4.3 Article

Academic Perseverance in Foreign Language Learning: An Investigation of Language-Specific Grit and Its Conceptual Correlates

Journal

MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 829-857

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/modl.12738

Keywords

academic buoyancy; academic perseverance; conscientiousness; foreign language achievement; industriousness; intended effort; language-specific grit

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The emerging interest in grit, which is positively correlated with foreign language achievement, has shown that intended effort and academic buoyancy also play important roles in FL learning according to recent studies. The study found that grit significantly overlapped with intended effort but was conceptually different from buoyancy and industriousness facet of conscientiousness. Contrary to previous research, the consistency-of-interest facet of grit demonstrated superior predictive and incremental validity with regard to FL achievement.
The emerging interest in grit, referred to as sustained perseverance and passion for reaching long-term goals and conceptualized as a facet of conscientiousness, has shown that language-specific grit is positively linked to foreign language (FL) achievement. Evidence from recent studies on intended effort and academic buoyancy-constructs conceptually related to grit-suggests that they also play a meaningful role in FL learning. Drawing on the framework for noncognitive factors in academic performance and academic perseverance in particular, this study examines grit and its conceptual correlates. A total of 360 FL learners responded to a survey assessing their FL grit, conscientiousness, intended effort, and buoyancy. The results demonstrated that grit largely overlapped with intended effort but was found to be conceptually distinct from buoyancy and the industriousness facet of conscientiousness. Contrary to previous research, the consistency-of-interest facet of grit demonstrated superior predictive and incremental validity with regard to FL achievement compared to the perseverance-of-effort facet. The findings suggest that the role of academic perseverance in FL learning is a fruitful area of investigation that merits further exploration and research.

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