This book clarifies the fundamental difference between North America-based instrumental motivation and Korea (and East Asia)-specific competitive motivation by which the EFL learners’ excessive competition to be admitted to famous universities and to be hired at a large-scale conglomerate is the main source of L2 motivation. It enables readers to understand that EFL-learning motivation reflects unique sociohistorical contexts grounded in a specific region or country. This book in turn necessitates the need to develop EFL motivation theory and research tradition which are firmly based on East Asian values and culture. ?
Chapter 1 Introduction.
Chapter 2 Historical Overview of English
Learning in South Korea: The 19th Century and Japanese Colonization.
Chapter
3 Historical Overview of English Learning in South Korea: The U.S. Military
Government, Korean War, and Post-War Reconstruction Period.
Chapter 4 A
Historical Overview of English Learning in South Korea: An Era of Economic
and Cultural Prosperity from the 1990s to the 2010s.
Chapter 5 History of
English Learning and Its Motivation in Other East Asian Countries.
Chapter 6
Recent Advances in EFL (De)Motivation Theory.
Chapter 7 Sociohistorical
Genesis of Korean EFL Learners English Learning Motivation.
Chapter 8
Conclusion.
Tae-Young Kim (CAU Distinguished Scholar 2014-2016) graduated from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (Ph.D., 2007) and from Seoul National University (M.A., 2002; B.A., 1997). He has been teaching in the Department of English Education at Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Korea since 2008. He teaches various courses related to L2 motivation, applied linguistics, and quantitative/qualitative research methods in ELT. His main area of research interest is L2 learning/teaching (de)motivation particularly in the context of English as a foreign language. He has published over 170 academic journal articles and book chapters on L2 learning motivation and co-edited a book entitled Second Language Teacher Motivation, Autonomy and Development in East Asia.