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The Anatomy of Directed Motivational Currents : Exploring Intense and Enduring Periods of L2 Motivation

Henry, Alastair LU ; Davydenko, Sofia and Dörnyei, Zoltán (2015) In The Modern language journal 99(2). p.329-345
Abstract
In a series of articles Dörnyei and his colleagues (Dörnyei, Ibrahim, & Muir, 2015; Dörnyei, Muir, & Ibrahim, 2014; Muir & Dörnyei, 2013) describe the phenomenon of a period of intense and enduring motivation in pursuit of a highly desired personal goal or vision. These surges of motivational energy, which they call Directed Motivational Currents (DMCs), uniquely differ from other types of highly motivated behaviour or optimal forms of engagement that are to be found in the literature in the sense that individual learning activities form integrated parts of a coherent motivational superstructure. The current article offers the first systematic empirical investigation of this motivational phenomenon. Focusing on periods of... (More)
In a series of articles Dörnyei and his colleagues (Dörnyei, Ibrahim, & Muir, 2015; Dörnyei, Muir, & Ibrahim, 2014; Muir & Dörnyei, 2013) describe the phenomenon of a period of intense and enduring motivation in pursuit of a highly desired personal goal or vision. These surges of motivational energy, which they call Directed Motivational Currents (DMCs), uniquely differ from other types of highly motivated behaviour or optimal forms of engagement that are to be found in the literature in the sense that individual learning activities form integrated parts of a coherent motivational superstructure. The current article offers the first systematic empirical investigation of this motivational phenomenon. Focusing on periods of unusually intense and enduring motivation experienced by migrant learners of Swedish as a second language, the purpose of this interview-based study is to consider whether core characteristics of DMCs can be identified in participants’ descriptions of sustained motivated behaviour, thereby considering the validity of the DMC construct. Results reveal that motivated behaviour is characterised by features similar to those outlined by Dörnyei and colleagues, namely the presence of a salient facilitative structure, the generation of positive emotionality, and the direction of motivated behaviour toward long-term identity investment goals. This indicates that the DMC construct captures a unique form of motivation worthy of future investigation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Motivation, Directed Motivational Currents, goals, vision, behavioural routines, positive emotionality, Specific Languages, Studier av enskilda språk
in
The Modern language journal
volume
99
issue
2
pages
17 pages
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:84937826867
ISSN
0026-7902
DOI
10.1111/modl.12214
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
2019-12-02T12:00:22.437+01:00
id
97f9aa2a-5344-467a-88e4-f29a089085e6
alternative location
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hv:diva-7864
date added to LUP
2023-09-06 09:07:05
date last changed
2023-09-21 15:10:06
@article{97f9aa2a-5344-467a-88e4-f29a089085e6,
  abstract     = {{In a series of articles Dörnyei and his colleagues (Dörnyei, Ibrahim, & Muir, 2015; Dörnyei, Muir, & Ibrahim, 2014; Muir & Dörnyei, 2013) describe the phenomenon of a period of intense and enduring motivation in pursuit of a highly desired personal goal or vision. These surges of motivational energy, which they call Directed Motivational Currents (DMCs), uniquely differ from other types of highly motivated behaviour or optimal forms of engagement that are to be found in the literature in the sense that individual learning activities form integrated parts of a coherent motivational superstructure. The current article offers the first systematic empirical investigation of this motivational phenomenon. Focusing on periods of unusually intense and enduring motivation experienced by migrant learners of Swedish as a second language, the purpose of this interview-based study is to consider whether core characteristics of DMCs can be identified in participants’ descriptions of sustained motivated behaviour, thereby considering the validity of the DMC construct. Results reveal that motivated behaviour is characterised by features similar to those outlined by Dörnyei and colleagues, namely the presence of a salient facilitative structure, the generation of positive emotionality, and the direction of motivated behaviour toward long-term identity investment goals. This indicates that the DMC construct captures a unique form of motivation worthy of future investigation.}},
  author       = {{Henry, Alastair and Davydenko, Sofia and Dörnyei, Zoltán}},
  issn         = {{0026-7902}},
  keywords     = {{Motivation; Directed Motivational Currents; goals; vision; behavioural routines; positive emotionality; Specific Languages; Studier av enskilda språk}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{329--345}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{The Modern language journal}},
  title        = {{The Anatomy of Directed Motivational Currents : Exploring Intense and Enduring Periods of L2 Motivation}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/modl.12214}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/modl.12214}},
  volume       = {{99}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}