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Korean ESL learners' pragmatic competence: motivation, amount of contact, and length of residence

This study examined the motivation for learning English, the amount of contact
with English, and length of residence in the target language area that affects Korean
graduate students’ English pragmatic skills studying at Texas A&M University in the
U.S. The study attempted to account for differential pragmatic development among 50
graduate-level Korean students in a target speech community in regards to functions of
their level of motivation, amount of contact with English, as well as length of residence
in the target language community.
Compared to other studies of second-language acquisition (SLA) which have
examined variation among individuals with respect to L2 language learning for quite
some time, there has been relatively little inquiry into how second language learners
acquire L2 pragmatics and which factors affect learners’ acquisition of L2 pragmatics.
Based on the need for more research on the individual difference factors that affect
developmental outcomes in L2 pragmatics, the following research questions were investigated: 1) How are differences in the Korean ESL learners’ degree of motivation
related with their achievement of pragmatic competence? 2) How is the reported amount
of contact with English related with the Korean ESL learners’ pragmatic competence?
3) How are differences in the Korean ESL learners’ length of residence related with their
achievement of pragmatic competence? 4) To what extent does student motivation
relate to the likelihood of pursuing contact with English? The data for the present study
were collected using three types of elicitation instruments: a written background
questionnaire, a discourse completion test, and the mini- Attitude/Motivation Test
Battery. Analyses in the present study proceeded in three stages: descriptive statistics,
correlation coefficients, and multiple regressions.
The findings of the study provided that (a) the levels of motivation examined
demonstrated a positive and moderate relationship to the Korean ESL learners’ L2
pragmatic competence; (b) overall, the amount of L2 contact appeared to have only a
weak and insignificant impact on the participants’ pragmatic competence; (c) despite (b),
one exception was that productive, more interactive type of language contact moderately
influenced the participants’ level of pragmatic competence; (d) the participants’ length
of residence moderately influenced the participants’ level of pragmatic competence; and
(e) the participants’ level of motivation moderately affected their likelihood of pursuing
contact with English.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2487
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsAhn, Soo Jin
ContributorsEslami, Zohreh
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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