631
“Young Scientist”
. #2 (82)
. January 2015
Philology
of ambiguity and so on. Inhibition is a kind of affect similar
to anxiety. Inhibition develops
when we gradually form self-
image, which is a kind of awareness of identifying a self that
is distinct from others.
With the greater awareness comes the need to protect ego,
if necessary by avoiding whatever might threaten the self.
Strong criticism and ridiculous words can greatly weaken the
ego and the weaker the ego, the higher the walls of inhibition.
Empathy is the process of 'putting yourself into someone
else's shoes (Brown, 2002:143) '.
Arnold and Brown define the term (Arnold, 2000:19): one
need not abandon one's own way of feeling or understanding,
nor even agree with the position of the other.
It is simply an
appreciation, possibly in a detached manner, of the iden-
tity of another individual or culture. It is closely related to
cultural relativity, which frees us from our conditioning and
helps us recognize that our way is not only way and possibly
not even the best way. Learners
who are good at empathy are
ready to cooperate with others. They can benefit from group
work and they can communicate with their partners and learn
from them. They are interested in the different culture and
can accept their value and life attitude. When learning they
will think about the purpose of teaching arrangement, so
they are glad to do what the teacher demands them.
However, Learners who are not good at empathy some-
times show passive attitudes towards the teachers' arrange-
ment. They cannot participate in
the classroom actively or
they cannot finish their homework according to the teach-
er's requirement.
Tolerance of ambiguity, according to Ehrman (Ehrman,
2000:75), can be viewed as made up of three levels of function:
intake: letting it in; tolerance of ambiguity proper: accepting
contradictions and incomplete information; accommodation:
making
distinctions, setting priorities, restructuring cogni-
tive schemata.
All of aforesaid researches on affective factors will be taken
as the references to make the new categorization and present
the operational definitions of affective variables in vocabulary
acquisition.
What kind of affective conditions the learners are in is ob-
viously of crucial importance in accounting for individual dif-
ferences in learning outcome. Learners' affective states tend
to be volatile, affecting not only overall
progress but also re-
sponses to particular learning activities on a day-to-day and
even moment-on-moment basis. Studies in the naturalistic
research tradition may prove most effective in exploring how
these transitional states are brought about and what effect
they have on learning (Ellis, 1999:483).
The effect of affective factors on SLA is interwoven and
very complicated. All the variables
are related to one an-
other in certain ways, just as anxiety can be connected with
plummeting motivation, negative attitudes, and inhibition.
Learning attitude is often affected by motivation. In reality,
all these factors may result with various kinds of combination
among different people. One factor sometimes does not defi-
nitely predict or entail another.
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