2024 : 11 : 21
Hossein Bozorgian

Hossein Bozorgian

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
HIndex: 0/00
Faculty: Department of literature
Address: English Language Department, Humanity and Social science college, University of Mazandaran, Babolsar, Iran
Phone: 35302677

Research

Title
EFL Listening Log: A Conceptual Replication of Kemp's (2010) Study on Motivating Autonomous Learning
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Listening Log, Replication of Kemp's (2010) Study on Motivating Autonomous Learning
Year
2024
Journal International Journal of Language Teaching Research
DOI
Researchers Hossein Bozorgian ، Meysam Mohammadpour ، Raheleh Qara

Abstract

We conceptually replicated Kemp (2010), who investigated the effect of keeping a listening log, a journal or learner diary, on ESL students' motivation toward autonomous learning. Her research suggested that keeping a listening log can aid ESL listeners to self-monitor their performance and reflect on their listening process independently. Besides, it was found that it would raise their metacognitive awareness of the listening process and motivate them toward autonomous listening. Her study deserves replication due to its theoretical motivation, which is the explicit teaching of a group of listening skills and strategies and the success of the listening skills module designed for study-abroad ESL students. However, almost no previous studies replicated the related research with a phenomenological perspective to examine its robustness and transferability, particularly in an EFL context. Thus, our conceptual replication used Kemp's (2010) materials and procedures to highlight the possible effects of keeping a listening log on EFL learners' motivation to become autonomous listeners in an EFL context. To serve this purpose, 30 freshmen Iranian TEFL students participated in this study. The data were collected through students' listening logs in eight sessions. Results suggested that keeping a listening log can motivate and encourage EFL learners to engage with and reflect on their listening experiences in potential learning situations, thus assisting them with becoming good listeners in real-life situations. Further discussions and pedagogical implications are provided in the paper.