Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)

Emotional attachment (EA) to the community's language reshape speakers' identities and aids in maintaining that language language in most immigrant societies. Language also serves the social purpose of identifying identity characteristics and significantly impacts social identity developme...

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Main Authors: Qian, Long, Boon Sim, Ng, Ling Yann, Wong, Abdul Halim, Hazlina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universiti Putra Malaysia 2024
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/1/116378.pdf
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author Qian, Long
Boon Sim, Ng
Ling Yann, Wong
Abdul Halim, Hazlina
author_facet Qian, Long
Boon Sim, Ng
Ling Yann, Wong
Abdul Halim, Hazlina
author_sort Qian, Long
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Emotional attachment (EA) to the community's language reshape speakers' identities and aids in maintaining that language language in most immigrant societies. Language also serves the social purpose of identifying identity characteristics and significantly impacts social identity development. However, more research is still needed on how Chinese Heritage Language Learners (CHLLs) form their identities, particularly when examining the relationship between this identity construction and language learning (Zhou, 2016). Therefore, this study uses a quantitative approach to explore the correlations between EA and CHLLs' motivation and and attitudes with Malaysian CHLLs' Chinese Language Proficiency (CLP) in relation to EA, motivations and attitudes. It also draws on the Chinese Identity Theory (Wang, 1985) and Gardner and Lambert's (1972) psychosocial model. The study found that participants in Malaysian public and private schools showed high CLP in listening, speaking and reading (over 80%), relatively low scores in writing (approximately 77%) and with positive attitudes toward learning Chinese, high integrative motivation, and low CHL classroom anxiety; the distinction is that, while Chinese cultural identity and attitudes toward Malaysian Chinese are thought to be the best predictors of CLP for the public school group, traditional costume, Chinese cuisine, Chinese architecture etc are considered the best predictors of CLP for the private school group.
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spelling upm-1163782025-03-27T06:04:11Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/ Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua) Qian, Long Boon Sim, Ng Ling Yann, Wong Abdul Halim, Hazlina Emotional attachment (EA) to the community's language reshape speakers' identities and aids in maintaining that language language in most immigrant societies. Language also serves the social purpose of identifying identity characteristics and significantly impacts social identity development. However, more research is still needed on how Chinese Heritage Language Learners (CHLLs) form their identities, particularly when examining the relationship between this identity construction and language learning (Zhou, 2016). Therefore, this study uses a quantitative approach to explore the correlations between EA and CHLLs' motivation and and attitudes with Malaysian CHLLs' Chinese Language Proficiency (CLP) in relation to EA, motivations and attitudes. It also draws on the Chinese Identity Theory (Wang, 1985) and Gardner and Lambert's (1972) psychosocial model. The study found that participants in Malaysian public and private schools showed high CLP in listening, speaking and reading (over 80%), relatively low scores in writing (approximately 77%) and with positive attitudes toward learning Chinese, high integrative motivation, and low CHL classroom anxiety; the distinction is that, while Chinese cultural identity and attitudes toward Malaysian Chinese are thought to be the best predictors of CLP for the public school group, traditional costume, Chinese cuisine, Chinese architecture etc are considered the best predictors of CLP for the private school group. Universiti Putra Malaysia 2024 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/1/116378.pdf Qian, Long and Boon Sim, Ng and Ling Yann, Wong and Abdul Halim, Hazlina (2024) Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua). Journal of Language and Communication, 11 (1). pp. 51-73. ISSN 2637-0875 https://sites.google.com/upm.edu.my/jlc-fbmk/regular-issues/vol-11-no-1-march-2024/jlc-04-march2024 10.47836/jlc.11.01.04
spellingShingle Qian, Long
Boon Sim, Ng
Ling Yann, Wong
Abdul Halim, Hazlina
Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title_full Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title_fullStr Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title_full_unstemmed Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title_short Heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of Malaysian Chinese (Mahua)
title_sort heritage language proficiency in relation to emotional attachment, motivations and attitudes: a comparative study of malaysian chinese (mahua)
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/116378/1/116378.pdf