Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers

This study investigates the relationship between nonnative English speaker (NNES) proficiency level and native English speaker (NES) level of comfort interacting with NNES. The purpose of this study was to discover at what proficiency level NESs feel comfortable interacting with NNES. This study als...

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Main Author: Roberts, Alison Divett
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2013
Subjects:
NES
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3683
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4682&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-46822019-05-16T03:28:15Z Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers Roberts, Alison Divett This study investigates the relationship between nonnative English speaker (NNES) proficiency level and native English speaker (NES) level of comfort interacting with NNES. The purpose of this study was to discover at what proficiency level NESs feel comfortable interacting with NNES. This study also looked at how communicative task and NES demographic variables affected the proficiency expectations NNESs have for NESs. Participants included 120 NESs and 7 NNESs. The NESs listened to sound clips from the 7 NNESs and rated how comfortable they would feel (on a scale of 0-10, 10 indicating very comfortable) interacting with the speaker in a variety of communication tasks. Listeners rated intermediate and advanced level speakers significantly higher than the novice speakers. Additionally, there was not a significant difference between mean ratings for the intermediate and advanced speakers. Communication task was revealed as having a significant main effect on task. Listeners rated that they would feel least comfortable communicating with the speakers over the phone while discussing a customer service issue. They also indicated that they would feel least comfortable interacting with the speakers if they were their boss. Listener demographic variables did not have a significant main effect on overall ratings, but were significant for some tasks when task was analyzed individually. Specifically, age and frequency of interaction with NNES had an effect on some tasks; however the reliability of this result is affected by sample size. These results suggest a threshold relationship between NES comfort ratings and speaker proficiency level. Additionally, the data suggests that task may be more important than proficiency level in some interactions. A larger sample is needed to better understand the role NES demographic variables may play in level of comfort during NES and NNES interaction. 2013-07-02T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3683 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4682&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive immigrants English proficiency interaction proficiency judgments proficiency level NES NNES native nonnative speaker communication nonnative speech Linguistics
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic immigrants
English proficiency
interaction
proficiency judgments
proficiency level
NES
NNES
native nonnative speaker communication
nonnative speech
Linguistics
spellingShingle immigrants
English proficiency
interaction
proficiency judgments
proficiency level
NES
NNES
native nonnative speaker communication
nonnative speech
Linguistics
Roberts, Alison Divett
Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
description This study investigates the relationship between nonnative English speaker (NNES) proficiency level and native English speaker (NES) level of comfort interacting with NNES. The purpose of this study was to discover at what proficiency level NESs feel comfortable interacting with NNES. This study also looked at how communicative task and NES demographic variables affected the proficiency expectations NNESs have for NESs. Participants included 120 NESs and 7 NNESs. The NESs listened to sound clips from the 7 NNESs and rated how comfortable they would feel (on a scale of 0-10, 10 indicating very comfortable) interacting with the speaker in a variety of communication tasks. Listeners rated intermediate and advanced level speakers significantly higher than the novice speakers. Additionally, there was not a significant difference between mean ratings for the intermediate and advanced speakers. Communication task was revealed as having a significant main effect on task. Listeners rated that they would feel least comfortable communicating with the speakers over the phone while discussing a customer service issue. They also indicated that they would feel least comfortable interacting with the speakers if they were their boss. Listener demographic variables did not have a significant main effect on overall ratings, but were significant for some tasks when task was analyzed individually. Specifically, age and frequency of interaction with NNES had an effect on some tasks; however the reliability of this result is affected by sample size. These results suggest a threshold relationship between NES comfort ratings and speaker proficiency level. Additionally, the data suggests that task may be more important than proficiency level in some interactions. A larger sample is needed to better understand the role NES demographic variables may play in level of comfort during NES and NNES interaction.
author Roberts, Alison Divett
author_facet Roberts, Alison Divett
author_sort Roberts, Alison Divett
title Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
title_short Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
title_full Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
title_fullStr Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of English Proficiency Levels: The Unspoken Expectations of Native English Speakers
title_sort perceptions of english proficiency levels: the unspoken expectations of native english speakers
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2013
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3683
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4682&context=etd
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