Book contents
- Second Language Identity
- Second Language Identity
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 On Actors, Architecture, and L2 Advancedness in Higher Education
- Part I Advancedness and the L2 Learner
- Part II Variable Notions of Advancedness
- Part III Assessment, Identity, and Critical Language Awareness As Markers of Advancedness
- 8 Assessing Advancedness in the Age of Identity Construction and Global Citizenship
- 9 A Quantitative Analysis of L2 Identity and Critical Language Awareness
- 10 Imagining Global Citizenship and Intercultural Competence
- 11 Sociocognitive Awareness of L2 Advancedness in Higher Education
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Name Index
- Subject Index
9 - A Quantitative Analysis of L2 Identity and Critical Language Awareness
from Part III - Assessment, Identity, and Critical Language Awareness As Markers of Advancedness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 July 2023
- Second Language Identity
- Second Language Identity
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 On Actors, Architecture, and L2 Advancedness in Higher Education
- Part I Advancedness and the L2 Learner
- Part II Variable Notions of Advancedness
- Part III Assessment, Identity, and Critical Language Awareness As Markers of Advancedness
- 8 Assessing Advancedness in the Age of Identity Construction and Global Citizenship
- 9 A Quantitative Analysis of L2 Identity and Critical Language Awareness
- 10 Imagining Global Citizenship and Intercultural Competence
- 11 Sociocognitive Awareness of L2 Advancedness in Higher Education
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Name Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Following Atkinson’s (2002) proposal for what a sociocognitive approach to instructed second language acquisition (ISLA) should focus on to consider L2 learners not merely as an input receptacle but as members of their social context, this chapter contrasts the levels of critical language awareness (CLA) between L2-Spanish learners enrolled in Tier-I and II courses. It is a first attempt at eliciting data from L2 learners about CLA in the larger context of L2 advancedness. We have seen that some awareness begins to emerge after taking content courses, but our results only show trends. Future studies should continue this line of research in two ways: 1) by gathering multi-site data of current Spanish curricula to gauge what the state of our advanced students is in regard to CLA and general identity as L2 learners and L2 speakers; and 2) by following up the first set of data collection with a redesign of their Spanish programs, marking that as the starting point of a longitudinal study that could chronicle changes in both students’ CLA levels and in the construction of their identities as L2 learners.
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- Second Language IdentityAwareness, Ideology, and Assessment in Higher Education, pp. 186 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023