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022_000094/0000

Extramural English Activities and Individual Learner Differences. A case of Hungary

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Balázs Fajt
Tudományterület
Pedagógia / Pedagogy (12910)
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Collection Károli. Monograph
Tudományos besorolás
monográfia
022_000094/0115
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022_000094/0115

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EXTRAMURAL ENGLISH ACTIVITIES AND INDIVIDUAL LEARNER DIFFERENCES 5.5.8.1 Learners’ willingness to incorporate their EE interests into EFL lessons Results of the regression analysis uncovered four latent dimensions explaining 40% of students’ willingness to include their own EE interests in EFL lessons at school (see Table 26). Four EE activities turned out to be significant predictors of the extent to which learners involve what they have learned from EE activities in EFL lessons at the p<.05 level of significance. Table 26. Results of regression analysis regarding learners’ willingness to include their EE interests in EFL lessons EE activities B SEB ß t EE reading online .31 04 .36* 7.24 EE video games 21 .03 .36* 8.30 EE watching films and series 11 .04 .14* 2.85 EE listening to music 17 .07 .10* 2.27 R? 40 F for change in R? 53.340 Note. B stands for regression coefficient. *p<.05 SE B — standard error associated with the coefficient B — standardized coefficient R? — stands for the proportion of variance in the dependent variable explained by the independent variables A total of four activities determine 40% of how often and how willingly students incorporate L2 elements they have acquired from various EE interests into school-based EFL lessons. Reading online content in English (e.g., news, websites, etc.) as well as playing English-language video games seem to be the most significant factors in determining to what extent participants are willing to include English-language lexical items and expressions learned from EE in EFL lessons. In the case of English-language films and series, as well as music, the standardized coefficient is less than half of that of playing video games, which may be explained by the fact that in the case of music, for instance, songs, especially pop songs, use really simple language (Murphy 1992, Pavia et al. 2019). Asa result, lexical coverage of such songs is also relatively low, i.e., these songs contain basic vocabulary items, so the words students could learn from them are already encountered at earlier stages of the L2 learning process; therefore, at higher levels, songs may be less efficient ways of improving WTC than other EE activities. * 114°

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