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Effects of Varying Lengths of Study‐Abroad Experiences on Japanese EFL Students' L2 Writing Ability and Motivation: A Longitudinal Study
133
Citations
23
References
2011
Year
Second Language LearningSecond Language WritingL2 WritingMultilingualismLanguage DevelopmentLanguage EducationEducationWriting AssessmentWriting PedagogyLanguage TeachingSecond Language AcquisitionForeign Language WritingLanguage AcquisitionMultilingual WritingLanguage StudiesJapanese StudentsWriting InstructionSecond Language EducationMotivationWriting StudiesForeign Language LearningJapanese Efl StudentsEnglish WritingL2 Writing AbilitySecond Language StudiesForeign Language Acquisition
The present study investigated the effects of varying lengths of overseas experiences on 37 Japanese students' English writing ability and motivation over 3.5 years. The students were observed at the beginning of their first year and in the middle of their second, third, and fourth years at their university. During the 3.5‐year observation period, 28 of the 37 students spent 1.5 to 11 months in English‐speaking countries. The results revealed that (1) students' second language (L2) writing ability did not change in a linear way; (2) over the 3.5 years, students who spent some time abroad significantly improved their L2 writing ability whereas those who stayed in Japan did not; (3) many of those students who went abroad formed L2‐related imagined communities that possibly motivated them to improve their L2 writing ability; (4) those students who spent more than 4 months abroad improved their L2 writing ability significantly more than the other students; and (5) only those students who spent more than 8 months abroad became intrinsically motivated and voluntarily practiced to improve their L2 writing.
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