While researchers have focused on examining the relationship between foreign language listening anxiety and its related correlates, most of their findings are largely inconclusive. To solve the problem, this meta-analysis investigates the overall average correlation between foreign language listening anxiety and its four key correlates, including two high-evidence correlates (listening performance and listening strategy) and two low-evidence correlates (motivation and reading anxiety) identified in the literature. For the two high-evidence correlates, a moderator analysis was also conducted to examine the moderating effects of learners’ age, foreign language proficiency and language distance. The results obtained a moderate and small negative correlation of listening performance and listening strategy, respectively. The two low-evidence correlates had small and moderate-to-large effect sizes, with motivation being the small and negative correlate, and reading anxiety being the moderate-to-large and positive correlate. Learners’ age and foreign language performance were found to be significant moderators.
CITATION STYLE
Li, R. (2022). Examining foreign language listening anxiety and its correlates: A meta-analysis. Porta Linguarum, 2022(38), 99–117. https://doi.org/10.30827/portalin.vi38.22173
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