Introspective Research

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Introspecti ve Research Lulud Oktaviani Nicko Putra W. Novian Zaini

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Transcript of Introspective Research

Page 1: Introspective Research

Introspective Research

Lulud Oktaviani

Nicko Putra W.

Novian Zaini

Page 2: Introspective Research

Definition

• Examination of one’s own conscious thoughts and feelings. (Schultz: 2012)

• The process of observing and reflecting on one’s thought, feelings, motives, reasoning processes, and mental states with a view to determining the ways in which these processes and states determine our behavior. (Nunan, 1992:115)

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Methods

Verbal Reports

• Think-Aloud

• Retrospective

Diary Studies

In general, introspective method is divided into two categories

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Definition of Verbal Report

• Oral records of thoughts, provided by subjects when thinking aloud during or immediately after completing a task.

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Types of Verbal Reports

• Think Aloud• Asking learners to verbalize their thought

processes while they are involved in processing language, typically reading a text or writing an essay

• Retrospective• Learners verbalize their thought processes

immediately after they process the language

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Principles of Verbal Reports

1. Time intervening between mental operations and report is critical and should be minimized as much as possible;

2. Verbalization places additional cognitive demands on mental processing that requires care in order to achieve insightful results;

3. Verbal reports of mental processes should avoid the usual social conventions of talking to someone;

4. There is a lot of information in introspective reports aside from the words themselves. Researchers need to be aware of these parallel signal systems and be prepared to include them in their analyses;

5. Verbal reports of automatic processes are not possible. Such processes include visual and motor processes and low-attention, automatized linguistic processes such as the social chat of native speakers.

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Procedures of Verbal Reports

• Provide students with a practice activity

• Give simple directions

• Be as unobtrusive as possible

• Ask students to report their thought processes at particular points

• Don’t ask leading questions

• Record the session

• Pay attention to students’ nonverbal behavior

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Data Analysis

• Transcribe the data

• Segment the transcript into thought units

• Code each unit

• Use inter-rater reliability when coding the data.

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Diary Studies

• Diary study is an account of a second language experience as recorded in a first-person journal; the diariests may be a language teacher or a language learner.

Main Characteristics:

• they are introspective; the diarist studies his own teaching and learning.

• the diarist can report on affective factors, language learning experience which are normally hidden or largely inaccessible to an external observer

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Procedures In Conducting Diary Studies

• Providing an account of personal language learning or teaching history.

• Recording events, details, and feelings about the current language experience in the diary.

• Revising the journal entries, looking for patterns and significant events.

• Identifying important factors to the language learning or teaching experience are interpreted and discussed int he final diary study.

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Benefits

• Providing information aboutl L2 learners and teacher and their perspectives on the affective and instructional factors thata affect L2 learning and teaching.

• Allowing researchers to see factors identified by teachers and learners

• Being a vehicle for data triangulation.

• The data collection process itself is more accessible in that it is ’low-tech, ‘portable’ and ‘trainable’.