Author:
MacIntyre Peter D.,Baker Susan C.,Clément Richard,Conrod Sarah
Abstract
Willingness to communicate (WTC) has been defined as the intention to initiate
communication, given a choice. It was hypothesized that orientations toward language learning as
well as social support would influence students' WTC in a second language. Grade 9
students of L2 French immersion, living in a relatively unilingual Anglophone community,
participated in the study. WTC was measured in each of four skill areas: speaking, writing,
reading, and comprehension. Five orientations or reasons for studying an L2 were examined:
travel, job related, friendship with Francophones, personal knowledge, and school achievement.
Results showed that endorsement of all five orientations for language learning was positively
correlated with WTC both inside and outside the classroom. Results also showed that social
support, particularly from friends, was associated with higher levels of WTC outside the
classroom but played less of a role inside the classroom. The support of friends was also
associated with higher orientations for travel and for friendship with Francophones. Results are
discussed in terms of an emerging situated model.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education
Cited by
309 articles.
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