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Journal ArticleDOI

Motivation and Vision: An Analysis of Future L2 Self Images, Sensory Styles, and Imagery Capacity Across Two Target Languages

Zoltán Dörnyei, +1 more
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 63, Iss: 3, pp 437-462
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TLDR
This article investigated whether learner characteristics are related to sensory and imagery aspects with indices of the strength of the learners' future L2 self-guides (ideal and ought-to L2 selves) and how these variables are linked to learning achievement in two target languages, English and Mandarin, assessed both by self-report and objective measures.
Abstract
Recent theorizing on second language (L2) motivation has proposed viewing motivation as a function of the language learners’ vision of their desired future language selves. This would suggest that the intensity of motivation is partly dependent on the learners’ capability to generate mental imagery. In order to test this hypothesis, this study investigates whether learner characteristics are related to sensory and imagery aspects with indices of the strength of the learners’ future L2 self-guides (ideal and ought-to L2 selves) and how these variables are linked to learning achievement in two target languages, English and Mandarin, assessed both by self-report and objective measures. One hundred seventy-two Year 8 Chinese students (ages 13–15) completed a questionnaire survey, and the results reveal several significant associations between the future self-guides and intended effort and actual grades, including a consistently positive relationship between the ideal self and the criterion measures. The findings also confirm the multisensory dimension of future self-guides, suggesting the importance of a broad imagery capacity (including both visual and auditory components) in the development of individuals’ future self-identities. Finally, the ideal-self images associated with different languages were shown to form distinct L2-specific visions, which has various implications for future research with regard to the potential positive or negative interaction of these self images.

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Citations
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L2 motivation research 2005–2014: Understanding a publication surge and a changing landscape

TL;DR: The authors examined the origins and nature of this extraordinary surge by reviewing a large dataset of journal articles and book chapters published between 2005 and 2014 in terms of the broad quantitative patterns they display with respect to theoretical and research methodological trends.
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Language Learning Motivation in China: Results of a Large-Scale Stratified Survey

TL;DR: The authors report on the findings of a large-scale cross-sectional survey of the motivational disposition of English language learners in secondary schools and universities in China and present a balanced overview of the general level of L2 motivation in China.
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The motivational dimension of language teaching

TL;DR: Motivation is recognized as a vital component in successful second language learning, and has been the subject of intensive research in recent decades as mentioned in this paper, focusing on a growing branch of this research effort, that examines the motivational effects of language teaching.

Motivation, Language Attitudes, and Globalisation: A Hungarian Perspective

TL;DR: Dornyei et al. as discussed by the authors presented the results of a large survey on motivation in second language learning from over 13,000 Hungarian foreign language learners collected in three successive stages during 1993, 1999, and 2004.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Motivational Foundation of Learning Languages Other Than Global English: Theoretical Issues and Research Directions

TL;DR: The theoretical paradigms of second language learning motivation developed over the past 25 years have been largely based on the study of English as a target language, which raises the question as to whether they are equally applicable to the understanding of the motivation to learn languages other than English as mentioned in this paper.
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