Abstract

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of listening strategy instruction on second language (L2) listening comprehension ability, listening anxiety, and listening self-efficacy of Iranian English as a foreign language (EFL) learners. To this end, a sample of 52 English major learners of two intact classes from a university in Iran was employed as the participants of the study. The intact groups were randomly assigned to an experimental group and a control group. The experimental group ( N = 27) received the listening strategy instruction based on the framework proposed by Yeldham and Gruba, whereas the participants in the control group ( N = 25) were instructed traditionally without receiving any strategy instruction. To collect the required data, the listening section of the International English Language Testing System (IELTS), Foreign Language Listening Anxiety Scale (FLLAS), and Second Language Listening Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (SLLSQ) were administered to assess the listening comprehension, listening anxiety, and listening self-efficacy of the learners before and after the intervention. The findings of the study indicated that listening strategy instruction significantly improved learners’ listening comprehension ability and reduced learners’ L2 listening anxiety. However, it was revealed that listening strategy intervention failed to significantly improve L2 listening self-efficacy of the learners. In light of the gained results, the implications of this study are discussed with respect to L2 teachers, learners, and curriculum developers.

Highlights

  • Second or foreign language (L2) listening is a crucial skill that provides the L2 learners with the ability to process L2 input and to have interaction with speakers of other languages in their real-life everyday communications (Xu & Huang, 2018)

  • A one-way between-groups analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was run to find out the effects of the two types of listening instructions utilized in the control group and the experimental

  • The results of the ANCOVA indicated that there was no statistically significant difference between the two groups in the mean scores on the posttest of L2 listening self-efficacy; F(1, 49) = 0.358, p = .552, partial η2 = .00. These results show that listening strategy instruction failed to improve Iranian English as a foreign language (EFL) learners’ L2 listening self-efficacy

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Summary

Introduction

Second or foreign language (L2) listening is a crucial skill that provides the L2 learners with the ability to process L2 input and to have interaction with speakers of other languages in their real-life everyday communications (Xu & Huang, 2018). L2 listening is conceptualized as a perceptual process requiring learners to employ auditory phonetics to organize, detect, and overcome lexical segmentation in­adequacies (Field, 2003). It is a complex and demanding process that involves invoking both linguistic knowledge and world knowledge to comprehend the aural texts (Vandergrift & Baker, 2015). As a result of this conceptualization of the skill, numerous researchers have investigated the effectiveness of strategic instruction for L2 listening (Goh, 2017; Graham, 2017; Ngo, 2019; Vandergrift & Tafaghodtari, 2010; Yeldham, 2016). A significant research base on language learning strategies asserts that teaching language learning strategies assists language learners in fostering the effective use of strategies (Chamot, 2005), and that effective strategy use and L2 achievements are positively correlated

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