“I would never have become an interpreter without social media”: online social media’s motivational dynamics in self-regulated interpreting learning
Zhiyu Cai, Shanshan Yang

TL;DR
This study explores how online social media affects the motivation and self-regulated learning of Chinese interpreting students, finding both benefits and challenges.
Contribution
The study introduces a nuanced understanding of how online social media influences motivation and self-regulated learning in interpreting education.
Findings
Online social media enhances motivation by providing resources, emotional support, and community engagement.
OSM can also hinder motivation through distractions, misinformation, and increased anxiety.
Effective use of OSM requires developing critical thinking skills to maximize benefits and reduce drawbacks.
Abstract
In the Web 2.0 era, self-regulated learning (SRL) through online social media (OSM) has become integral to language learning, particularly for Chinese interpreting learners preparing for postgraduate programs. Despite its growing role, the impact of OSM on interpreting learners’ motivation and SRL outcomes remains underexplored. Grounded in Zimmerman’s Cyclical Model of SRL, this study employed semi-structured interviews with 29 Chinese interpreting learners to examine OSM-mediated motivational dynamics throughout the Self-regulated interpreting learning process. Our findings reveal that OSM acts as a double-edged sword. OSM significantly enhances learners’ motivation, operating both as an end-state and an ongoing process, by providing accessible resources, offering emotional support, creating platforms for community engagement, increasing interpreter visibility, and offering learning…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods · EFL/ESL Teaching and Learning · Reflective Practices in Education
