

Findings : female students displayed

greater use of form rule-related practice

strategies and conversational input

elicitation strategies.

Page 10: Factors  affect lls

Green (1991); Watanabe (1990); Noguchi

(1991); Zoubir, Shaw, & Oxford (1995);

Dreyer & Oxford (1996); Abou Baker El-

Dib (2004); Lu (2007)

Females generally use more strategies

than males

Page 11: Factors  affect lls

LEARNING STYLES

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LEARNING STYLES Cohen (1998); Fan (2003); Oxford (2003)

Learning styles of an individual will help

determine to some extent the strategies

employed in language processing.

Rossi-le (1989)

How a learner uses learning strategies is

related to his/her learning style.

Learners who favor group study are shown

to use social and interactive strategies.

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Ehrman & Oxford (1990)

Learning style has a strong influence on

the way adult language learners use

strategies and how they advance in their

language learning.

Oxford (2003)

Learning styles and learning strategies of

an individual learner can work

cooperatively with a given instructional

methodology.

Page 14: Factors  affect lls

LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY

Page 15: Factors  affect lls

LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY Dreyer & Oxford (1996)

High correlation between language

proficiency and strategy use among

Africans.

Proficient learners used the cognitive

strategy, compensation strategy and

metacognitive strategy.

The use of social strategies was more

common among the less proficient.

Page 16: Factors  affect lls

Park (1997)

A significant linear relationship between

strategy use and proficiency in a Korean

context.

Bremner (1999)

Significant levels of association between

cognitive strategies and proficiency among

proficient learners of a group of

undergraduates in Hong Kong.

Less proficient learners tended to use

more affective strategies.

Page 17: Factors  affect lls

Nambiar (1996)

The beginning, intermediate, and

advanced learners in a Malaysian tertiary

setting used similar strategies but the

manipulation of the strategies were

different.

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BELIEFS

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BELIEFSYang (1999)

Learners’ self-efficacy beliefs about

learning English did influence their use of

functional practice strategies.

Proposes a cyclical relationship between

beliefs and strategy use ( in her study )

Page 20: Factors  affect lls

Hong (2006)

Carried out a study among monolingual

Korean and bilingual Korean-Chinese

university students

Findings: A higher use of learning

strategies was reported since the learners

had stronger beliefs about learning

Page 21: Factors  affect lls

Yu (2007)

Carried out a study among third-year

college students in China

Findings: students had very strong form-

focused beliefs and disagreed with the use

of the mother tongue to learn language(a

significant correlations between beliefs

and strategy use).

Page 22: Factors  affect lls

Mokhtari (2007)

Carried out a study among a group of 166

students learning Persian in three settings

in U.S using the SILL and BALLI

Findings: the stronger the beliefs about

learning, the higher the use of strategies.

Page 23: Factors  affect lls

REFERENCE

• Nambiar, R. (2009). Learning strategy

research-where are we now? The Reading

Matrix, 9(2), 137-144.

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