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The role of individual and social variables in task performance.

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The role of individual and social variables in task performance. / Dörnyei, Z.; Kormos, Judit.
In: Language Teaching Research, Vol. 4, No. 3, 07.2000, p. 275-300.

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Dörnyei Z, Kormos J. The role of individual and social variables in task performance. Language Teaching Research. 2000 Jul;4(3):275-300. doi: 10.1177/136216880000400305

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Dörnyei, Z. ; Kormos, Judit. / The role of individual and social variables in task performance. In: Language Teaching Research. 2000 ; Vol. 4, No. 3. pp. 275-300.

Bibtex

@article{edd050005c6746498cd60100d8fc46ad,
title = "The role of individual and social variables in task performance.",
abstract = "This paper reports on a data-based study in which we explored - as part of a larger-scale British-Hungarian research project - the effects of a number of affective and social variables on foreign language (L2) learners{\textquoteright} engagement in oral argumentative tasks. The assumption underlying the investigation was that students{\textquoteright} verbal behaviour in oral task situations is partly determined by a number of non-linguistic and non-cognitive factors whose examination may constitute a potentially fruitful extension of existing task-based research paradigms. The independent variables in the study included various aspects of L2 motivation and several factors characterizing the learner groups the participating students were members of (such as group cohesiveness and intermember relations), as well as the learners{\textquoteright} L2 proficiency and {\textquoteleft}willingness to communicate{\textquoteright} in their L1. The dependent variables involved objective measures of the students{\textquoteright} language output in two oral argumentative tasks (one in the learners{\textquoteright} L1, the other in their L2): the quantity of speech and the number of turns produced by the speakers. The results provide insights into the interrelationship of the multiple variables determining the learners{\textquoteright} task engagement, and suggest a multi-level construct whereby some independent variables only come into force when certain conditions have been met.",
author = "Z. D{\"o}rnyei and Judit Kormos",
note = "The final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Language Teaching Research, 4 (3), 2000, {\textcopyright} SAGE Publications Ltd, 2000 by SAGE Publications Ltd at the Language Teaching Research page: http://ltr.sagepub.com/ on SAGE Journals Online: http://online.sagepub.com/",
year = "2000",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1177/136216880000400305",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "275--300",
journal = "Language Teaching Research",
issn = "1477-0954",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The role of individual and social variables in task performance.

AU - Dörnyei, Z.

AU - Kormos, Judit

N1 - The final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Language Teaching Research, 4 (3), 2000, © SAGE Publications Ltd, 2000 by SAGE Publications Ltd at the Language Teaching Research page: http://ltr.sagepub.com/ on SAGE Journals Online: http://online.sagepub.com/

PY - 2000/7

Y1 - 2000/7

N2 - This paper reports on a data-based study in which we explored - as part of a larger-scale British-Hungarian research project - the effects of a number of affective and social variables on foreign language (L2) learners’ engagement in oral argumentative tasks. The assumption underlying the investigation was that students’ verbal behaviour in oral task situations is partly determined by a number of non-linguistic and non-cognitive factors whose examination may constitute a potentially fruitful extension of existing task-based research paradigms. The independent variables in the study included various aspects of L2 motivation and several factors characterizing the learner groups the participating students were members of (such as group cohesiveness and intermember relations), as well as the learners’ L2 proficiency and ‘willingness to communicate’ in their L1. The dependent variables involved objective measures of the students’ language output in two oral argumentative tasks (one in the learners’ L1, the other in their L2): the quantity of speech and the number of turns produced by the speakers. The results provide insights into the interrelationship of the multiple variables determining the learners’ task engagement, and suggest a multi-level construct whereby some independent variables only come into force when certain conditions have been met.

AB - This paper reports on a data-based study in which we explored - as part of a larger-scale British-Hungarian research project - the effects of a number of affective and social variables on foreign language (L2) learners’ engagement in oral argumentative tasks. The assumption underlying the investigation was that students’ verbal behaviour in oral task situations is partly determined by a number of non-linguistic and non-cognitive factors whose examination may constitute a potentially fruitful extension of existing task-based research paradigms. The independent variables in the study included various aspects of L2 motivation and several factors characterizing the learner groups the participating students were members of (such as group cohesiveness and intermember relations), as well as the learners’ L2 proficiency and ‘willingness to communicate’ in their L1. The dependent variables involved objective measures of the students’ language output in two oral argumentative tasks (one in the learners’ L1, the other in their L2): the quantity of speech and the number of turns produced by the speakers. The results provide insights into the interrelationship of the multiple variables determining the learners’ task engagement, and suggest a multi-level construct whereby some independent variables only come into force when certain conditions have been met.

U2 - 10.1177/136216880000400305

DO - 10.1177/136216880000400305

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 275

EP - 300

JO - Language Teaching Research

JF - Language Teaching Research

SN - 1477-0954

IS - 3

ER -