Publication: Changes in thai university students' beliefs about language learning: Relationships between beliefs and learning experiences, and achievements
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Issued Date
2014-01-01
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ISSN
23277920
23278692
23278692
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2-s2.0-84936929955
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
International Journal of Assessment and Evaluation. Vol.20, No.1 (2014), 33-44
Suggested Citation
Takayoshi Fujiwara Changes in thai university students' beliefs about language learning: Relationships between beliefs and learning experiences, and achievements. International Journal of Assessment and Evaluation. Vol.20, No.1 (2014), 33-44. doi:10.18848/2327-7920/CGP/v20i01/48337 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/34944
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Title
Changes in thai university students' beliefs about language learning: Relationships between beliefs and learning experiences, and achievements
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Abstract
© Common Ground, Vasilakis Panagiotis, Nikitakos Nikitas. The purpose of this study was to examine whether Thai university students change their beliefs about language learning when they learn the Japanese language. The study also explored the relationships between the learners' beliefs and their achievements in language learning. The participants (N = 81) were undergraduate students taking the elementary-level Japanese language courses at a Thai university. The participants completed a 35-item questionnaire, Beliefs About Language Learning Inventory (BALLI) developed by Horwitz at two different times with an interval of approximately four months. Through principal component analysis, five underlying dimensions were identified for the beliefs. A significant increase at the dimensional level was uncovered in one of the five identified belief factors, while changes were also observed in other two factors yet they were not statistically significant. Pearson product-moment correlations between the students' belief factor mean scores and variables of Japanese and English achievements were statistically significant in two cases, yet they were generally weak. It appeared that the students' experience of taking elementary-level Japanese language courses was related to changes of certain types of their beliefs about language learning, which implies one facet of the beliefs' nature of being dynamic, variable, and socially constructed.
