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Journal ArticleDOI

A Dynamic System Approach to Willingness to Communicate: Developing an Idiodynamic Method to Capture Rapidly Changing Affect

Peter D. MacIntyre, +1 more
- 01 May 2011 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 2, pp 149-171
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TLDR
In this article, an idiodynamic methodology for studying rapid changes in willingness to communicate (WTC) is presented, which consists of recording responses from six young adult, female speakers to second language communication tasks, their self-ratings of changes in WTC during those tasks, and reporting of their experience and attributions for fluctuations in WTC.
Abstract
Willingness to communicate (WTC) can be conceptualized as changing from moment to moment, as opportunities for second-language communication arise. In this study we present an idiodynamic methodology for studying rapid changes in WTC. The methodology consists of recording responses from six young adult, female speakers to second-language communication tasks, their self-ratings of changes in WTC during those tasks, and reporting of their experience and attributions for fluctuations in WTC. The role of stable personal characteristics of the speakers is taken into account, as are observations made by an observer during the respondents’ speech. Conceptualizing WTC as a dynamic system allows for an examination of the variation in WTC over time. The results show both consistency and variation in WTC even among a relatively homogeneous sample of speakers. Searching memory for vocabulary was identified as a key process affecting WTC, though it is argued that other factors (including language anxiety) are also operating to affect WTC. After concluding that WTC can be seen as a dynamic system, limitations of the methodology and future research directions are discussed.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding willingness to communicate as embedded in classroom multimodal affordances: Evidence from interdisciplinary perspectives

TL;DR: This article analyzed how second language learners' willingness to communicate (WTC) is responsive to classroom multimodal affordances and found that WTC was subject to the joint influence of individuals' linguistic and affective factors and classroom contextual factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

An examination of the dynamic feature of WTC through dyadic group interaction

TL;DR: This paper examined how the fluctuation of willingness to communicate (WTC) influences language learners' actual language use when the interlocutor set-ups are altered based on their matched or mismatched WTC level.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Exploration of Factors Contributing to Students’ Unwillingness to Communicate in a Foreign Language across Indonesian Secondary Schools

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored factors that contribute to English as a foreign language (EFL) students' unwillingness to communicate across Indonesian secondary schools and found that there was a significant correlation between the unwillingness-to-communicate scale (UCS) and its two factors, i.e., language class risk and language class sociability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Willingness to Communicate and Second Language Speech Fluency: An Investigation of Affective and Cognitive Dynamics.

TL;DR: Les recherches sur la volonte de communiquer en L2 (langue seconde) ont gagne du terrain depuis deux decennies as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Technological impact on language anxiety dynamic

TL;DR: A longitudinal study of 10 weeks in which the mobile learning apps of Rain Classroom was administered to 158 postgraduate students in language class implied that the binary approach of anxiety reduction was not sufficient for the big picture of fluctuations and variations of language anxiety.
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