A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education

The absence of language admission thresholds in many English medium instruction (EMI) university programmes has led to marked heterogeneity in students’ English proficiency upon entry. These students may face diverse challenges when listening to academic lectures, adopt different strategies to cope,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhou, S, Rose, H
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2024
_version_ 1826317623827103744
author Zhou, S
Rose, H
author_facet Zhou, S
Rose, H
author_sort Zhou, S
collection OXFORD
description The absence of language admission thresholds in many English medium instruction (EMI) university programmes has led to marked heterogeneity in students’ English proficiency upon entry. These students may face diverse challenges when listening to academic lectures, adopt different strategies to cope, and undergo varying trajectories in listening over time. To unpack such complexities, this study adopts a longitudinal mixed-methods design, comprising questionnaire responses from 412 freshmen and semi-structured interviews with 34 students at the beginning, halfway, and end of their first semester studying at an EMI university in China. Students were divided into high, medium, and low proficiency cohorts based on their listening placement test scores. Multilevel modelling analyses highlight that students entering with lower proficiency reported sharper reductions in listening challenges over time. Interview findings also reveal that these students engaged in more industrious self-regulated listening practice outside of the classroom than their highly proficient peers. Regardless of disparities in students’ proficiency, all students developed a higher tolerance towards ‘non-native’ teacher accents and shifted attitudes towards handling disciplinary terminology. The findings offer pedagogical implications for supporting different groups of students’ needs for successful transitions into English-medium tertiary education.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:29:18Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:826aa8d8-6b79-4c1d-9408-e7b73915f1ee
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2025-03-11T16:56:51Z
publishDate 2024
publisher De Gruyter
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:826aa8d8-6b79-4c1d-9408-e7b73915f1ee2025-02-24T12:33:24ZA longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher educationJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:826aa8d8-6b79-4c1d-9408-e7b73915f1eeEnglishSymplectic ElementsDe Gruyter2024Zhou, SRose, HThe absence of language admission thresholds in many English medium instruction (EMI) university programmes has led to marked heterogeneity in students’ English proficiency upon entry. These students may face diverse challenges when listening to academic lectures, adopt different strategies to cope, and undergo varying trajectories in listening over time. To unpack such complexities, this study adopts a longitudinal mixed-methods design, comprising questionnaire responses from 412 freshmen and semi-structured interviews with 34 students at the beginning, halfway, and end of their first semester studying at an EMI university in China. Students were divided into high, medium, and low proficiency cohorts based on their listening placement test scores. Multilevel modelling analyses highlight that students entering with lower proficiency reported sharper reductions in listening challenges over time. Interview findings also reveal that these students engaged in more industrious self-regulated listening practice outside of the classroom than their highly proficient peers. Regardless of disparities in students’ proficiency, all students developed a higher tolerance towards ‘non-native’ teacher accents and shifted attitudes towards handling disciplinary terminology. The findings offer pedagogical implications for supporting different groups of students’ needs for successful transitions into English-medium tertiary education.
spellingShingle Zhou, S
Rose, H
A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title_full A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title_fullStr A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title_full_unstemmed A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title_short A longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self-regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in EMI higher education
title_sort longitudinal study on lecture listening difficulties and self regulated learning strategies across different proficiency levels in emi higher education
work_keys_str_mv AT zhous alongitudinalstudyonlecturelisteningdifficultiesandselfregulatedlearningstrategiesacrossdifferentproficiencylevelsinemihighereducation
AT roseh alongitudinalstudyonlecturelisteningdifficultiesandselfregulatedlearningstrategiesacrossdifferentproficiencylevelsinemihighereducation
AT zhous longitudinalstudyonlecturelisteningdifficultiesandselfregulatedlearningstrategiesacrossdifferentproficiencylevelsinemihighereducation
AT roseh longitudinalstudyonlecturelisteningdifficultiesandselfregulatedlearningstrategiesacrossdifferentproficiencylevelsinemihighereducation