Kamis, 02 Agustus 2018

MOTIVATION, SELF CONFIDENCE, and RISK TAKING as THREE FACTORS in SUCCEEDING LEARNING ENGLISH as FOREIGN LANGUAGE

Artikel ini disampaikan pada seminar nasional di aula universitas islam lamongan tanggal 30 oktober 2017. diterbitkan dalam prosiding seminar nasional bulan bahasa ISBN: 978-602-51362-0-7



MOTIVATION, SELF CONFIDENCE, and RISK TAKING as THREE FACTORS in SUCCEEDING LEARNING ENGLISH as FOREIGN LANGUAGE*

Abdullah Farih
Islamic University of Lamongan
 E-mail address: farichabdullah@gmail.com


Abstract: Many teachers are not highly succeeded yet in teaching English as Foreign Language. They haven’t got the most appropriate way to teach yet. They follow many kinds of seminars to prepare teaching plans and to change their own method of teaching. But one most important thing they forget in giving motivation to the students. This is the real problem why the teachers fail to make the students get four language skills. In this article, the writer proposes five solutions dealing with giving motivation and guiding the students to have self-confidence and risk taking. They are: 1) doing meaningful learning activity 2) using authentic material 3) having good interaction in the classroom 4) using co-operative rather than competitive goals and 5) giving feedback to the students. Such activities are possible to be conducted because teacher is a controller, director, manager and also facilitator.
Key words: Motivation, self-confidence, Risk Taking

INTRODUCTION
The failure of teaching English in Indonesia has become the main topic in English teaching and learning forum. This condition has made the important educated people blame one another. This is just caused by their inappropriate perception about understanding foreign language learning and foreign language acquisition process.
The education curriculum has been changed many times for some reasons. It has made the English teachers make lesson plans and teaching duties. It forces the teachers to do what the curriculum has the teachers do.
The English teachers have joined some English teaching workshops and seminars. They are trained to make many kinds of teaching preparation making all of the teachers bored. Instead of thinking about how to teach and how to make the students enjoy learning they are busy sitting, writing, preparing their lesson planning because of their fright of their headmaster or the education controller. They are demanded to know well how to plan a lesson and to make other teaching preparation while the motivation with which the students will get a big success is almost neglected. They almost never get special knowledge about arousing the students’ motivation, intention to learn.
Something becoming the viruses in all the teachers’ mind is Teaching English as Foreign language. Some teachers try to do “the atmosphere of learning English activity happily” despite their fright of the students’ failure in their last examination. The teachers hope the students to be able to speak a little bit English and become interested in learning English. On the other hand, the students “not yet” get complicated rules offered by the curriculum.
Many kinds of books have been printed and sold to the students without being carefully revised. The most important thing is that the books give high profit to the teachers, especially the low teaching motivated teachers. The books are said to be communicative approach but the content is really the traditional one. This condition also supports the failure of our English education.
For these reasons this article is aimed to give description of learning English as a foreign language. This is hoped to give good contribution to all English teachers especially in motivating the students to learn English. That’s why the writer wants to propose questions, How can teachers motivate, guide students to have self-confidence and risk taking to study English?” and “How can motivation, self-confidence, and risk taking increase the students’ ability to speak English?
Language learning heart strategy has been ignored for many years. It is really neglected heart of language learning. It is the most possible pathway in the realm of language learning motivation.

MOTIVATION
What is motivation? Some definitions drawn from a number of different sources: (l) Motivation is enthusiasm for doing something (Cambridge dictionary, 2008). (2) Motivation is the cause to act in particular way. (3) Motivation as “the anticipation of reinforcement”. (4) Motivation is the extent to which you make choices about (a) the goals to pursue and (b) the effort you will devote to that pursuit (Brown, 2004:72). (5) Effort and desire to learn a language and attitude toward learning the language are viewed as motivation.
This article stresses on various ways of improving the student’s motivation to learn. Whatever the type of motivation is intended to enhance the student’s spirit to win the four kinds of language skills.
Carter (2006) stated that motivation is composed of four elements: (l) a goal (2) a desire to get the goal (3) positive attitude toward learning the language (4) and effortful behavior to the effect. There are three sets of motivational components; first, course specific motivational components are the syllabus, the learning materials, the teaching method, and the learning tasks. Second, Teacher specific motivational components are the teacher’s personality, teaching style, feedback, and relationship with the students; and third, group specific motivational components are the dynamics of the learning group. Groups are formed for a purpose, to have fun to learn.
Many researchers show us that motivation directly influences the student’s behavior in learning foreign language and the students can determine themselves how to choose good strategies to learn and acquire English skills. That’s why giving motivation, with various ways, to the students is a ‘must’ to achieve the target language. No matter what strategies are chosen to arouse the student’s motivation. The most important thing is that the students can win both kinds of motivation, intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. Without motivation it is extremely difficult for them to succeed in learning foreign language or the writer is brave to say “it is impossible”.

TYPES OF MOTIVATION
Dornyei (2009) emphasizes many aspects of learning motivation, but the writer is just interested in discussing about teaching strategies dealing with motivation, intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. Highly motivated students will find themselves how to choose suitable learning strategies and determine their own attitude to the target language. And the writer considers that all normal human beings will get advantages of taking part in language learning interaction.

Intrinsic Motivation
Motivation is the first requirement to be successful in foreign language learning. The highly motivated students will learn faster than those who are not well motivated. Brown (2004) states that motivation is probably the most frequently used term for explaining the success of failure virtually any complex task, including L2/FL learning. Never say “that is wrong or that is not right” but motivate the students by saying “good” and hide the students’ mistakes by stating “almost right, but…”.
Keep the language politeness while teaching. Don’t use difficult patterns because they will destroy the students’ spirit or even they will hate the language target. Use conversational grammar because it is based on how people actually talk. It includes small chunks, mostly clauses and single words rather than complete sentences.
This is true for both interactional and transactional turns and use authentic materials and media. Although they must be prepared and need a lot of time to make them there are very strong reasons to use them. Authentic materials and media can reinforce for students the direct relation between the language classroom and the outside world.
One of the teachers’ tasks at school is to motivate students by engaging their interest in classroom activities or outside classroom activities. One way in which intrinsic interest in L2/Fl learning might be achieved is by providing opportunities for communication. Ellis (1994) emphasizes the importance of a desire to communicate, arguing that without this an integrative motivation may not be effective. It is the need to get meanings across and the pleasure experienced when this is achieved that provides the motivation to learn an L2/FL.
One possibility, supported by a strong pedagogic literature is that interest is engendered if learners become self-directed, able to determine their own learning objectives, choose their own ways of achieving these and evaluate their own progress.
Traditionally the teacher in elementary and secondary school give rewards to the students to enhance the students’ motivation. The students have a high desire to learn because of the prize in this case. But they don’t have an internalized thirst for knowledge and experience. Consequently, such dependency focuses students too exclusively on the material or monetary rewards of an education for creativity and for satisfying some of the more basic drives for knowledge and experience.

Extrinsic Motivation
Behaviors carried out in anticipation of a reward from outside and beyond the self have extrinsic motivation. The extrinsic rewards can be in the form of money, prizes, grades and even certain types of positive feedback. The avoidance of punishment is also one kind of extrinsic motivation because this can build the students sense of competence and determination (Brown, 2004:76).

SELF CONFIDENCE
Self-confidence is we belief with our ability to do something. According to Brown (2004: 62) self-confidence is a person’s belief in his or her ability to accomplish the task. While self-confidence can be linked to language ego, it goes a step further in emphasizing the importance of the learner’s self-assessment, regardless of the degree of language-ego involvement. In short self-confidence is learners’ belief that they indeed are fully capable of accomplishing a task is at least partially a factor in their eventual success in attaining the task.
Some immediate classroom applications of this principle emerge. First, give ample verbal and nonverbal assurances to students. It helps a student to hear a teacher affirm a belief in the student’s ability. Energy that the learner would otherwise direct at avoidance or at erecting emotional walls of defense is thereby released to tackle the problem at hand.
Second, we sequence techniques from easier to more difficult. As a teacher we are called on to sustain self-confidence where it already exists and to build it where it doesn’t. our activities in the classroom would therefore logically start with simpler techniques and simpler concepts. Students then can establish a sense of accomplishment that catapults them to the next, more difficult, step.

RISK TAKING
Risk taking is the ability of learners to take calculated risk in attempting to use language-both productively and receptively. Successful language learners, in their realistic appraisal of themselves as vulnerable beings yet capable of accomplishing tasks, must be willing to become “gamblers” in the game of language, to attempt to produce and to interpret language that is a bit beyond their absolute certainty (Brown, 2004: 63).
The Language and culture are intricately intertwined. Whenever you teach a language, you also teach a complex system of cultural customs, values, and ways of thinking, feeling and acting. When they are ready to take those necessary risks, they are ready to try out their newly acquired language, to use it for meaningful purposes, to ask questions, and to assert themselves.
How can clasroom activity reflect risk taking? First, create and atmosphere in the classroom that encourages students to try out language, to venture a response, and not to wait for someone else to volunteer language. Second, provide reasonable chalengges in the technoques-make them neither too easy nor too hard., Third, Help students to understand what claculated risk-taking is, lest some feel that they must blurt out any old response. Fourth, Respond to students’ risky attempts with positive affiramtion, praising them for trying while at the same time warmly but firmly attending to their langauge.

HOW TO MOTIVATE THE STUDENTS, GUIDE THEM TO HAVE SELF CONFIDENCE AND RISK TAKING
Motivating the students can be done through many kinds of ways and all of you will agree that it is very complex. The motivation can come from the teacher, the students themselves or their environment. The following activities are examples of giving motivation to the students.

Doing Meaningful Learning
Almost all of the students whom the writer teaches consider that English is the most difficult lesson. They also think that English has no relation to their life. Some of them don’t want at all to know the language rules given by the teacher.
Knowing that the students have very low motivation, the teacher has obligation to find as many kinds of strategies as possible to arouse the students’ desire to learn. By conducting various ways to teach, the teacher is able to choose the best way motivating the students to learn and make the students learn without having to understand and memorize complicated language rules.
Meaningful learning will lead toward better long-term retention than rote learning (Brown, 2004: 57)

Using Authentic Materials and Media
To do this, he begins with an idea in a text and based on the understanding of students' needs and interests, locate authentic materials, as well as create additional activities that make use of them. Here is as example of how the writer did this. While the students were participating in ‘a card’ activity, they expressed interest learning how to offer drink in a living room.
This condition is very suitable with what Brown (2004) advises to avoid the pitfalls of rote learning. They are: (l) too much grammar explanation, (2) too many abstract principles and theories, (3) too much drilling and/or memorizing, (4) activities whose purposes are not clear, (5) activities that do not contribute to accomplishing the goals of the lesson, unit or course and (6) techniques that are so focus on the mechanics instead of on the language or meanings.
In short, if the students have become intrinsically motivated to all classrooms or outside classroom activities, teachers might not be needed anymore. Develop students self confidence.
The teacher should ask the students to do inside classroom activities or outside classroom activities by saying “You can do it” repeatedly and he should start the students’ activities logically with simpler techniques and simpler concepts.
Asking the students to memorize difficult sentences and giving them complicated explanation should extremely be avoided. Just tell the students that ing form and be, for example, are used if the time signal is “now” without writing the name of the tense and even the pattern of the tense.

Interaction in Classroom Settings
What is interaction? Interaction is the collaborative exchange of thoughts, feelings, or ideas between two or more people resulting in a reciprocal affect on each other (Brown, 2004: 165). Theories of communication competence emphasize the importance of interaction as human being use language in various contexts to “negotiate” meaning or simply stated, to get an idea out of one person' head and into the head of another person and vice versa. To do the best interaction, the teacher should consider:
First, helping the students learn the natural way is useful. This means that learning foreign language only in the classroom is not suitable anymore. The students must be in the real context to practice communication. But they should no force themselves to use the language. A young Israel who stressed the importance of living the language explained: “I don’t think I have to use it. If it happens to me to use it, I use it. I don't force myself to use a word, because if it is compulsive, it is not natural”.
Second, forcing the students to practice the target language is needed. The teacher should find strategies in order that the students use the language as often as possible. If someone practices he will learn automatically, get accustomed to speaking, understand better and learn to think in English.
Third, including socio-cultural component in the foreign language syllabus is a good way. The teacher can invite the students to watch films or TV recordings, play relevant music and invite interesting native speaker’s gusts. If possible organizing school trips or exchange programs to the foreign language community; or finding pen friends for your students.

Using co-operative rather than competitive goals
Co-operative learning activities are those in which students must work together in order to complete a task or solve a problem. These techniques have been found to increase the self-confidence of students, including weaker ones, because every participant in a co-operative task has an important role to play. Knowing their team-mates are counting on them can increase students’ motivation. (Lightbown & Spada, 2001:57)

Giving feedback to the students
After finishing learning activity, the teacher should gives feedback to the students. by giving feedback, the teacher will gets the information about how teacher doing in his/her effort to reach a goal. Giving feedback also implies that students have ready access to the discussion and evaluation. 

TEACHER ROLES
Teachers play very important roles in the course of teaching described in the form of metaphor: teacher as manufacturer, teacher as doctor, teacher as judge, teacher as gardener and others. And the following is another set of metaphors to describe the possibilities of teachers’ roles.
The teacher should make students group work. By grouping the students, the teachers can give the students more opportunities to speak, interaction happens. H. Douglas Brown, in his book untitled teaching by principle, describes the importance of interaction in the language classroom:

The teacher as Controller
A role that is sometimes expected in traditional educational institutions is that of “master” controller, always in charge of every moment in the classroom. The teacher is a controller. So the teacher determines what the students do, when they should speak, and what language forms they should use. They can often predict many students’ responses because everything is mapped out ahead of time, with no leeway for divergent paths. In some respects, such control may sound admirable. But for interaction to take place, the teacher must create a climate in which spontaneity can thrive, in which unrehearsed language can be performed, and in which the freedom of expression given over to students makes it impossible to predict everything that they will say and do.
Nevertheless, some control on your part is actually an important element of successfully carrying out interactive techniques. In the planning phase especially, a wise controller will carefully project how a technique will proceed, map out the initial input to students, specify directions to be given, and gauge the timing of a technique. So granted that allowing for spontaneity of expression involves yielding certain elements of control to students, nevertheless, even in the most cooperative of interactive classrooms, the teacher must maintain some control simply to organize the class hour.

The Teacher as Director
Some interactive classroom can legitimately be structured in such a way that the teacher is like a conductor of an orchestra or a director of a drama. As students engage in either rehearsed or spontaneous language performance, it is your job to keep the process flowing smoothly and efficiently. The ultimate motive of such direction, of course, must always be to enable students eventually to engage in the real life drama of improvisation as each communicative event brings its own uniqueness.

The Teacher as Manager
This metaphor captures your role as one who plans lessons, modules, and courses, and who structures the larger, longer segments of classroom time, but who then allows each individual player to be creative within those parameters. Managers of successful corporations, for example, retain control of certain larger objectives of the company, keep employees pointed toward goals, engage in ongoing evaluation and feedback, but give freedom to each person to work in his or her own individual areas of expertise. A language class should not be markedly different.

The Teacher as Facilitator
A less directive role might be described as facilitating the process of learning, of making learning easier for students: helping them to clear away roadblocks, to find shortcut, to negotiate rough terrain. The facilitating role requires that you step away from the managerial or directive role and allow students, with your guidance and gentle prodding, to find their own pathways to success. As facilitator, teachers capitalize on the principle of intrinsic motivation by allowing students to discover language through using it pragmatically, rather than by telling them about language.

The Teacher as a Learning Source
Here you take the least directive role. In fact, the implication of the resource role is that the student takes the initiative to come to you. You are available for advice and counsel when the student seeks it. It is of course not practical to push this metaphor to an extreme where you would simply walk into a classroom and say something like, “Well, what do you want to learn today?” Some degree of control, of planning, of managing the classroom is essential. But there are appropriate times when you call literally take a back seat and allow the students to proceed with their own linguistic development.
In the lesson that you deliver, you should be able to assume all five of these roles on this continuum of directive to non directive teaching, depending on the purpose and context of an activity. The key to interactive teaching is to strive toward the upper, non directive end of the continuum, gradually enabling your students to move from their roles of total dependence to relatively total independence.
The proficiency level of your class will determine to some extent which roles will dominate. But even at the lowest levels, some genuine interaction can take place, and your role must be one that releases your students to try things for themselves.

CONCLUSION
Teaching English is not just teaching, giving information, explaining the lesson as many as possible so that the students can get knowledge faster, giving exercises and just doing any activities in the classroom. Teachers should do more than just teaching, giving information, explaining the lesson, giving exercises and just doing any activities in the classroom. Motivation and guiding students to have self self-confidence to learn must be administered to them in order that they can determine their own way to learn and automatically have positive attitude to learn the language.

REFERENCES
Brown, H. Douglas. 2004. Teaching by Principle: an interactive approach to language pedagogy (2nd ed.). Longman
Brown, H. Douglas. 2004. Language Assesment: Principles and Classroom Practices. New York: Pearson Education Incorporation.
Carter, C.J. 2006. Reciprocal Teaching: The application of teaching Improvement Strategy on Urban Students in Highland Park, Michigan, 1993-95. Geneva: The International Bureau of Education.
Dornyei, Z. 2009. Motivation and Motivating in the Foreign Language Classroom. English Department: Eotvos University.
Ellis, R. 1994. The Study of Second Language Acquisition. Oxford University Press.
Lightbown, P. M. & Spada, N. 2001. How Language are Learned. Revised edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Mu’minin, M. Amiril. 2012. Motivation as a Main Factor in Succeeding to Learn English for High School Students. Namira, 1 (2) : 48-54
Walter, Elizabeth. 2008. Cambridge advanced learner’s dictionary (3rd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press



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