4.6 Article

The impact of Google Assistant on adolescent EFL learners' willingness to communicate

Journal

INTERACTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 1485-1502

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10494820.2020.1841801

Keywords

Intelligent personal assistant (IPA); willingness to communicate (WTC); Google Assistant; EFL learning; automatic speech recognition (ASR)

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This study investigated the potentials of Google Assistant for developing adolescent EFL learners' WTC and their perceptions of IPAs for EFL learning. The results showed that Google Assistant significantly promoted learners' WTC, enhanced communicative confidence, and reduced speaking anxiety. Participants enjoyed interacting with Google Assistant, feeling less anxious and more motivated to use English for real and meaningful communication.
Willingness to communicate (WTC) is considered to be an important factor contributing to successful foreign language learning. Many studies aim at finding effective tools for enhancing WTC. With the support of AI and Automatic Speech Recognition technology, intelligent personal assistants (IPAs) seem to have potentials in improving foreign language learners' WTC. However, few empirical studies focus on the possible impact of IPAs on learners' WTC. This study was conducted to investigate the potentials of an IPA, Google Assistant, for developing adolescent EFL learners' WTC and their perceptions of IPAs for EFL learning. This study recruited 112 eighth-grade EFL learners who engaged in Google-Assistant-language-learning activities for two weeks. Two WTC questionnaires were administered at the beginning and end of the intervention. The results demonstrated that Google Assistant significantly promoted EFL learners' WTC, enhanced communicative confidence, and reduced speaking anxiety. Analyses of interviews revealed that participants enjoyed playing games with Google Assistant and talking to chatbots, which helped them feel less anxious and motivated to use English for real and meaningful communication. The findings indicated that IPA-based interaction provided a less threatening environment, in which learners displayed higher levels of engagement, motivation, confidence, and, in turn, their WTC in the target language.

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