Motivation and Foreign
Language Learning
Damián Francis
In this day and age, many experts in
foreign language teaching say that in order to be successful in learning a
foreign language, three aspects have to be taken into account: the first one
is motivation, the second exposure and the last one is practice. But what is
motivation, and how does it help during the learning process? According to Spratt, Pulverness, and Williams (2008), “motivation is the thoughts and feelings we have which make us
want to do something, continue to want to do it and turn our wishes into action.”
So it means that motivation is what inspires people to do something in order to
accomplish a goal.
There are theories of motivation, some of
the most known are the behavioral, the cognitive, and the constructivist.
According to the behavioral point of view, motivation is the anticipation of a
reward in which individuals are inspired to get positive reinforcement. Brown (2007), says that behaviorists see motivation subordinated to external
influences, such as ”parents, teachers, peers, educational requirements, job
specifications, and so forth
.
The cognitive standpoint says that what
motivates people comes from deep inside them. According to Brown (2007), motivation could come from the need of exploring the unknown, manipulating
something, doing some physical or mental activity, the need for stimulation, the
need for knowledge, or the need for being accepted by others.
And finally, the last theory is the
constructivist point of view. According to it, motivation comes from the
individual’s own conception, but it is also influenced by cultural and social
aspects because the individuals’ decisions are stimulated by the dynamics of
life around them.
People could be intrinsically or
extrinsically motivated. A person is intrinsically motivated when the
inspiration comes from an internal desire, in this case, to learn a language. For
example, it could be for an integrative purpose (the desire to integrate into
the target language culture) or just because the person enjoys learning
languages. An individual is extrinsically motivated when the inspiration is
external, it means when there is an external reward, such as money,
acknowledgment, prizes, grades at school, a promotion at work, etc. for example:
some people get motivated to study English to get a better position in the
company they work for.
I made a questionnaire for my English as foreign language students of level 6 and level 7 in which they had to answer the following question: What motivates you to learn English?
The result was the following: the amount
of students was twenty, sixteen said that their motivation was to be promoted at work or to get a better-paid job,
so it means that the motivator or inspiration was an extrinsic one, we could
say that it is money; two students said they like languages, so these ones are
inspired by an intrinsic motivator, one student said that he frequently travels
to the United States and he needs to speak the language, and one answered that
she is on the process of getting a green card for living in the United
States. These two are examples of
extrinsic motivation, too.
We can conclude that 80% of my students
in this trimester are extrinsically motivated to study English and the motivator is money; 10% is extrinsically motivated by necessity and only 10%
is intrinsically motivated.
Language teachers need to be aware of the
importance of motivation in language learning, so when they plan their lessons
they have to think about activities and strategies that motivate learners and
make them enjoy the learning language process. Educators also have to encourage students
to be autonomous. To do this they need to be good motivators, this is really
good, especially, for those students who need extrinsic motivation.
Teachers can motivate their students by
telling them the importance of learning the target language in the context they
are learning. For example in the Dominican Republic Context, where the
unemployment rate among young population is high, public school english teachers
motivate their students by telling them the wage people get in call centers for
speaking english, only.