are foreign language residences acquisition- rich environments ?

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Are Foreign Language Residences Acquisition-Rich Environments? Presented originally at American Association of Applied Linguistics, 2008 Cary Johnson, Jennifer Bown, Wendy Baker, Laura Catharine Smith, and Rob Martinsen Brigham Young University

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Are Foreign Language Residences Acquisition- Rich Environments ?. Presented originally at American Association of Applied Linguistics, 2008 Cary Johnson, Jennifer Bown, Wendy Baker, Laura Catharine Smith, and Rob Martinsen Brigham Young University. Thank you. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Are Foreign Language Residences Acquisition-Rich Environments?

Presented originally at American Association of Applied Linguistics, 2008

Cary Johnson, Jennifer Bown, Wendy Baker, Laura Catharine Smith, and Rob Martinsen

Brigham Young University

Page 2: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Thank youCenter for Language Studies, BYU

College of Humanities, BYU

Our Research Assistants: Soren Farmer Carrie Gold Jasmin Hammer Alexander Ivanov Taka Yanagita

Page 3: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

What is Acquisition Rich? Not the typical initiation, response, evaluation seen in classrooms

(Donato & Brooks, 2004)

Natural conversation and natural feedback, practical language use; conscious grammar learning is de-emphasized (Horwitz, 1986)

Students have topic control (Ellis, 1992)

Negotiation of meaning (clarification requests, confirmation checks, and self- and other- repetitions) (Ellis, 1992)

Regular and intensive language use, informal environments that involve the learner directly (Krashen, 1981)

Encouragement to communicate and support for students to formulate utterances in L2;supportive non-threatening atmosphere (Horwitz, 1986)

Page 4: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

BackgroundForeign Language

Housing

9 languages

This studyFrenchGermanRussian Japanese

25 apartments

1 NS and 5 learners per apartment

Page 5: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

ParticipantsPaired with class-only

learners,

matched by languagebackground, age, and gender

All college students ages18-26

Total N=77 39 women 38 men

Page 6: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Participants – Starting level

N Sup. Adv. Int. Novice

French 27 0 17 10 0 19 f8 m

German 27 0 12 14 1 12 f16 m

Russian 6 1 5 0 0 6m

Japanese 17 0 3 5 9 8f9m

Page 7: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Data Sources

1. Language measuresi.e. OPI, Pre & Post

2. Language Logs

3. Language Task/Conidence Survey

4. Video & Interviews

Page 8: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Example language log of non-FLH student

Page 9: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

1. Intensive Language use

Three analyses:

• Number of minutes per day spoken in target language

• Percent of language use that is productive (vs. receptive)

• Percent of language use not devoted to class work

Page 10: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Number of minutes per day in target language

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

FLH non-FLH

242 (4 hrs)

91 (1 ½ hrs)

2 ½ hours more per day!!!

Page 11: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Number of minutes per day in target language by lang.

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

French German Russian Japanese

•FLH

•Non-FLH

Page 12: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Percent of productive language useShaded portions represent tasks considered high in productive language use

Page 13: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Percent of productive language use

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

FLH non-FLH

41%

31%

Page 14: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Percent of productive language use by language

0

0.25

0.5

0.75

1

French German Russian Japanese

•FLH

•Non-FLH

Page 15: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Percent of language use not devoted to class work

0

0.25

0.5

0.75

1

FLH non-FLH

.78

.46

Page 16: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Percent of language use not devoted to class work

•FLH

•Non-FLH

Page 17: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Language Task Survey

Page 18: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Frequency of Tasks by level

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

5

FLH NonFLH

NoviceIntermediateAdvancedSuperior

Very often

Sometimes

Never

Page 19: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Comfort with functions at various proficiency levels

Very Comfortable

Neutral

Very Uncomfortable

Page 20: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

French FLH

French Class

German FLH

German Class

JapaneseFLH

Japanese Class

Ave. Pre- OPI 6 5.7 6 6.2 4.2 5

Ave.Post- OPI

6.5 6.2 6.4 6.13 4.8 5.33

Ave. Gains .75 .5 .4 .13 .6 .33

OPI Pre-Post, Gains4 = Int. Low, 6 = Int. High

Page 21: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Statistically Speaking,Who improved more, classroom or FLH?

FLH students in German, Japanese and French made greater gains on the OPI than Class only students.

significant effect of group (FLH vs. CO) (F(1,43) = 4.69, p < .05) and L2 (F(3,43) = 4.97, p < .05) L2 by group interaction (F (3,1) = 7.439, p <. 05)

For Russian, FLH and CO students were the same.(Small sample, hard to analyze)

Page 22: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Do certain tasks/traitshelp more?

Factor r squared

F statistic P value

Going to church in L2

.42 8.71 .01

Explaining a concept

.18 8.36 .005

Confidence in performing tasks

.14 11.65 .001

Eating Lunch in L2

.09 14.80 .0001

Total .86

Page 23: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Summary of Results Students in FLH…….

Spoke significantly more

Improved more in Speaking skills

Felt more confident with a variety of language tasks.

Living in FLH and taking classes provides advantage over just taking classes.

Further research:

Benefits can vary by Language. Certain tasks help more Why????

Page 24: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

FLH vs. Study abroadShort-term study abroad is growing rapidly

(Open Doors, 2007)

Comparison of three programs

Guadalajara (Spring), Service Learning Madrid (Spring), “Traditional”

FLH i.e. Span house (Spring), On-campus

Compared language use,

Used language logs

Compared language gains

Used native speaker ratings

Preliminary results……..

Page 25: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Language Use Overall speaking: The FLH group had significantly less overall

time speaking than Mexico and Spain study abroad.

No significant difference between Spain study abroad and Mexico.

Productive: No significant difference between three groups used “productive” use i.e., outside of class time, talking to people

Receptive: Spain group = most receptive language use. (i.e., in class and listening to native speakers), then Mexico, then FLH. Significant difference between the FLH and Spanish groups only.

Ratio: Spain group = largest ratio of time spent using the language related to class time.Mexico and FLH = same amount of time in class.

Class: Controlling for time in class, no difference between amount of Spanish used by the three groups!

Students in Spanish house use language as much as in study abroad—Amazing!!!

Page 26: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Qualitative Data:Intensive language useInterviewer: What has helped you

improve your language the most?

Participant: Constant usage of language. Because I use it every day, 5-6 hours, it really helps.

Page 27: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

1. Intensive language useDinner conversations reveal few

advanced or superior level functions

Advanced and superior level topics were addressed but stayed at sentence (intermediate) level (e.g., like the classroom discussions reseached in Donato & Brooks, 2004).

Page 28: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

3. OwnershipRecorded dinner conversations

Nomination of topics Wide range of topics,

selected by all residents Investment in topic

Dropped topics

Interviews Motivation, goals “Being there” Investment in topic

Sample Topics

• Politics

Tests

Plans for weekend

Daily happenings

Food

Dating

Jazz

Religion

Comparison among cultures Healthcare Justice

Page 29: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

3. OwnershipMotivation and goals

To become fluentTo build vocabularyTo build confidence

Page 30: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

3. Ownership“Being there”

“It’s harder when the most advanced speakers go to the library. It’s hard because it leaves us beginners at home and sometimes we switch into English because we don’t know how to say it in Japanese.”

“It’s pretty much just eat and go.” (Russian house)

“We get ready for dinner and then have dinner. Then a bunch of the boys play foosball and some of the girls too.” (French House)

“Dinner is thirty minutes to an hour, usually closer to an hour.” (French House)

Page 31: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

3. OwnershipInvestment in topic

It’s better for me to talk about something that I’m interested in because I have more to say. It’s hard if I don’t know very much about the topic, but it’s good for me to do it.

A lot of people like to talk about politics, but I’m not very political.

Page 32: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

4. CommunitySupportive environment

“[The French House]” is probably my favorite place. Everyone is really open. I can be myself. I don’t have any inhibitions. It’s great because I don’t have to worry.”

“Everyone is very accepting. It’s nice to know that I can make a mistake and learn from it, and we all help each other.” (French House)

“It’s a comfortable environment, you can speak without being judged. I don’t mind being corrected by friends in FLH, in class I don’t like to get corrected because I don’t know them.” (French House)

“In the FLH I don’t feel the need to be perfect and my confidence has improved.”

Page 33: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

4. CommunityNon-supportive environment

Russian house: “I’ve been having fun correcting Calvin’s errors. He’s pretty good at taking it, too. New person, new errors to correct, yeah.” (Nigel)

Russian house: “We don’t not get along, but we don’t get along.”

Page 34: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

4. Community

Common goals“We’re all here to learn the language.

We have to keep in mind that we are here to learn French. We have more motivation [than students on study abroad].”

“I spoke more English in study abroad than I wanted to because of the group. In FLH everyone is committed to speaking the language.” (French House)

Page 35: Are Foreign  Language Residences  Acquisition- Rich Environments ?

Conclusion: Acquisition Rich

Our perspective

1. Intensive language use

2. Negotiation of meaning/Scaffolding

3. Ownership and Investment

4. Community

Students’ Perspective

1. Similar goals for learners

2. Supportive environment

3. Vocabulary help

4. Lots of chances to talk

5. Lots of activities together