Abstract The purpose of this research is to model the link between language learners’ socioeconomic status (SES), their self-directed, technology-enhanced language learning, and their language achievement. The participants of this… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The purpose of this research is to model the link between language learners’ socioeconomic status (SES), their self-directed, technology-enhanced language learning, and their language achievement. The participants of this study are 382 university students taking part in a survey related to their perceptions of their self-directed, technology-enhanced language learning in addition to their experience of language learning at school and in private institutes. Parental income has been used as a proxy to the learners’ SES. Their language outcome has been operationalised by their performance in the English section of the nation-wide entrance exam and their pre-university course. The results of path analysis revealed that EFL learners’ SES is a significant predictor of their autonomous language learning with technology and their language achievement. Furthermore, students’ out-of-class engagement with technology was positively associated with their performance in the English section of the nation-wide exam.
               
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