Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the latent constructs in the Foreign Language Classroom Anxiety Scale using a research context of Japanese undergraduates who learn English as a foreign language. The study conducted both exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis against two different groups of Japanese undergraduate students. First, exploratory factor analysis was used to extract factors from 33 items of the scale in its application to 149 management major students. Subsequently, confirmatory factor analysis was conducted on the factors from the exploratory factor analysis. Data from 237 English language learners at two universities—155 undergraduates at a foreign study university and 82 at a general university—were applied to test a hypothetical model in relation to the extracted latent constructs. Results of the two factor analyses identified and confirmed two underlying components of the scale: (1) communication apprehension and (2) fear of failing. The model fit statistics illustrated that the two-factor paradigm appropriately fit the data from the second undergraduate group. Implications of the results are discussed.

Highlights

  • Over the past 30 years, the concept of foreign language anxiety (FLA) has received much attention from many scholars and theorists in the domain of foreign language and communication studies (Park 2014)

  • Japanese undergraduate students are most familiar with the grammar-translation approach of learning English as a foreign language (EFL)

  • The results suggest that our two-factor model may be applicable to examination of EFL anxiety of students who learn in various types of universities in Japan

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past 30 years, the concept of foreign language anxiety (FLA) has received much attention from many scholars and theorists in the domain of foreign language and communication studies (Park 2014). Krashen (1985) argued that comprehensible input and a state of the affective filter that allows the input lead to L2 acquisition. The FLA concept is thought to be related to an individual’s affective filter, as introduced by Dulay and Burt (1977) and developed by Krashen (1982), who focused on the process of an individual’s second language (L2) acquisition. This filter is typically activated by a variety of psychological affective variables such as motivation, attitudes, self-confidence, and anxiety (Krashen 1981). It seems obvious that FLA lies within the affective filter when highlighting a learning context of foreign languages

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