the effect of language anxiety on students' oral test performance and attitudes
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“The Effect of Language Anxiety on Students' Oral Test Performance and Attitudes”
ELAINE M. PHILLIPS Department of Modern and Classical Languages Southwestern University, Georgetown
Definition
O Foreign language anxiety: a distinct complex of self-
perceptions, beliefs, feelings, and behaviors related to
classroom learning arising from the uniqueness of the
language learning process (Horwitz; Horwitz & Cope,
1986:126).
O Anxiety is a complex psychological construct consisting of
many variables. Three of these variables are trait anxiety,
state anxiety and situation-specific anxiety (Dornyei, 2005).
Anxiety is the feeling of tension, apprehension, nervousness and worry.
Two types of anxiety can be distinguished:
• TRAIT ANXIETY is the general trait of a person being anxious.
• STATE ANXIETY is anxiety experienced in relation to a particular event. (Phillips, 1999)
Sources of Anxiety
O Speaking the target language in front of peers.O Teacher-centered classroom.O Fear of losing oneself.O Making errors.
(MacIntyre, 1999)
Three Types of Foreign Language Anxiety (Horwitz,1986)
1. Communication apprehension: arising from learner’s
inability to express thoughts and ideas.
2. Fear of negative social evaluation: from a learner’s need
to make a positive social impression on others.
3. Test anxiety: nervousness from academic evaluation.
The Influence of Anxiety
O Severe language learning anxiety causes interlocking
problems.
O Language anxiety is one of the best predictors of foreign
language achievement.
O Research on language anxiety (Philips, 1999; MacIntyre,
1999; Arnold & Brown, 1999; Dornyei, 2005; Woodrow,
2006) has repeatedly shown that it has a negative impact
on L2 learners’ performance, especially during speaking
practices.
Activities that Reduce Language Anxiety Levels
O Conversation gambits (Woodrow, 2006)
“Oh, really?”“Sorry, I don’t get it.”“Say that again, please.”“It’s a beautiful day, eh?”“By the way, …”“Actually, …”“Are you serious?”“No kidding!”
This activity helps learners carry on a more ‘natural’ conversation and help build a sense of community in the classroom by the use of common communicative vocabulary.
Activities that Reduce Language Anxiety Levels
O Cued responseWake up early: “I’m going to wake up early on Saturday”Have dinner out: “I’m not going to have diner out.”
Meet friends: “I’m going to meet my friends”
Watch a movie: “I’m going to watch a movie”
Add more: “I’m not going to work this weekend…”
It helps learners, especially in the early stages of learning, to alleviate the
frustration that occurs when they have to focus both on meaning and on
form.
Activities that Reduce Language Anxiety Levels
O Information Gap
Activity: Find out where the international students come from and in which countries they lived and traveled in.
It helps learners to build a sense of community. The final product is built as a team, rather than individual answers.
Activities that Reduce Language Anxiety Levels
O Improvising dialogues
Activity: In pairs, students receive two lines of a dialogue. They work together
and come up with a possible dialogue. They are allowed some time to
rehearse it before presenting it to the class.
E.g.: I never thought I’d be in a situation like this!
Who said I liked apples?
It helps learners to work cooperatively with peers; gives them an opportunity
to rehearse their speech; allows them to get used to presenting in front of
other students; if an element of comedy is introduced it helps to break the ice.
Activities that Reduce Language Anxiety Levels
O Interviews and surveys
Activity: Find someone who...
a. stayed at home Saturdayb. saw a good film last weekc. went out last nightd. didn’t sleep well last nighte. arrived on time for class today
It helps learners to have a great deal of practice, which lowers L2 oral anxiety.
Helping lower students’ level of anxiety during oral tests
• Provide students’ with ample opportunities for oral practice in class.
• Use the same types of activities students have practiced in class.
• Test students’ in pairs or small groups.
• Role-plays are excellent tools for evaluating communicative competence
• Humorous role-play could be incorporated into the testing situation.
• Teachers need to re-evaluate the evaluation instrument itself: test
communicative competence and not only accuracy.
• Students’ test anxiety may be lower if they are aware that their
communicative competence will be rewarded.
Conclusion
O No teacher can guarantee that a class will be anxiety-
free; however, teachers should be aware of trying to
minimize the anxiety in the classroom to strengthen
language learning efficiency.
O For further research, there is a need for empirical
evidence concerning how effective anxiety reducing
techniques are in second language learning classrooms.
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