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The “Weaponization” of Corpus Linguistics: Testing Heller’s Linguistic Claims
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In: Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law (2019)
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An Introduction to Complex Systems: Making Sense of a Changing World
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In: Faculty Books (2019)
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The effects of socio-biographical background, acculturation, and personality on Persian immigrants' swearing behaviour
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Phonological acquisition and development in Arabic-English bilingual children
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Aptitude, experience and second language pronunciation proficiency development in classroom settings: a longitudinal study
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Lexical aspects of comprehensibility and nativeness from the perspective of native-speaking English raters
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Exploring the relationship between productive vocabulary knowledge and second language oral ability
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To what extent does long-term foreign language education help improve spoken second language lexical proficiency?
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Investigating sound and structure in concert: a pupillometry study of relative clause attachment
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The relationship between bi/multilingualism, nativeness, proficiency and multimodal emotion recognition ability
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Translanguaging and embodied teaching and learning: lessons from a multilingual karate club in London
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The relationship between English proficiency and humour appreciation among English L1 users and Chinese L2 users of English
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Multilingualism and trait emotional intelligence: an exploratory investigation
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How unique is the foreign language classroom enjoyment and anxiety of Chinese EFL learners?
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Abstract:
Recent research has shown that Chinese foreign language learners’ classroom emotions stand out from learners in the rest of the world. The present mixed-method study investigated to what extent foreign language enjoyment (FLE) and foreign language classroom anxiety (FLCA) of 564 Chinese undergraduate EFL learners are different from learners outside China. While mean levels of FLE and FLCA were found to differ, most of the patterns between FLE and FLCA and a range of learner-internal and teacher-related variables were comparable to those identified in previous research, except for Chinese students' dislike of unpredictable behaviour by the teacher. Participants reported similar levels of FLE but higher levels of FLCA compared to the international sample in Dewaele and MacIntyre (2014), which could be attributed to the Chinese educational context. Multiple regression analyses revealed that FLE was predicted more strongly by teacher-related variables while FLCA was mostly predicted by learner-internal variables, confirming earlier research outside China. Qualitative analysis of learners’ emotional experiences also revealed that FLE was more likely to have been triggered by the teacher while FLCA was more related to learners themselves. Pedagogical implications of the findings are provided for EFL teaching in Chinese universities.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26479/ https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26479/3/26479.pdf https://doi.org/10.1016/j.system.2019.02.017
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