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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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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Willingness to communicate: Antecedents & consequences

TL;DR: In this paper, a structural equation model examined the hypothesized antecedents to willingness to communicate (WTC) and revealed a good fit to the data and found that trait WTC was related to volunteering for the lab portion of the study and state WTC was associated with initiating a difficult communication task.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ambivalence About Communicating in a Second Language: A Qualitative Study of French Immersion Students’ Willingness to Communicate

TL;DR: The authors used the focused essay technique to investigate ambivalence about communicating among adolescent French immersion students (12-14 years of age) and found substantial similarities between situations in which students are most or least willing to communicate, they can be differentiated by subtle changes in context that affect the authenticity of communication and needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness.
Book ChapterDOI

Communicative Language Teaching: Strategies and Goals

TL;DR: For instance, communicative language teaching (CLT) has become as familiar to discussions about the practice and theory of second and foreign language teaching as the Big Mac is to fast food as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Event Self-Importance, Event Rehearsal, and the Fading Affect Bias in Autobiographical Memory

TL;DR: This paper found that negative affect associated with autobiographical memories fades faster across time than the positive effect associated with such memories (i.e., the fading affect bias, FAB) when events are perceived to be self-important, psychologically open, or self-caused.
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