The Effect of Study Abroad Homestay Placements: Participant Perspectives and Oral Proficiency Gains

Abstract: Although the study abroad homestay context is commonly considered the ideal environment for language learning, host-student interactions may be limited. The present study explored how language development of students of Spanish, Mandarin, and Russian related to student and host family perspectives on the homestay experience. The study used pretest and posttest Simulated Oral Proficiency Interviews to investigate student oral proficiency gains and surveys to examine beliefs of these students (n = 152) and their hosts (n = 87). Students and families were generally positive about the homestay, with significant variation based on language. A significant relationship was found between students' oral proficiency gains and their being glad to have lived with a host family. Significant correlations were also found between students' language learning satisfaction and their satisfaction with the homestay.Key words: homestay, host families, oral proficiency, participant perspectives, study abroadStudy abroad is often viewed as the ideal environment for language learners to de- velop their abilities because it is assumed to provide a depth of immersion into the tar- get language that is rife with interactions with native speakers. Living with a local host family is further seen as the optimal context to foster language gains due to the opportunities for target language input it affords.The conventional wisdom about the guaranteed benefits of the homestay has been challenged, however, by studies questioning the richness of student- host family interactions (Diao, Freed, & Smith, 2011; Iino, 2006; O'Donnell, 2004; Segalowitz & Freed, 2004; Wilkinson, 1998) and finding that homestay students do not make greater language gains than learners in other living arrangements (Magnan & Back, 2007; Rivers, 1998; Vande Berg, Connor-Linton, & Paige, 2009). Al- though two parties constitute the homestay dynamic, few studies have considered the host family perspective in investigating study abroad language contact and gains (Engel, 2011; Kinginger, 2013b; Knight & Schmidt-Rinehart, 2002).With increasing numbers of U.S. uni- versity students participating in study abroad (Institute for International Education, 2013), it is critical to examine the language gains students make after a period abroad and steps programs can take to further promote language learning. The present study explored student and host family attitudes at the beginning and end of semester-long study abroad programs for Spanish, Mandarin, and Russian in order to gain a deeper understanding of the connections between the homestay experience and oral proficiency gains. By investigating the perceptions of both study abroad learners and their hosts about the homestay relationship, the study aimed to provide additional insight into how this type of study abroad placement can foster language development.BackgroundResearch on Language Learning During Study AbroadAccording to Freed (1998), early research on language learning in study abroad con- texts primarily used criterion-referenced tests to measure language growth. While these studies suggested a positive relation- ship between time spent abroad and second language acquisition, many lacked control groups and used measures that were unable to draw fine distinctions in language gains or conclusions about individual variation in results. Freed noted that later studies moved beyond exclusively test-based data to inves- tigate the relationships between language development, student characteristics, and specific experiences abroad.Kinginger (2011) enumerated three re- search trends that grew from the results of early outcomes studies that showed great differences in individual achievement after periods abroad. First, studies attempted to correlate language gains with quantitative accounting of student activities and target language use; second, ethnographies and case studies examined student perceptions of the study abroad sojourn; and most re- cently, researchers have pursued mixed- methods studies incorporating qualitative analysis of student behaviors and perspec- tives with assessment of language learning outcomes. …

[1]  Barbara F. Freed What makes us think that students who study abroad become fluent , 1995 .

[2]  C. Kinginger Language Learning in Study Abroad: Case Studies of Americans in France , 2008 .

[3]  Àngels Llanes,et al.  The many faces of study abroad: an update on the research on L2 gains emerged during a study abroad experience , 2011 .

[4]  Dan E. Davidson Study abroad. When, how long and with what results?: New data from the Russian front , 2010 .

[5]  Martina Lindseth The Development of Oral Proficiency During a Semester in Germany , 2010 .

[6]  Assessing the Gain in Oral Proficiency from Summer Foreign Study. , 1991 .

[7]  Barbara A Lafford,et al.  THE EFFECT OF THE CONTEXT OF LEARNING ON THE USE OF COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES BY LEARNERS OF SPANISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE , 2004, Studies in Second Language Acquisition.

[8]  Jing Xia Study Abroad and Second Language Use: Constructing the Self , 2009 .

[9]  Michele Back,et al.  Using Facebook Data to Analyze Learner Interaction During Study Abroad , 2013 .

[10]  Celeste Kinginger,et al.  Identity and Language Learning in Study Abroad , 2013 .

[11]  Eton Churchill,et al.  1. Evolving Threads in Study Abroad Research , 2006 .

[12]  K. O’Donnell Student Perceptions of Language Learning in Two Contexts: At Home and Study Abroad , 2005 .

[13]  J. Connor-Linton,et al.  The Georgetown Consortium Project: Interventions for Student Learning Abroad , 2009 .

[14]  Barbara F. Freed Second language acquisition in a study abroad context , 1995 .

[15]  Federica Goldoni Students' Immersion Experiences in Study Abroad , 2013 .

[16]  Barbara F. Freed An Overview of Issues and Research in Language Learning in a Study Abroad Setting. , 1998 .

[17]  Elsa Tragant,et al.  A Longitudinal Analysis of the Effects of One Year Abroad , 2012 .

[18]  Marc Cadd Encouraging Students to Engage With Native Speakers During Study Abroad , 2012 .

[19]  The Home Stay: A Gendered Perspective. , 2008 .

[20]  Todd A. Hernández,et al.  The Relationship Among Motivation, Interaction, and the Development of Second Language Oral Proficiency in a Study-Abroad Context , 2010 .

[21]  C. Kinginger Language Socialization in Study Abroad , 2012 .

[22]  Sally Sieloff Magnan,et al.  Social Interaction and Linguistic Gain During Study Abroad , 2007 .

[23]  Martha Castaneda,et al.  Making the Most of the "New" Study Abroad: Social Capital and the Short-Term Sojourn. , 2011 .

[24]  Vija Glazer Mendelson,et al.  Spain or bust? Assessment and student perceptions of out -of -class contact and oral proficiency in a study abroad context , 2004 .

[25]  Christina L. Isabelli-García,et al.  9. Study Abroad Social Networks, Motivation and Attitudes: Implications for Second Language Acquisition , 2006 .

[26]  Masakazu Iino,et al.  Norms of interaction in a Japanese homestay setting: Toward a two-way flow of linguistic and cultural resources , 2006 .

[27]  P. Siska,et al.  Assessing Gains in Language Proficiency, Cross-Cultural Competence, and Regional Awareness During Study Abroad: A Preliminary Study , 2013 .

[28]  D. Hardison Changes in Second-Language Learners’ Oral Skills and Socio-Affective Profiles Following Study Abroad: A Mixed-Methods Approach , 2014 .

[29]  Pellegrino Aveni,et al.  Study Abroad and Second Language Use: Acknowledgments , 2005 .

[30]  Allison J. Spenader Language Learning and Acculturation: Lessons From High School and Gap‐Year Exchange Students , 2011 .

[31]  Celeste Kinginger,et al.  Enhancing Language Learning in Study Abroad , 2011, Annual Review of Applied Linguistics.

[32]  William P. Rivers,et al.  Is Being There Enough? The Effects of Homestay Placements on Language Gain During Study Abroad , 1998 .

[33]  Susan M. Knight,et al.  The Homestay Component of Study Abroad: Three Perspectives , 2004 .

[34]  S. Wilkinson,et al.  Study Abroad from the Participants' Perspective: A Challenge to Common Beliefs , 1998 .

[35]  Promoting Speaking Proficiency through Motivation and Interaction: The Study Abroad and Classroom Learning Contexts , 2010 .

[36]  Barbara F. Freed,et al.  CONTEXT, CONTACT, AND COGNITION IN ORAL FLUENCY ACQUISITION: Learning Spanish in At Home and Study Abroad Contexts , 2004, Studies in Second Language Acquisition.

[37]  S. Knight,et al.  Enhancing the Homestay: Study Abroad from the Host Family's Perspective , 2002 .

[38]  Rob A. Martinsen Short-Term Study Abroad: Predicting Changes in Oral Skills , 2010 .

[39]  H. Allen Interactive contact as linguistic affordance during short-term study abroad: Myth or reality? , 2010 .

[40]  Barbara F. Freed,et al.  Confirmed Beliefs or False Assumptions? A Study of Home Stay Experiences in the French Study Abroad Context. , 2011 .

[41]  Hang Du,et al.  The Development of Chinese Fluency during Study Abroad in China. , 2013 .