Effects of Language Learning Strategies and Learners’ Motivation on Students’ Learning Achievement
Abstract
This study investigated whether learning strategies had made any impact on learners’ achievement and explored whether learning motivation was correlated with learning strategies. The participants of this study were the students from the EFL (English as a Foreign Language) intermediate level course at a college in Taiwan. The students were given a pretest and a posttest. The mean scores of these tests were compared with a SILL survey (Strategies Inventory for Language Learning) at the end of the investigation. The participants’ course performance was compared with their use of learning strategies. The assumption of the relationship between learning strategies and motivation is that motivated learners have a greater desire to seek out solutions or support from others and employ more strategies to process the new information. The results of this investigation revealed that only the memory strategies had a significant difference in the posttest of Group A on the independent sample t-test analysis.
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PDFDOI: https://doi.org/10.5296/ijele.v3i2.8276
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Copyright (c) 2015 Hao-Yuan Cheng, Nai-Ying Chang
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International Journal of English Language Education E-mail: ijele@macrothink.org Copyright © Macrothink Institute ISSN 2325-0887
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