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To No Ones Surprise, Researchers Find That That The Key Principles Of Self-Determination Theory Find That It Applies To Language-Learners’ Motivation, Too

Author: admin_zeelivenews

Published: 20-06-2026, 7:30 AM
To No Ones Surprise, Researchers Find That That The Key Principles Of Self-Determination Theory Find That It Applies To Language-Learners’ Motivation, Too
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I’ve written constantly about how the tenets of Self-Determination Theory (autonomy, relatedness, competence, relevance) are key to creating the conditions where student intrinsic motivation can thrive in the classroom – for language learners and for everybody else.

Now, a specific study on Self-Determination Theory finds that to be the case for language learners.

Self‑Determination Theory and Language Learning: A Multilevel Meta‑Analysis is the study’s title, and it’s not behind a paywall.

Unfortunately, though, it’s pretty dense. Here’s ChatGPT’s summary of it (I’m adding this info to Best Posts On “Motivating” Students):

Here’s what matters most for classroom practice based on Alamer, Robat, et al. (2025) (a study grounded in Self-Determination Theory and L2 learning motivation):


1) Autonomy support boosts ELL engagement and learning

The study found that when teachers support student autonomy — giving learners choices, opportunities for self-direction, and meaningful participation — ELLs:

  • Show higher intrinsic motivation

  • Engage more deeply with language tasks

  • Persist longer in challenging activities

Classroom application:
✔ Offer students choices in speaking/writing topics
✔ Let students set personal language goals
✔ Include student voice in project design
✔ Use task options rather than one mandated format


2) Competence support increases ELL confidence

The research showed that constructing learning experiences so that students feel successful and capable is strongly linked to positive outcomes.

That means teachers should:

  • Provide clear success criteria

  • Use scaffolded supports (graphic organizers, sentence frames)

  • Give feedback that emphasizes progress

Rather than saying, “You did X wrong,” feedback should be:

“You’re close here — try adding ___ to better convey your idea.”

This builds perceived competence, which motivates more learning.


3) Relatedness matters for language acquisition

A core finding: ELLs learn better when they feel connected to others in the classroom.

Strategies that help:

  • Pair/group activities with positive social norms

  • Peer feedback routines

  • Cooperative tasks where students genuinely depend on each other

  • Community-building rituals

Because language learning is social, strengthening relationships supports both language growth and motivation.


4) Autonomy + Competence + Relatedness = more self-regulated learners

The study confirms the three pillars of Self-Determination Theory (autonomy, competence, relatedness) are not just theoretical — they predict student engagement and achievement in L2 contexts.

Practical scaffold:

Support Type What It Looks Like in ELL Class
Autonomy Choice in reading & speaking topics
Competence Structured rubrics, feedback loops
Relatedness Partner tasks, group discussions

ELL teachers can build routines around all three to boost motivation holistically.


5) Use tasks that are meaningful and purposeful

Motivational outcomes were stronger when tasks:

  • Were relevant to learners’ lives

  • Had real communicative goals

  • Allowed creative expression

Examples:

  • Writing a letter to a community member

  • Recording a podcast about a student’s hobby

  • Role-plays based on real errands

Relevance transforms tasks from “language practice drills” into authentic language use, which is far more engaging.


6) Teachers’ interaction styles impact motivation

The way teachers talk to students matters:

  • Warm, encouraging language increases students’ sense of relatedness

  • Open-ended questions stimulate internal motivation

  • Prescriptive commands reduce autonomy and lower engagement

So instead of:

“Repeat after me…”

Try:

“How might you say this if you were talking with a friend?”


7) Assessment can either support or thwart motivation

The study highlights that assessment matters not just for grades but for learner self-belief.

Avoid:

Favor:

These practices help ELLs feel capable and in control of their learning.


✅ Build autonomy by giving choice and voice

✅ Scaffold for competence with clear targets and feedback

✅ Foster relatedness with collaborative, respectful interaction

✅ Use meaningful, authentic tasks that feel purposeful

✅ Make feedback supportive, not just corrective

Taken together, these approaches create motivational conditions that help ELLs:

✔ engage more
✔ persevere through challenge
✔ communicate more confidently
✔ take ownership of learning

That’s exactly what the study argues motivates second-language development most effectively.

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