Article published In: Study abroad and the Erasmus+ programme in Europe: Perspectives on language and intercultural learning
Edited by Anne Marie Devlin
[Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education 5:1] 2020
► pp. 119–152
Overall L2 proficiency maintenance and development among returning ERASMUS study abroad participants
Published online: 24 February 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sar.19011.hes
https://doi.org/10.1075/sar.19011.hes
Abstract
This study examines the sustainability of gains in overall English proficiency made by 81 German students on ERASMUS study abroad placements in the UK (lasting one term or one academic year) following their return to their home country. Students were tracked using C-tests and questionnaires from pre-study abroad up until nine months post-return. Their development was compared with that of 25 peers who applied for ERASMUS placements, but continued studying at home. The analysis presented focuses on the post-return phase and includes factors associated with individual differences in L2 proficiency development post-return, self-perceived L2 skills development, and returnees’ perceived needs regarding further language classes. Results show that students tended to sustain gains in overall L2 proficiency made during study abroad. L2 proficiency level achieved by the end of study abroad, self-efficacy in using the L2 in social interactions, and majoring in English were all positively associated with post-return L2 development.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Literature review
- 2.1Research on L2 development post-study abroad
- 2.2Research on factors associated with individual differences in L2 development post-SA
- 2.3Purpose of the present study
- 3.Method
- 3.1Overall study design
- 3.2Participants
- 3.3Instruments
- 3.3.1The C-test
- 3.3.2The questionnaires
- 3.4Procedures of data collection and analysis
- 4.Results
- 4.1Students’ overall L2 proficiency development post-return
- 4.2Students’ self-assessments of their English language skills at pre- and post-return
- 4.3Factors associated with overall L2 proficiency development post-return
- 4.3.1L2 proficiency level achieved by the end of the study abroad period
- 4.3.2Self-efficacy in using English in social interactions
- 4.3.3Continued L2 contact / usage post-return
- 4.3.4Studying English as a major
- 4.4ERASMUS students’ perceived needs regarding further English language classes
- 5.Discussion
- 6.Limitations and suggestions for future work
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
References (48)
Asano, Y. (2014). Misst ein C-Test das, was er messen soll? In R. Grotjahn (Ed.), Language testing and evaluation, Volume 34: Der C-Test / The C-Test: Aktuelle Tendenzen / Current Trends (pp. 76–98). Frankfurt: Peter Lang.
Babaii, E., & Ansary, H. (2001). The C-test: a valid operationalization of reduced redundancy principle? System, 29(2), 209–219.
Bandura, A. (1986). Social foundations of thought and action: A social cognitive theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Beattie, J., Valls-Ferrer, M., & Pérez-Vidal, C. (2014). Listening performance and onset level in formal instruction and study abroad. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 195–216). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Davidson, D. E. (2010). Study abroad: When, how long, and with what results? New data from the Russian front. Foreign Language Annals, 43(1), 6–26.
Dörnyei, Z., & Katona, L. (1992). Validation of the C-test amongst Hungarian EFL learners, Language Testing, 91, 187–206.
Eckes, T., & Grotjahn, R. (2006). A closer look at the construct validity of C-tests. Language Testing, 23(3), 290–312.
Efron, B., & Tibshirani, R. J. (1993). An Introduction to the bootstrap. New York, NY: Chapman & Hall.
Engel, L., Sandstrom, A.-M., Van der Aa, R., & Glass, A. (2015). The EAIE Barometer: Internationalisation in Europe. Amsterdam: European Association for International Education (EAIE).
European Commission. (2014). ERASMUS+ Programme Guide (Version 2). Brussels: Directorate General Education and Culture.
. (2015). ERASMUS – Facts, figures & trends. The European Union support for student and staff exchanges and university cooperation in 2013–2014. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union.
Grotjahn, R. (2010). Der C-Test: Beiträge aus der aktuellen Forschung. Einleitung und Übersicht über den Band. In R. Grotjahn (Ed.). The C-Test: Contributions from Current Research (pp. viiii–xxix). Frankfurt: Peter Lang.
Hessel, G. (2016). The impact of study abroad in the UK on students’ overall English proficiency, self-efficacy, English use anxiety and self-motivation to continue learning English: A mixed methods investigation (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Oxford, St Edmund Hall.
(2017). A new take on individual differences in L2 proficiency gain during study abroad. System, 661, 39–55.
(2019). Study abroad: L2 self-efficacy and engagement in intercultural interactions. In A. Kostoulas (Ed.), Challenging boundaries in language education (pp. 199–210). Basel: Springer.
Hessel, G., & Vanderplank, R. (2018). What difference does it make? Examining English proficiency gain as an outcome of participation in ERASMUS study abroad programmes in the UK. Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education, 3(2), 191–219.
Howard, M. (2009). Short- versus long-term effects of naturalistic exposure on the advanced instructed learner’s L2 development: A case study. In E. Labeau & F. Myles (Eds.). The advanced learner varieties: The case of French (pp. 93–123). Bern: Peter Lang.
Huensch, A., & Tracy-Ventura, N. (2017). L2 utterance fluency development before, during, and after residence abroad: A multidimensional investigation. The Modern Language Journal, 1011, 275–293.
Huensch, A., Tracy-Ventura, N., Bridges, J., & Cuesta Medina, J. A. (2019). Variables affecting the maintenance of L2 proficiency and fluency four years post-study abroad. Study Abroad Research in Second Language Acquisition and International Education, 4(1), 97–126.
Ife, A., Vives, G., & Meara, P. (2000). The impact of study abroad on the vocabulary development of different proficiency groups. Spanish Applied Linguistics, 4(1), 55–84.
Juan-Garau, M. (2014). Oral accuracy growth after formal instruction and study abroad. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 87–110). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Juan-Garau, M., Salazar-Noguera, J., & Prieto-Arranz, J. I. (2014). English L2 learners’ lexico-grammatical and motivational development at home and abroad. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 235–258). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Keijzer, M. (2007). Last in first out? An investigation of the regression hypothesis in Dutch emigrants in Anglophone Canada (LOT Dissertation Series Nr. 163). Available at <[URL]> (6 December 2019).
Khabbazbashi, N. (2013). An investigation into the effects of topic and background knowledge of topic on second language speaking performance assessment in language proficiency interviews (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Oxford University, Worcester College.
Kubota, M. (2017). Post study abroad investigation of kanji knowledge in Japanese as a second language learners. System, 691, 143–152.
Kuckartz, U. (2012). Qualitative Inhaltsanalyse. Methoden, Praxis, Computerunterstützung. Basel: Beltz Juventa.
Leiner, D. J. (2019). SoSci Survey (Version 3.1.06) [Computer software]. Available at <[URL]> (6 December, 2019).
Llanes, À. (2012). The short-and long-term effects of a short study abroad experience: The case of children. System, 40(2), 179–190.
Llanes, À., & Muñoz, C. (2009). A short stay abroad: Does it make a difference? System, 37(3), 353–365.
Mehotcheva, T. H. (2010). After the fiesta is over: Foreign language attrition of Spanish in Dutch and German Erasmus students (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Mercer, S. (2012). The dynamic nature of a tertiary learner’s foreign language self-concepts. In M. Pawlak (Ed.). New perspectives on individual differences in language learning and teaching (pp. 201–215). Berlin: Springer.
Mitchell, R., Tracy-Ventura, N., & McManus, K. (2017). Anglophone students abroad: Identity, social relationships and language learning. New York, NY: Routledge.
Pérez-Vidal, C. (2014). Study abroad and formal instruction contrasted: The SALA project. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 17–58). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Pérez-Vidal, C., & Barquin, E. (2014). Comparing progress in academic writing after formal instruction and study abroad. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 217–234). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Pérez-Vidal, C., & Juan-Garau, M. (2009). The effect of study abroad on written performance. Eurosla Yearbook, 91, 269–295.
Pizziconi, B. (2017). Japanese vocabulary development in and beyond study abroad: the timing of the year abroad in a language degree curriculum. The Language Learning Journal, 45(2), 133–152.
Raatz, U., & Klein-Braley, C. (1982). The C-test – a modification of the cloze procedure. In T. Culhane, C. Klein-Braley, & D. K. Stevenson (Eds.), Practice and problems in language testing IV (pp. 113–138). Colchester: University of Essex, Dept. of Language and Linguistics.
Rees, J., & Klapper, J. (2007). Analysing and evaluating the linguistic benefit of residence abroad for UK foreign language students. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 32(3), 331–353.
Regan, V. (2005). From speech community back to classroom: What variation analysis can tell us about the role of context in the acquisition of French as a foreign language. In J-M. Dewaele (Ed.), Focus on French as a foreign language (pp. 191-209). Clevedon, UK: Mutilingual Matters.
Sasaki, M. (2009). Changes in English as a Foreign Language students’ writing over 3.5 years: A sociocognitive account. In R. Manchon (Ed.), Writing in foreign language contexts: Learning, teaching, and research (pp. 49–76). Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.
Sax, K. (2003). Acquisition of stylistic variation by American learners of French (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). Indiana University, Bloomington, IN.
Singleton, D., & Singleton, E. (2002). The C-Test and L2 acquisition / processing research. In J. A. Coleman, R. Grotjahn, & U. Raatz (Eds.). University language testing and the C-test (pp. 143–168). Bochum: AKS-Verlag.
Valls-Ferrer, M., & Mora, J. C. (2014). L2 fluency development in formal instruction and study abroad: The role of initial fluency level and language contact. In C. Pérez-Vidal (Ed.), Second language acquisition in study abroad and formal instruction contexts (pp. 111–136). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Van Mol, C., & Timmerman, C. (2014). Should I stay or should I go? An analysis of the determinants of intra-European student mobility. Population, Space and Place, 20(5), 465–479.
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Howard, Martin
2023. Grammatical development during study abroad. In Methods in Study Abroad Research [Research Methods in Applied Linguistics, 4], ► pp. 239 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 1 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
