Abstract

Acquiring two languages such as English and Cebuano during migration is an interesting challenge for nine young Filipino-German migrants living in Dumaguete City, Philippines which is dubbed as one of the best places to retire in the world. Attitudes and motivation play a significant part in learning the second language with the consequence of forgetting the mother tongue due to its non-use. The respondents are divided into short -term migrants who migrated less than five years and long-term migrants who moved to Dumaguete for more than five years and beyond. In the motivation and attitude study, only the short-term migrants answered neutral for attitude towards German people and attitude towards Filipino people. The rest of the categories yielded moderately agree answers. Finally, majority of the short-term migrants believed that speakers of other languages perceived them as German speakers while people in the community thought that long-term migrants speak Cebuano, English fluently but actually attrited in their native language.

Highlights

  • Attitude and motivation are principal drivers in acquiring a second language and these two factors in later time help the L1 speakers sustain the slow and meticulous progression of language acquisition

  • Long term migrants on the other hand, preferred Cebuano and the preferred language was English because they stayed in Negros for a long time and had fully acquired those languages

  • Most of the languages spoken by friends of short-term migrants were English and Cebuano while long term migrants had pals who spoke in English, Cebuano as well as Germans

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Summary

Introduction

Attitude and motivation are principal drivers in acquiring a second language and these two factors in later time help the L1 speakers sustain the slow and meticulous progression of language acquisition. The respondents gave a positive outcome to how they associate with Germans in the Philippines and Germans in general as well their attitudes towards Filipinos and learning a foreign language. The over-all results of the respondents’ attitudes towards German people living in the Philippines were neutral for short-term migrants and moderately agree for long-term respondents.

Results
Conclusion

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