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An Investigation of the Effects of Interactive Whiteboards as Perceived by Ohio High School Foreign Language TeachersLangan-Perez, Julie A. January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Bridging the Gap Between Communicative Language Teaching and Practice in an Introductory Chinese Language ClassroomZhang, Ning 06 August 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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The Effects of Foreign Language Acquisition on Wages for US College GraduatesNguyen, Christopher 28 July 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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Codeswitching in the Foreign Language Classroom: Students' Attitudes and Perceptions and the Factors Impacting ThemBailey, Ainsworth Anthony January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Depicting washback in the intermediate Spanish language classroom: a descriptive study of teacher's instructional behaviors as they relate to testsFournier-Kowaleski, Lisa A. 22 November 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Towards Understanding Misunderstanding in Cross-Cultural Communication: The Case of American Learners of Chinese Communicating With Chinese People in Chinese LanguageQin, Xizhen 21 March 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Self-Efficacy and the Language LearnerYough, Michael S. 25 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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A study on motivation in the high school foreign language classroom through focus groups with third- and fouth-year high school Spanish studentsAlzamora, Priscilla M. 01 January 2008 (has links)
In the Florida Public Schools' Curriculum, there lacks a requirement for completion of foreign language credits in order for a student to graduate. However, many colleges and universities, as well as scholarship programs like the Florida Bright Futures Scholarship, require students to take a minimum of two consecutive years of a foreign language. In many schools, there is an abundance of Level 1 and Level 2 foreign language classrooms, but in the upper levels there seems to be a scarcity of students within those programs. Why is it that these few students are motivated to continue studying the language, even though it is not required of them? This study serves to show the variety of motivations felt by high school students during the 2007-2008 school year. After conducting several focus groups at Oviedo High School in Oviedo, FL, with Spanish 3 and Advanced Placement (AP) Spanish students, the researcher analyzed the variety of reasons given candidly by the students. Through the conversations with these students, a better understanding of the motivations of high school students can be attained. Through this understanding, educators can target other areas that might motivate students, and thus work to increase enrollment in classes and to ensure that students can see the benefits of learning a second language with fluency.
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What Personal, Professional, and Contextual Characteristics of Ohio Elementary Principals Influence Their View of FLES (Foreign Language in Elementary School) Programming?Lewis, Michelle E. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Identity and anxiety in teachers of Arabic and Hebrew : the native vs. nonnative speaker questionCaravita, Joanna Ruth 20 September 2013 (has links)
This study examines the beliefs of foreign language teachers regarding the relative positions of native and nonnative speakers in foreign and second language education. In particular, I am concerned with the idealization of the native speaker in this context and the foreign language anxiety that may occur in nonnative speaker language teachers if they internalize this idealization. I collected data from 29 college-level Arabic and Hebrew teachers using four methods: (1) a questionnaire on their background and beliefs regarding native and nonnative speaker language teachers, (2) a version of the Teacher Foreign Language Anxiety Scale (Horwitz, 2007), (3) a one-on-one interview, and (4) class observation. By and large, study participants believed that native speakers, because of their nativity, have reached higher levels of linguistic and cultural proficiency with relative ease, and as a result are more readily granted credibility as teachers of their native language. Participants believed that nonnative speakers are more empathetic and understanding of their students' problems because of their own experience and efforts as students of the language. With regard to foreign language anxiety, the main sources of anxiety among the nonnative speaker participants were the fear of making mistakes (and losing credibility as a result), of not having the authority to speak on cultural issues, of not being hired when competing with native speakers, and of addressing professional audiences. Native speakers feared that they cannot anticipate or understand as easily as nonnative speaker teachers the difficulties their students have in learning their language, because they cannot relate to their experiences in the same way. Neither group, however, reported feeling particularly anxious overall. I argue that anxiety was minimal for both groups because of specific steps that participants have taken to overcome the perceived disadvantages of their group and thereby bolster their confidence. Participants reported gaining confidence through some combination of the following factors: (1) gaining experience and education, (2) improving their linguistic and cultural proficiency, (3) presenting the persona of a credible language teacher through extra preparation and language choices, (4) receiving external validation, and (5) realizing that everyone can learn from and teach others. / text
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