
Glossophobia among Engineering Learners: A Case Study at a Technical University
Author(s) -
Subatira Balakrishnan,
Norlisa Loke Abdullah,
Linda Khoo Mei Sui
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
asian journal of university education/asian journal of university education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.198
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2600-9749
pISSN - 1823-7797
DOI - 10.24191/ajue.v18i1.17154
Subject(s) - public speaking , communication apprehension , anxiety , psychology , employability , public university , curriculum , medical education , engineering education , apprehension , mathematics education , pedagogy , engineering , linguistics , medicine , political science , mechanical engineering , philosophy , public administration , psychiatry , cognitive psychology
Glossophobia or fear of public speaking is commonly experienced by tertiary learners during classroom presentations. This study intends to examine the speech anxiety level experienced by engineering learners and the relationship between the learners’ English language proficiency and their speech anxiety. The study will also identify the causes of public speaking anxiety among these engineering learners. The samples were 65 Engineering Diploma students who responded to McCroskey’s Personal Report of Public Speaking Anxiety (PRPSA) questionnaire. The students’ English language grades at SPM level were used as the measurement of their English language proficiency. The findings showed the students’ speech anxiety is at moderate level (M= 105.9) and there was a weak negative relationship between total PRPSA scores and SPM English language grades (r = -.149, n = 65, p > 0.05). Mere thoughts of presenting a speech with undue worries of being asked questions were the causes of their speech anxiety. Therefore, it is proposed engineering learners be given ample public speaking trainings through planned programmes and engineering curriculum planners include elements of public speaking in engineering subjects. Public speaking skills will be an added value and increase engineering graduate employability in future.
Keywords: Communication apprehension, Glossophobia, Public speaking, Speech anxiety, PRPSA