{"id":867,"date":"2019-02-08T13:36:19","date_gmt":"2019-02-08T04:36:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kuis.kandagaigo.ac.jp\/relayjournal\/?page_id=867"},"modified":"2020-09-11T16:03:30","modified_gmt":"2020-09-11T07:03:30","slug":"ohara","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/kuis.kandagaigo.ac.jp\/relayjournal\/issues\/jan19\/ohara\/","title":{"rendered":"A Sociocultural Approach to Learner Autonomy in the Language Classroom"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Tetsushi Ohara, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Ohara, T. (2019).\u00a0A sociocultural approach to learner autonomy in the language classroom.\u00a0<em>Relay Journal, 2<\/em>(1), 17-26.\u00a0https:\/\/doi.org\/10.37237\/relay\/020103<\/span><\/p>\n<p>[<a href=\"https:\/\/drive.google.com\/file\/d\/1ZxHmb68M3yOXkVui0JRXFbRG1BTnJSLQ\/view?usp=sharing\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Download paginated PDF version<\/a>]<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ff0000;\">*This page reflects the original version of this document. Please see PDF for most recent and updated version.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Abstract<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Approaches to understanding learner autonomy in language learning often contain dichotomous views: those that emphasize individual attributes and those that emphasize social influence. In order to articulate our understanding of learner autonomy, it is necessary to find approaches, which view a dialectic unity between the individualistic views and the social views. Sociocultural theory based on the concept of mediation is an approach, which has potential to offer a unique way to analyze learner autonomy. While using sociocultural theory as the main theoretical framework, this article attempts to understand how students take charge of their learning in the language classroom. Qualitative data indicate that interpersonal relationships between students work as mediational means for students to engage in their learning in the classroom. From this finding, it is argued that by understanding mediational means that students employ and are appropriate in the classroom, we are better able to track the students\u2019 ability to take charge of their own learning.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><em>Keywords<\/em>: learner autonomy, classroom, sociocultural theory, mediation<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Approaches to language learning often fall into two categories: those that emphasize individual attributes and those that emphasize social influence. As Rogoff (1995) argues:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Development research has commonly limited attention to either the individual or the environment \u2026 with an emphasis on either separate individuals or independent environmental elements as the basic unit of analysis. (pp. 139)<\/p>\n<p>Recent books on learner autonomy also describe the existence of a dichotomy between the individualistic and the social approaches. For example, Benson and Cooker (2013) allude to this dichotomy in explaining the genesis of their book about identity, motivation, and autonomy in language learning:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Our starting point was the observation that social approaches have tended to define themselves in opposition to the individualistic \u2018Other\u2019 of the mainstream SLA [Second Language Acquisition] research. (pp. 11)<\/p>\n<p>As one of the approaches to overcome the dichotomy, Benson and Cooker (2013) suggest sociocultural theory. The emphasis of sociocultural theory is on the mutuality of the individual and the sociocultural environment. This drives the theory\u2019s concern to find a unit of analysis that contains the essence of the events of interest, rather than separating an event into elements which no longer function as a whole (Rogoff, 1995, p. 140). Through the dialectic unity between individuality and social dimensions, sociocultural theory provides a new perspective on learner autonomy by presenting a way that captures the fact that learners live in the middle of both individualistic and social perspectives. This paper attempts to identify how students engage in their classroom learning and articulate the concept of learner autonomy, which is often defined as the individual learner\u2019s ability to take charge of his or her own learning (Holec, 1981, p. 3), in a university language classroom context using sociocultural theory.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Unit of Analysis<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Critical to the methods of analysis in studies of the psychological structure of thought and language, Vygotsky proposes a unique approach to understanding thought and language. According to Vygotsky (1962), most psychologists adopt a method that analyses complex psychological wholes by breaking them down into elements. For example, this results in \u201cthe chemical analysis of water into hydrogen and oxygen, neither of which possesses the properties of the whole and each of which possesses properties not present in the whole\u201d (Vygotsky, 1962, p. 3). Vygotsky (1962) criticizes this method of analysis:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Psychology winds up in the same kind of dead end when it analyses verbal thought into its components, thought and word, and studies them in isolation from each other. In the course of analysis, the original properties of verbal thought have disappeared. Nothing is left to the investigator but to search out the mechanical interaction of the two elements in the hope of reconstructing, in a purely speculative way, the vanished properties of the whole. (pp. 3)<\/p>\n<p>Thus, Vygotsky (1962) proposes what he calls \u201canalysis into units\u201d (p. 4). A unit is a product of analysis which possesses all the basic properties of the whole and which cannot be further divided without losing the basic properties (Vygotsky, 1962, p. 4). Vygotsky (1962) considers that the unit of verbal thought is word meaning because a word without meaning is but an empty sound and each word is a generalisation of thought.<\/p>\n<p>Despite Vygotsky\u2019s concern that a unit maintaining the properties of the whole must be analysed rather than each element being analysed separately, it is difficult to agree that word meaning is such a unit. Wertsch (1985, p. 197) indicates the difficulty of perceiving mediated processes such as memory or attention in the microcosm of word sense. Word meaning alone is not adequate to understand the complex contexts of human life. Leont\u2019ev (1978) also argues the inadequacy of word meaning as a unit to be analysed because word meaning is too far removed from the concrete activity of people in their world. Thus, the appropriate unit of analysis is \u201ctool-mediated goal-directed action\u201d (Lantolf, 2000, p. 7). In classroom settings, we would need to analyse how students engage in a class activity using mediational means in order to understand how students take charge of their learning.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Interaction in the Japanese language classroom<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The data shown in this section come from the second semester of an introductory Japanese language course at an Australian university. The data were collected in a tutorial class of the Japanese language course, which consisted of lectures, tutorials and seminars, during the 13-week semester. Tutorials helped the students to engage in the basic practice and use of the linguistic structures and vocabulary introduced in the lectures. Students also worked on the written Japanese scripts of <em>hiragana<\/em>, <em>katakana<\/em>, and <em>kanji<\/em> in writing-related exercises such as dictation (hereafter all Japanese terms are written in italics). However, the students were encouraged to interact with one another even during the writing exercises so that they were able to help each other to improve their writing. Thus, interactive activities in pairs or small groups occupied most of the tutorial time. In order to collect the data, I conducted observations of the Japanese language classroom with video and audio recordings and interviews with students and teachers (week 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, and 13). The following analysis will focus on a relationship between a student named Jane, who is originally from Hong Kong, and another student named Ben, who is an international student from Korea, in the tutorial consisting of 21 students (all students\u2019 names are pseudonyms in this article). Jane and Ben were good friends because they had taken the first-semester of the introductory Japanese language course and played badminton together outside the classroom.<\/p>\n<p>Dialogue 1 below is an extract from interactions between Jane and Ben in the week 11 tutorial. They were engaged in a dictation activity and the teacher asked Ben to write the answer to the second question on the white board. The answer was <em>kinou wa kaze ga tsuyokute, samukatta node, jaketto o kimashita<\/em> [Because it was windy and cold yesterday, I wore a jacket]. Jane and Ben were trying to figure out how to write \u2018jacket\u2019 in Japanese <em>katakana<\/em> after they had worked out how to write some <em>kanji<\/em> characters in the dictation answer.<\/p>\n<p><em>Dialogue 1<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Jane: <em>Kaze<\/em>. <em>Tsuyoi<\/em>. [<em>Kanji<\/em> for \u201cwind\u201d. <em>Kanji<\/em> for \u201cstrong\u201d]<\/li>\n<li>Ben: Have we learnt?<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Yeah I think we learnt <em>tsumetai<\/em> [<em>kanji<\/em> for \u201ccold\u201d] but not <em>tsuyoi<\/em> [<em>kanji<\/em> for \u201cstrong\u201d]\u2026<\/li>\n<li>Teacher: <em> Dewa, ni-ban kakimasu ka. Ni-ban<\/em>. [Yes. Then, do you (Ben) write the second question. The second.]<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Ben-<em>san<\/em>. Hahaha [laugh] \u2026<\/li>\n<li>Jane: I hope I was right. Is it \u2018<em>jaketto<\/em>\u2019 [emphasizing <em>katakana<\/em> spelling for \u201cJacket\u201d], alright? Is it?<\/li>\n<li>Ben: \u2018<em>Jaketto<\/em>\u2019<\/li>\n<li>Both Jane and Ben were checking the textbook.<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Ah.<\/li>\n<li>Jane and Ben: Yeah, yeah, yeah.<\/li>\n<li>Ben walked up to the front of the classroom to write the answer.<\/li>\n<li>Jane: <em>Ganbatte<\/em>! [Work hard or good luck!]<\/li>\n<li>Ben: <em>A<\/em>, <em>hai<\/em>. [Oh, yeah.]<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>As this example shows, Jane and Ben not only did exercises together but also had a rapport with each other.\u00a0 In the week 11 interview, Jane and I listened to the audio recording of this interaction and I asked her about this part of interaction between Jane and Ben:<\/p>\n<p><em>Interview 1<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Interviewer: And basically, you guys are speaking in English in this part \u2026 But in the last part, it becomes like \u201c<em>Ganbatte<\/em>\u201d. This part is in Japanese again, right? How do you decide when you speak Japanese and English?<\/li>\n<li>Jane: I think if I said \u201c<em>Ganbatte<\/em>\u201d, then Ben-san would be like hmm, \u201c<em>Ganbaru<\/em>, <em>ganbaru<\/em> [he will work hard, work hard]\u201d. Hmm, \u201c<em>Ganbatte<\/em>\u201d then. Hmm, maybe a little bit closer.<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer: I see.<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Because if I said it in English, maybe not this close.<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer:<\/li>\n<li>Jane: When I push him &#8230; Do the right thing\uff01<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Jane and Ben often used short Japanese expressions such as <em>ganbatte<\/em> and <em>damare<\/em> [shut up] (when they were making fun of each other) which they had learnt from outside the Japanese classroom. Jane\u2019s usage of \u201c<em>Ganbatte!<\/em>\u201d showed their close relationship as they shared Japanese expressions that expressed a degree of emotional attachment.<\/p>\n<p>Ben explained in the week 11 interview that interaction is an important tool for him to learn Japanese in the classroom:<\/p>\n<p><em>Interview 2<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Ben: \u2026 when I want to study alone, I can study even outside of the class. In the class, I have friends\u2026 who study the same thing. So. It\u2019s like, it\u2019s a kind of opportunity to interact.<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer: Ok.<\/li>\n<li>Ben: And I can ask\u2026 because Jane is from Hong Kong, so she knows more about <em>kanji<\/em> than me.<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer: Ok.<\/li>\n<li>Ben: So, it\u2019s more like easy\u2026 yeah.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Ben\u2019s comments imply that each student has his\/her own strengths, expertise or repertoire in terms of learning Japanese, and that students maximize their ability to learn Japanese by sharing their resources in the classroom.<\/p>\n<p>Jane and Ben also indicated that their interactions with classmates became limited when they were not able to create a rapport with them. Jane and Ben usually sat together in the classroom as they had been good friends since the previous semester. In the tutorial that Jane and Ben attended, the teacher re-arranged the students\u2019 seats in week 10. Jane indicated in the week 11 interview that she not only felt uncomfortable with talking to classmates with whom she was not familiar in class but that she also felt unwilling to talk to the classmate she had been asked to sit next to.<\/p>\n<p><em>Interview 3<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Interviewer: Actually, <em>sensei<\/em> [teacher] decided where you sat and what do you think about it? More comfortable or uncomfortable, or you don\u2019t like it or you like it?<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Uncomfortable.<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer: Uncomfortable, yeah.<\/li>\n<li>Jane: Yeah, if the person I sit next to was the one that I speak a lot, maybe, ah very interested in interacting with him, classmates and maybe better. But the girl I sat next to was kind of rude. I asked a question to her and she didn\u2019t answer me.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>It is assumed that Jane and her partner\u2019s interpersonal relationship collapsed in their pair work. Thus, Jane could not utilize the interaction with the classmate to enhance learning. Ben also mentioned in the week 11 interview that sitting with unfamiliar classmates could minimize the interaction between students.<\/p>\n<p><em>Interview 4<\/em><\/p>\n<ol>\n<li>Interviewer: Which do you prefer [between the class you can choose your own seat and the class the teacher decides your seat]?<\/li>\n<li>Ben: Hmm, probably this week [the class he can choose his own seat]\u2026<\/li>\n<li>Interviewer: Ok. Why?<\/li>\n<li>Ben: Because like with my friend yeah, I would like to speak more. But if I sit with other people that I really don\u2019t know, even though they, we have a conversation, like we just ask a question and finish. And we don\u2019t say anymore.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>Because the recording of classroom interactions was not scheduled for week 10, it is difficult to know exactly what interactions Jane, Ben and their classmates had in the week 10 tutorial. However, from Jane and Ben\u2019s comments in the week 11 interviews, it seems likely that they had awkward moments and were not able to have constructive interactions during the class activities with the classmates they did not know.<\/p>\n<p>Research indicates that interaction is an important factor for classroom language learning. Lotman (1988) indicates the importance of dialogic function of text, which tends to emphasize \u201cdynamism, heterogeneity, and conflict among voices\u201d (Wertsch 1998, p. 115) and generates new meanings through interaction among voices. Due to the differences in experiences, knowledge and skills, each student has his\/her own perspectives and approaches in language learning. The differences among students create a multivocal environment (the dialogic function in Lotman\u2019s terms) when they interact with each other in the classroom. The multivocal environment in the classroom encourages students to reflect on what and how they are learning as they can listen to a variety of opinions and perspectives from other students and teachers. Students can use the reflection as a \u201cthinking device\u201d (Lotman, 1988, p. 36) to critically examine their understanding and develop new perspectives on language learning, which is related to taking charge of their learning.<\/p>\n<p>Ushioda (2011, p. 21) also argues for these more interactive classrooms:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">When students are enabled to voice opinions, preferences, and values, align themselves with those of others, engage in discussion, struggle, resist, negotiate, compromise or adapt, their motivational dispositions and identities evolve and are given expression.<\/p>\n<p>It is important for students to have opportunities to share their opinions and thoughts in terms of motivation and identities related to language learning. Northwood and Thomson (2012) find that university students attend classes because they want not only to study the academic subjects but also to socialize with friends. Socialization is an important motivation for participating in classroom activities. Mideros and Carter\u2019s (2014) study shows that positive interdependence and active collaboration play an important role in students\u2019 development of listening skills through active negotiations which make students aware of the role their peers can play in the development of their skills. Thus, it is important to organize classroom activities in which students have opportunities to interact with other students and teachers in dialogic ways to develop learner autonomy.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of taking charge of their Japanese language learning in the classroom, it could be argued that Jane and Ben were able to expand their ability to take charge of their learning in week 11 compared to week 10 because they had begun to draw on each other as learning resources and motivational sources through the collaborative interaction with each other in week 11. As Jane and Ben\u2019s example suggests, students\u2019 interaction becomes limited when they sit with unfamiliar classmates as this unfamiliarity may inhibit them from initiating and\/or expanding interactions. Jane and Ben\u2019s experiences show that the learning system created through their interpersonal relationship is an important mediational means in their process of taking charge of their learning in the classroom.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Mediational Means as Keys to Understand Learner Autonomy <\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The above data shows that Jane and Ben are not executing their abilities to take charge of their learning in the classroom as an individual agent but they are expressing their abilities though their interpersonal relationships as mediational means. In his study focusing on the ways in which the navigation team on a U.S. Navy ship constitutes a cognitive and computational system, Hutchins (1995) argues that human cognition is socioculturally distributed among its members. Participants (students and teachers) in the classroom have different abilities and experiences in terms of language learning. Thus, it is argued that knowledge and skills are distributed among the classroom participants. Murray (2014, p. 244) indicates that the outcome of these multiple components interacting is a complex system:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Emergence \u2026 occurs when elements of an environment self-organize\u2014interact and combine\u2014to form a complex system which is greater than the sum of its parts.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>The ability to take charge of one\u2019s own learning emerges, then, from the student\u2019s engagement and interaction with linguistic and social resources including other students and teachers in the classroom. Classroom learning is always socioculturally created by dynamic systems that include students and teachers interacting with each other and with a variety of teaching\/learning materials such as textbooks, notebooks and computers. Classroom learning is also affected by classroom structures and rules as well as by teaching\/learning styles. Therefore, if we take an individual student as the unit of analysis, our understanding of the student\u2019s ability will be greatly limited. Instead, by understanding mediational means that the student employs and appropriates in the classroom, we are better able to track the student\u2019s ability to take charge of one\u2019s own learning.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This paper has argued that the formation of interpersonal relationships among the students is an important factor in students\u2019 ability to take charge of their own learning in the language classroom. The ability to take charge of one\u2019s learning is almost always socioculturally mediated. The students\u2019 ability to take charge of their Japanese language learning in the classroom becomes more clearly visible when we analyze and understand interpersonal relationships and collaborative interaction among the participants in the classroom. The ability to take charge of one\u2019s own learning in the classroom is based on \u201can attribute of system created by the irreducible tension\u201d (Wertsch, 1998, p. 35) among students and teachers in the classroom. The interpersonal relationships are not external factors influencing how the students engage in their own learning but are integral components of students\u2019 ability to take charge of their own learning in the classroom.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Notes on the contributor<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Tetsushi Ohara is a senior lecturer in Japanese at Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University (APU). His research interests include articulating the concept of learner autonomy, applying sociocultural theory to language learning\/teaching, and designing class activities to promote active learning. He is also a coordinator of the Self-Access Learning Center at APU.<\/p>\n<p><strong>References<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Benson, P., &amp; Cooker, L. (2013). The social and the individual in applied linguistics research. In P. Benson &amp; L. Cooker (Eds.), <em>The applied linguistic individual: Sociocultural approaches to identity, agency and autonomy<\/em> (pp. 1\u201316). Sheffield, UK: Equinox Publishing.<\/p>\n<p>Holec, H. (1981). <em>Autonomy in foreign language learning<\/em>. Oxford, UK: Pergamon.<\/p>\n<p>Hutchins, E. (1995). <em>Cognition in the wild<\/em>. Cambridge, MA: The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.<\/p>\n<p>Lantolf, J. P. (2000). <em>Sociocultural theory and second language learning<\/em>. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Leont\u2019ev, A. N. (1978). <em>Activity, consciousness, and personality<\/em>. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.<\/p>\n<p>Lotman, Y. M. (1988) Text within a text. <em>Soviet Psychology<\/em>, <em>26<\/em>(3), 32\u201351.<\/p>\n<p>Murray, G. (2014). Autonomy in language learning as a social construct. In G. Murray (Ed.), <em>Social dimensions of autonomy in language learning<\/em> (pp. 233\u2013249). Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.<\/p>\n<p>Mideros, D., &amp; Carter, B. A. (2014). Meeting the autonomy challenge in an advanced Spanish listening class. In G. Murray (Ed.), <em>Social dimensions of autonomy in language learning<\/em> (pp. 135\u2013151). Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.<\/p>\n<p>Northwood, B., &amp; Thomson, C. K. (2012). What keeps them going? Investigating ongoing learners of Japanese in Australian universities. <em>Japanese Studies<\/em>, <em>32<\/em>(3), 335\u2013355. doi:10.1080\/10371397.2012.735988<\/p>\n<p>Rogoff, B. (1995). Observing sociocultural activity on three planes: Participatory appropriation, guided participation, and apprenticeship. In J. V. Wertsch, P. Del Rio, and A. Alvarez (Eds.),\u00a0\u00a0<em>Sociocultural studies of mind<\/em> (pp. 139\u2013164). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Ushioda, E. (2011). Why autonomy? Insights from motivation theory and research. <em>Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching<\/em>, <em>5<\/em>(2), 221\u2013232. doi: 10.1080\/17501229.2011.577536<\/p>\n<p>Vygotsky, L. S. (edited and translated by E. Hanfmann and G. Vakar.) (1962). <em>Thought and language<\/em>, Cambridge, MA: The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press.<\/p>\n<p>Wertsch, J. V. (1985). <em>Vygotsky and the social formation of mind.<\/em> Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.<\/p>\n<p>Wertsch, J. V. (1998). <em>Mind as action<\/em>. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Tetsushi Ohara, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University Ohara, T. (2019).\u00a0A sociocultural approach to learner autonomy in the language classroom.\u00a0Relay Journal, 2(1), 17-26.\u00a0https:\/\/doi.org\/10.37237\/relay\/020103 [Download paginated PDF version] *This page reflects the original version of this document. Please see PDF for most recent and updated version. 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