Examining the Impacts of Cartoons on Motivating EFL Beginner Students to Speak English Language in Beninese Secondary Schools: The Case Study of Some Secondary Schools in the Atlantic Region2
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Abstract
In Benin, a French speaking country where English is taught and learnt as a foreign language, secondary school
learners and their teachers encounter a variety of problems related to EFL learners’ poor oral performance. This
research work investigates the impacts of cartoons on motivating EFL students to speak English in classrooms.
Throughout this study, the motivating potentials of visual aids and of cartoons have been explored as a means to
improve the teaching/learning of English as a Foreign Language in the Beninese context. This research work
was carried in two secondary schools located in the Atlantic Region where two EFL classes have been selected.
One representing the experimental group and the other the control group. Four (4) teachers and two hundred and
thirty (230) EFL students were selected to participate in the study. Two types of questionnaires were designed
and distributed to both EFL learners and teachers. The data collected were presented in forms of frequency,
tables, and figures. The findings revealthat although students love games, movies, a large majority of Beninese
EFL teachers rarely resort to them as a technique. Thefindings also reveal that cartoons when used appropriately
yield positive impacts on EFL beginners’ listening, speaking, reading and writing abilities. 75% of Beninese
teachers recognize that cartoons is an efficient means for fighting anxiety and motivating EFL beginners to
develop their oral production. As a result, the study recommends that teachers should be trained on the practical
strategies and techniques to use cartoons to motivate their learners to communicate fluently in English language
and to create a less-stressful classroom atmosphere.
