English Language Apprehension among Student Interns: Triggerring Activities, Perceived Causes, and Coping Mechanisms in Clinical Settings

Fatima Grace R. Albano *

Northern Christian College, Inc., Philippines.

Jahnese D. Asuncion

Mariano Marcos State University, Laoag City, Philippines.

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Background: Coping mechanisms refer to the deliberate or instinctive strategies that interns adopt to navigate and reduce this apprehension within the clinical setting. Together, these three variables provide a comprehensive yet focused lens through which the phenomenon of English language apprehension can be understood — not merely as a problem to be diagnosed, but as a lived experience that nursing student interns actively confront and respond to in the course of their clinical training.

Aim: This study aimed to examine English language apprehension among nursing student interns in clinical settings by identifying the clinical learning activities that trigger apprehension, the perceived causes underlying it, and the coping mechanisms employed to manage it.

Study Design: A qualitative descriptive research design was employed to capture the lived experiences of nursing student interns.

Place and Duration of Study: The study was conducted at a private higher education institution in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte, Philippines, during the academic year 2025–2026.

Methodology: A total of 10–15 fourth-year nursing student interns were selected through purposive sampling based on self-reported English language apprehension in clinical contexts. Data were collected using a validated researcher-developed survey questionnaire and a semi-structured interview guide. The instruments elicited information on triggering clinical activities, perceived causes, and coping mechanisms. Qualitative data were subjected to thematic analysis to identify recurrent patterns and salient categories grounded in participants’ narratives.

Results: English language apprehension was predominantly triggered by high-stakes communicative tasks, including patient interviews, case presentations, clinical documentation, and interactions with clinical instructors. The most salient perceived causes were limited exposure to English in authentic clinical communication, fear of linguistic errors in evaluative settings, diminished self-confidence, and the pressure inherent in high-risk clinical environments. Participants demonstrated adaptive and maladaptive coping strategies, including deliberate self-practice, cognitive preparation, reliance on peer support, and selective avoidance of communicative situations.

Conclusion: English language apprehension constitutes a critical barrier to effective clinical communication among nursing student interns. The findings underscore the need for context-specific language support and communication training integrated within clinical education to strengthen communicative competence, enhance patient safety, and support professional readiness in nursing practice.

Keywords: English language apprehension, nursing student interns, clinical communication, communication anxiety, coping mechanisms, clinical education, Philippines


How to Cite

Albano, Fatima Grace R., and Jahnese D. Asuncion. 2026. “English Language Apprehension Among Student Interns: Triggerring Activities, Perceived Causes, and Coping Mechanisms in Clinical Settings”. Asian Journal of Education and Social Studies 52 (4):307-14. https://doi.org/10.9734/ajess/2026/v52i42962.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.