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研究生: 陳純鈴
Chen, Chun Ling
論文名稱: 從學生和老師的角度來探討台灣國中英語課室教學中動機策略的應用
The use of motivational strategies in the secondary EFL setting in Taiwan: teacher and student perspectives
指導教授: 黃淑真
Huang, Shu Chen
學位類別: 碩士
Master
系所名稱: 外國語文學院 - 英語教學碩士在職專班
The Master of Arts in English Teaching
論文出版年: 2012
畢業學年度: 100
語文別: 中文
論文頁數: 112
中文關鍵詞: 動機策略英語為第二外語之學習環境教師角色學習者自主性
外文關鍵詞: motivational strategies, EFL setting, teacher's role, learner autonomy
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  • 本研究之目的在探討台灣國中課室中英語教師動機策略應用的情形,此研究調查學生和老師雙方面對於在課堂中動機策略使用頻率的感知,比較其中差異。很少研究同時參考雙方面的意見,本研究透過問卷的方式詢問老師使用動機策略的頻率,也詢問學生對於相同教師策略使用頻率的感受,目的在找出何種動機策略最常被使用,也最常被學生體驗到。另一個目的是要收集學生對於課室內動機策略的觀點,以瞭解在學生的觀點中,哪些策略可以有效提升他們學習興趣。問卷收集樣本共有老師135人,學生216人。另外,研究者還進行了10堂課的課室觀察,期以觀察所得的資料與師生填寫的問卷資料做對照。
    研究結果顯示,學生和老師大致上對使用頻率較高的策略有共識。在48個動機策略當中,老師和學生對各項的排序幾乎相同。前幾名分別是適當的教師行為、辨別出學生的努力、適當地呈現教學任務、提升學習者的自我信心、創造愉悅的教室氣氛等。但是程度上老師表示的和學生體認到的卻大不相同,以T檢定比較學生和教師問卷,發現大部分項目都達顯著性差異,教師表示使用的頻率高,但學生體驗到的頻率卻相對較低。在課室觀察的資料中,發現最常被觀察到教師使用的動機策略為:呈現教學工作、提供回饋、教師行為、提升學習者自主性,和提升與第二語言相關的價值,可能因為這些外顯行為的項目較其他容易被實際地觀察到。
    此外,比較學生對不同策略重要性的看法問卷當中也指出,學生對於動機策略的想法的確和老師報導的使用頻率不相同。學生對重要性前幾項依序為:提升學習者的自主性、創造愉悅的教室氣氛、辨別學生的努力、適當的教師行為,和提升學習者的自信心。特別在提升學習者的自主性這個類別裡,老師和學生的看法就很不一樣。老師們最少使用這個類別的策略,但是學生卻認為這些是最有效於提升他們對學習語言動機的策略。


    The purpose of the present study is to find out the use of motivational strategies in secondary EFL settings in Taiwan. Questionnaires were sent to inquire teachers’ reported use and students’ perception of such use of motivational strategies. Few studies have included questionnaire results from both students and teachers. The present study elicited answers from both parties to find out which motivational strategies were frequently used by teachers and which were perceived by learners in the foreign language classroom. Another purpose is to collect data from students about their opinion on the importance of various motivational strategies used in the classroom. The number of teacher sample is 135, and the number of students is 216. Besides, ten classroom observations were conducted by the researcher in order to complement self-reported questionnaire data.
    The results of this study revealed that students and teachers generally agree on which motivational strategies were frequently used in class. The rank order of teachers and students were almost the same. The top ones, in the order of frequency, were proper teacher behavior, recognizing students’ effort, presenting tasks properly, promoting learners’ self-confidence, and creating a pleasant classroom climate. However, the frequency as reported by teachers and stated by students was very different. The data collected from teachers and students was examined by performing an independent sample t-test, and the result indicated that difference between them was statistically significant. Teachers reported that they frequently used the strategies, but students didn’t experience those strategies as frequently as teachers reported using. In the data collected from classroom observation, the most observable and frequently used strategies were: presenting tasks properly, providing feedback, teacher behavior, promoting learner autonomy, and promoting L2-related values. The fact that these domains appeared to be more prominent in the observation data may probably be associated with the nature of their being more observable.
    In addition, the result from the student questionnaire asking about students’ expectation toward the motivational strategies also indicated that students’ perceived importance of them was different from teachers’ reported frequency of use. The rank-order of the ten clusters of students’ expectation were: promoting learner autonomy, creating a pleasant classroom climate, recognizing students’ effort, proper teacher behavior, and promoting learners’ self-confidence. As to the conceptual domain of “promoting learning autonomy”, it is viewed very differently by teachers and students. Teachers put this one on the last place, but students regarded this domain as the most effective strategy in promoting their motivation toward language learning.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    CHINESE ABSTRACT……………………………………………… …i
    ENGLISH ABSTRACT………………………………………… ………ii
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS………………………………………… ………iii
    TABLE OF CONTENTS……………………………………… ……… iv
    LIST OF TABLES………………………………………………… . vii
    CHAPTER ONE 1
    INTRODUCTION 1
    Background of the Study 3
    Statement of the Problem 4
    Significance of the Study 5
    Research Questions 6
    Organization of the Thesis 7
    CHAPTER TWO 8
    LITERATURE REVIEW 8
    The Definition and Significance of Motivation 9
    The Dynamic Nature of Motivation 9
    The Prominent Motivational Theories 11
    Expectancy-value theory 11
    Self-determination theory 12
    Gardner’s motivational theory 13
    Dörnyei’s L2 Motivation Framework 16
    Motivational Strategies 17
    Studies Concerning Motivational Strategies 19
    CHAPTER THREE 25
    METHODOLOGY 25
    Participants 25
    Questionnaire participants-teachers 25
    Questionnaire participants-students 27
    Observation participants 28
    Instrument 30
    Instrument-questionnaires 30
    Language of Questionnaires/Instruments 32
    Instrument of Classroom Observation -the MOLT Classroom Observation Scheme 32
    Procedure 35
    Pre-Implementation Stage 35
    Implementation Stage 36
    Classroom Observation Procedure 37
    Post-Implementation 39
    Data Analysis 39
    CHAPTER FOUR 42
    RESULTS 42
    The Results 42
    The Results from the Questionnaire 42
    The Means of the Result 43
    Further Breakdown of the Micro-strategies 46
    A Comparison of Teacher and Student Questionnaire on Strategy Use 49
    The Results from Classroom Observation 51
    Students’ Perceived Effectiveness of Motivational Strategies 55
    Summary 57
    CHAPTER FIVE 59
    CONCLUSION 59
    Discussion and Implication of Results from Questionnaire 59
    Discussion and Implication of Results from Observation 60
    Discussion and Implication of Results from Students’ Opinions on Strategy Effectiveness 62
    A Comparison with Previous Studies 63
    Discussion and Implication on Specific Strategies 66
    Promoting learner autonomy 66
    Creating a pleasant classroom climate 67
    Recognizing students’ effort 67
    Proper teacher behavior 68
    Making the learning tasks stimulating 69
    Presenting tasks properly 69
    Increasing learners’ goal-orientedness 70
    Familiarizing learners with L2-related values 71
    Promoting group cohesiveness and group norms 71
    Limitations of the Study 72
    Suggestion for Future Research 73
    REFERENCES 74
    Appendix A: The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-teacher’s version 78
    The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-teacher’s version(Chinese) 82
    Appendix B: The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-student’s version 85
    The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-student’s version(Chinese) 89
    Appendix C: The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-student’s version 92
    The Questionnaire of Motivational Strategies-student’s version(Chinese) 95
    Appendix D: Teacher’s Use of Motivational Strategies: Observation Schedule 99
    Appendix E: Final descriptive statistics of the 10 conceptual domains and the individual constituent strategies 100

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