DOAJ Open Access 2024

Self-evaluations and the language of the beholder: objective performance and language solidarity predict L2 and L1 self-evaluations in bilingual adults

Esteban Hernández-Rivera Alessia Kalogeris Mehrgol Tiv Debra Titone

Abstrak

Abstract People are often asked to self-evaluate their abilities, and these evaluations may not always reflect objective reality. Here, we investigated this issue for bilingual adults’ self-evaluations of language proficiency and usage. We specifically examined how people’s self-reported language solidarity impacted their first- (L1) and second-language (L2) self-evaluations, while statistically controlling for their objective language performance (i.e. LexTALE). We also investigated whether this impact varied for value-laden evaluations (e.g. how “good” am I at my L2) vs. usage-based evaluations (e.g. how often do I use my L2) for two sociolinguistically distinct groups (i.e. English-L1 speakers vs. French-L1 speakers in Montreal). Starting with value-laden self-evaluations, we found that French-L1 speakers with more favourable L2-English solidarity tended to underestimate their objective L2 ability, whereas French-L1 speakers with less favourable L2-English solidarity more accurately estimated their objective L2 ability. In contrast, English-L1 speakers with more favourable L2-French solidarity more accurately estimated their objective L2 ability than those with less favourable L2-French solidarity who underestimated their L2-French abilities. Turning to usage-based self-evaluations, we found that participants' self-evaluations were generally more accurate reflections of their performance, in a manner that was less affected by individual differences in self-reported language solidarity. This implies that language solidarity (or perhaps language attitudes more generally) can implicitly or explicitly impact bilingual adults’ language self-evaluations when these evaluations are value-laden. These data suggest that people’s language attitudes can bias how they perceive their abilities, although self-evaluations based on language use may be less susceptible to bias than those that are value-laden. These data have implications for the study of language and cognition that depend on self-assessments of individual differences and are relevant to work on how people self-assess their abilities generally.

Topik & Kata Kunci

Penulis (4)

E

Esteban Hernández-Rivera

A

Alessia Kalogeris

M

Mehrgol Tiv

D

Debra Titone

Format Sitasi

Hernández-Rivera, E., Kalogeris, A., Tiv, M., Titone, D. (2024). Self-evaluations and the language of the beholder: objective performance and language solidarity predict L2 and L1 self-evaluations in bilingual adults. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41235-024-00592-4

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Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2024
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.1186/s41235-024-00592-4
Akses
Open Access ✓