Date of Archiving
2022Archive
Radboud Data Repository
Publication type
Dataset
Access level
Restricted access
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Organization
SW OZ DCC PL
Audience(s)
Life sciences
Languages used
English
Key words
foreign language attrition; language use; individual differences; study abroadAbstract
While recent laboratory studies suggest that the use of competing languages is a major driving force in foreign language (FL) attrition, research on ‘real’ attriters has failed to demonstrate such a relationship. We addressed this issue in a large-scale longitudinal study, following German university students throughout a study abroad in Spain and their first six months back in Germany. Monthly, percentage-based frequency of use measures enabled a more fine-grained description of language use than in previous studies. L3 Spanish forgetting rates were indeed predicted by the quantity and quality of Spanish use as well as by L1 German and L2 English fluency. Attrition rates were furthermore influenced by prior Spanish proficiency, but not by motivation to maintain Spanish or non-verbal long-term memory capacity. Overall, this study highlights the importance of language use for FL retention and sheds light on the complex interplay between language use and other determinants of attrition.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Datasets [1948]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30737]