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Original Article

The Role of Motivation and Learner Variables in L1 and L2 Vocabulary Development in Japanese Heritage Language Speakers in the United States

Toshiko M. Calder

Princeton Community Japanese Language School

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First published: 18 November 2015
Cited by: 4

Yoshiko Mori (PhD, University of Urbana‐Champaign) is Associate Professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.

Toshiko M. Calder (MA, Columbia University) is Trustee of Princeton Community Japanese Language School, Princeton, NJ.

Abstract

This study investigates the role of motivation and learner variables in bilingual vocabulary development among first language (L1) Japanese students attending hoshuukoo (i.e., supplementary academic schools for Japanese‐speaking children) in the United States. One hundred sixteen high school students ages 15–18 from eight hoshuukoo completed Japanese and English vocabulary tests and a student characteristics questionnaire. A principal component analysis identified six motivational factors: preference for Japan, Japanese heritage, no choice, career orientation, American identity, and positive perceptions. The students highly rated career orientation, positive perceptions, and Japanese heritage as reasons to learn both languages. Regression analysis revealed negative effects of American identity and career orientation on L1 Japanese vocabulary knowledge and a positive impact of positive perceptions on second language (L2) English proficiency. The students' college plans were highly related to the motivational factor of preference for Japan. In sum, bilingual competence can be related to motivational factors, and individual differences in bilingual proficiency among young learners of Japanese as a heritage language can be, at least partially, accounted for by socio‐psychological factors.

Number of times cited: 4

  • , Student attitudes and Cantonese proficiency in a Cantonese dual immersion school, Foreign Language Annals, 51, 3, (596-616), (2018).
  • , Sleep‐dependent memory consolidation is related to perceived value of learned material, Journal of Sleep Research, 26, 3, (302-308), (2016).
  • , The Role of Parental Support and Family Variables in L1 and L2 Vocabulary Development of Japanese Heritage Language Students in the United States, Foreign Language Annals, 50, 4, (754-775), (2017).
  • , Heritage language socialization in Chinese American immigrant families: prospective links to children’s heritage language proficiency, International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 10.1080/13670050.2018.1547680, (1-17), (2018).