Early-stage french as a foreign language in Taiwan : a case study involving L2 oral proficiency, motivation and social presence in synchronous computer mediated communication (CMC)
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Abstract
This study, adopting a case study approach with a group of beginning-level FFL
(French as a foreign language) learners, investigated the possibility that initial level
foreign language learners may acquire oral skills through synchronous CMC, and
the impacts of synchronous CMC learning on their motivation, as well as their
social presence.
The participants were 12 FFL beginners in a Taiwanese university. Divided into
three groups, they were required to conduct three tasks in three different learning
environments (video/audio, audio and f2f) during an academic semester (18 weeks).
The semester constituted cycles of three-week practices on those tasks. The
contents of the tasks were inter-connected. Before each oral task, all the
participants had to conduct the same task in synchronous text chat.
The data for this study was collected from the participants’ performance in three
oral tests held at the initial, middle and final phases of the study, their online chat
records, interview transcriptions, learning journal, questionnaires completed at the
beginning and the end of the study, and the instructor’s observation journal.
The results suggest that these three CMC learning modes bring only partial benefits
in terms of learners’ oral proficiency development. It is factors generated by the
three learning environments, rather than the environments themselves, that have the
largest impact on the learners’ oral proficiency development, learning motivation
and attitudes towards the target language. However, the differences in the
environments are reflected in particular in the learners’ perception of social
presence.
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