Research Article
30 June 2022

The Impact of Virtual Reality on L2 French Learners’ Language Anxiety and Oral Comprehensibility

Publication: CALICO Journal
Volume 39, Number 2

Abstract

Winner of the CALICO Journal Best Article award 2022 Research has noted that virtual reality (VR) environments can lessen language learners’ foreign language anxiety (FLA). However, previous research has relied primarily on participants’ qualitative opinions, leading to a lack of studies empirically assessing how VR impacts anxiety and, consequently, second language (L2) oral production. This pilot study addresses these gaps by exploring how VR influences the self-reported and physiological FLA and oral comprehensibility of 25 L2 French learners. Participants completed four comparable interpersonal consensus building tasks over eight weeks: two in the social VR application, vTime XR™, and two in a traditional classroom. Immediately following each task, participants self-assessed their anxiety. Moreover, a subsample of participants’ self-reported anxiety data was complemented with a physiological indicator of anxiety, salivary cortisol, to evaluate using this biomarker in FLA research. Participants’ speech for all tasks was rated by four native French speakers for comprehensibility. Descriptive statistics are presented. Self-reported anxiety and cortisol data indicated that participants were less anxious in VR and throughout the eight weeks. A positive correlation was found between self-reported and cortisol data, indicating consistency between these two anxiety measures. Finally, raters found participants to be more comprehensible in VR and when they self-reported lower anxiety.

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Information

Published In

Go to CALICO Journal
CALICO Journal
Volume 39Number 22022
Pages: 219 - 238

History

Published online: 30 June 2022

Key Words

  1. Chinese three teachings;
  2. Chinese Buddhism
  3. religious diversity
  4. complementarity
  5. unity
  6. multiple religious belonging
  7. John Hick

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Tricia Thrasher [email protected]
Author
Biography: Tricia Thrasher is a PhD candidate in the department of French and Italian at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her primary research interests include immersive technologies for language learning, foreign language anxiety and oral production, and subjective and objective anxiety measurements.
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

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Tricia Thrasher
CALICO Journal 2022 39:2, 219-238

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