Essays about: "willingness to communicate"

Showing result 36 - 40 of 61 essays containing the words willingness to communicate.

  1. 36. Not afraid to give it a go and make mistakes : What do teachers perceive as the factors that motivate students to speak English in and outside of the classroom?

    University essay from Umeå universitet/Institutionen för tillämpad utbildningsvetenskap

    Author : Jennifer Gosser Duncan; [2019]
    Keywords : motivation; English; classroom language; willingness to communicate; teacher presence; strategies;

    Abstract : The goal of English language teaching is to encourage students to become proficient and confident users of the target language. Maximal use of the target language by both teachers and students in the classroom and outside it is one way to increase language confidence and fluency, according to Krashen’s acquisition learning theory where students are exposed to the target language and acquire it instead of learn it. READ MORE

  2. 37. Volition is Key : Self-Perceived Willingness to Communicate and Actual Willingness to Communicate among Swedish EFL Learners

    University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för språk (SPR)

    Author : Josef Rudberg; [2019]
    Keywords : Interviews; classroom observations; self-reported Willingness to Communicate; Swedish EFL students; upper secondary education; Willingness to Communicate; WTC.;

    Abstract : It is generally assumed that in order to learn a language, learners need to master reading, writing, listening and speaking. However, merely possessing the skills and abilities to communicate is not sufficient; one must have the will to use the language. READ MORE

  3. 38. Uncovering rural resentment in the global North: A discourse analysis of how ‘Fishing for Leave’express and communicate feelings of discontent

    University essay from Stockholms universitet/Stockholm Resilience Centre

    Author : Conall Ó Duibhir; [2018]
    Keywords : fishing policies; global North; EU fisheries;

    Abstract : Discontent of primary resource users (PRU) towards authorities, governing bodies and policy  regulations, here termed ‘rural resentment’, has been growing in the global North.  Resentment is a hidden emotion, which is not frequently voiced. READ MORE

  4. 39. Förtroende i skogliga affärsrelationer : skogsägarens förtroende för virkesköparen beroende av skogsägarens avstånd till skogsfastigheten

    University essay from SLU/Dept. of Forest Resource Management

    Author : Erika Nylander; [2017]
    Keywords : skoglig kompetens; kommunikation; viljan att kundanpassa; lokal anknytning; trygghet;

    Abstract : Den här studien genomfördes i samarbete med SCA Skog AB eftersom att de upplevde ett behov av att förstå hur skogsägare resonerar kring begreppet förtroende i skogliga affärsrelationer. Konkurrensen bland virkesköpande organisationer om skogsägares virke ökar i takt med industriernas ökade efterfrågan på råvara och i och med urbaniseringen och den skiftande skogsägarstrukturen. READ MORE

  5. 40. Producing and consuming artisan food: a way of preserving our biological heritage? : A phenomenographic study on how biological heritage is understood, described and communicated in the context of artisan food production and consumption

    University essay from Södertörns högskola/Institutionen för naturvetenskap, miljö och teknik

    Author : Chloé Girard; [2017]
    Keywords : biological heritage; local food; artisan food; environmental quality goals; environmental communication; fäbod; Sweden;

    Abstract : In Sweden, the environmental quality goal 13 for A Varied Agricultural Landscape, that combines environment, food production and rurality and aims at keeping the agricultural landscape open, was considered as not achieved in 2016. One of the reasons for this non-achievementis the agricultural intensification and specialisation and in turn the decrease in number of pastures during the 20th century, threating thus habitats, diversity and values resulting from a continuous, traditional use of the land commonly called ‘biological heritage’. READ MORE