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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

The impact of assessment on an English as a Foreign Language academic reading programme

Schneider, Sue January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
22

Imaginative challenge and discourse strategies in task-based language learning

Robinson, Mark January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
23

Läxor i engelskundervisningen : En studie om hur lärare ser på engelskläxor och ordinlärning i årskurs 4-6

Blomqvist, Lina January 2016 (has links)
Läxor är en omdiskuterad fråga i den svenska skoldebatten med många argument både för och emot och för att kunna ta ställning i frågan är det viktigt att det finns tillgänglig kunskap om läxans för- och nackdelar. Detta en empirisk studie om lärares inställning till läxor och ordinlärning i engelskundervisning i grundskolans årskurs 4-6. Tidigare forskning om läxor och ordinlärning beskrivs och under studien har sju verksamma engelsklärare intervjuats. Metoden som används är en strukturerad intervju, där frågor har antecknats på förhand innan intervjun genomförts. Detta har gjorts för att minimera risken att informanternas svar påverkas av forskarens följdfrågor. Intervjuerna har spelats in och transkriberats för att sedan analyseras utifrån studiens teoretiska perspektiv, kognitiv lingvistik. Resultatet av analysen redovisas i studien och diskuteras med koppling till tidigare forskning och det teoretiska perspektivet. Resultatet av studien är att lärare idag använder sig av flera olika typer av läxor i engelska för att främja elevernas ordinlärning och glosläxan är den vanligast förekommande varianten. Lärarnas åsikter och föreställningar om läxor och ordinlärning skiljer sig mycket, vilket även reflekteras i forskningen om huruvida läxor bör användas och hur ordkunskap bäst undervisas. / <p>Engelska</p>
24

Investigation into Egyptian in-service EFL teachers' professional development : surmounting the challenges

Rezk, Lameya Mahmoud Abdeltawab January 2016 (has links)
This study explores English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers’ experiences of Professional Development (PD) programmes in Egypt. The current study investigates the sample’s experience as learners, instructors, and as individuals in relation to different contexts that include the classroom, school, and PD. In addition, it identifies the views of other PD stakeholders, including parents, school principals, PD designers, and training providers. The study has four main aims:(1) to identify teachers’ needs, concerns, problems, challenges, and frustrations with their PD; (2) to provide insight into the English Language Teaching (ELT) class context and any hindering factors that contribute to unsatisfactory PD; (3) to identify contextual factors in the school environment that hinder EFL teachers’ PD; and (4) to investigate the views of PD stakeholders towards EFL teachers’ experiences of PD. The participants of this study are in-service EFL teachers who have attended, or are currently attending, at least one of four PD programmes in the Cairo and Giza governorates. The sample, representing Greater Cairo, was selected to include a mix of gender, academic backgrounds, varied years of experience, and a variety of governmental school districts. PD stakeholders were selected according to the nature of their work which is closely connected to PD and school as well as parents. The methodology adopted by the researcher broadly follows mixed methods methodology that uses a sequential mixed-methods approach. The data generation process combines Questionnaire, Journal Writing, Focus Groups and Individual Semi-Structured Interviews. Data is analyzed quantitatively using Statistical Package of Social Sciences (SPSS) software and qualitatively using exploratory content analysis. The study’s most significant finding was the impact the following have on PD: teachers’ classroom practice and pedagogy, their workloads and time pressures, the role of private tuition, separation between PD and class pedagogy, curriculum innovations, PD and quality standards, the size of classes and teachers’ relationships with students. The school context is a vital finding of the study; context includes the influences of school principals, supervisory practices, collegiality within the school, the influence of parents, and school libraries on the effectiveness of PD. A significant finding that emerged from the data analysis illustrates a major concern with EFL PD, particularly, the management of teachers’ PD. This emerging theme sheds light on PD and the Ministry of Education’s decisions, its centralization, bureaucracy, issues of favouritism, co-ordination between the different parties of schools, universities, training schools, and personnel, employment, or job-related issues. The findings of the current study have been discussed into five different categories with regard to EFL teachers’ PD: cultural, social, academic, affective and institutional domains. The study concludes with a number of potential fruitful implications and suggestions for further research.
25

Effects of Cooperative Learning on Motivation, Learning Strategy Utilization, and Grammar Achievement of English Language Learners in Taiwan

Liao, Hui-Chuan 20 January 2006 (has links)
To examine the effects of cooperative learning on EFL students in Taiwan, a 12-week quasi-experimental pretest-posttest comparison group research study was designed. Two college classes (42 students each) in Taiwan participated in the study, one receiving grammar instruction through cooperative learning and the other through whole-class teaching. Three specific research questions guided the study. The first looked at effects of cooperative learning on motivation, the second on out-of-class strategy use, and the third on grammar achievement. Additional exploratory questions examined these results across subgroups within each class as well as the relationships between the dependent variables. Data were collected via learners' pretest and posttest scores on the dependent variables. The data were analyzed with MANCOVAs, one- and two-way ANCOVAs, simple effects, and Pearson correlations. Cooperative learning was found to have large positive effects on motivation and strategy use, and medium-to-large positive effects on grammar achievement. Overall, the findings indicated a consistent pattern in favor of cooperative learning over whole-class instruction in teaching the Taiwanese learners English grammar. The results of the exploratory questions indicated that cooperative learning facilitated motivation and strategy use of learners across all subgroups, but more so with those performing at higher and lower levels. Grammar achievement of learners at higher and lower levels was affected positively. Additional analyses also indicated cooperative learning positively affected learning at higher cognitive levels. Implications for future research and for curriculum and instruction are addressed.
26

English as a Foreign Language (EFL) learning through classroom interaction : an investigation of participants' collaborative use of speech prosody in classroom activities in a secondary EFL classroom

Zhao, Xin January 2015 (has links)
Conversational prosody or tone of voice (e.g. intonation, pauses, speech rate etc.) plays an essential role in our daily communication. Research studies in various contexts have shown that prosody can function as an interactional device for the management of our social interaction (Hellermann, 2003, Wennerstrom, 2001, Wells and Macfarlane, 1998, Couper-Kuhlen, 1996). However, not much research focus has been given to the pedagogical implications of conversational prosody in classroom teaching and learning. Informed by Community of Practice theory (Lave and Wenger, 1991) and Academic Task and Social Participation Structure (Erickson, 1982), which place participation at the core of the learning development, the current research employs an exploratory case study to examine the function of speech prosody during the co-construction of classroom talk-in-interaction in and between different classroom activities (e.g. whole class instruction, group discussion, group presentation, etc.). Audio–video data of classroom lessons were collected over a two-month period. Transcribing conventions described by Atkinson and Heritage (1984) were adopted to note the prosodic features in the recordings. Prosodic features such as pauses, volume, intonation, and speech rate were set as the main criteria for analysing the classroom talk. Analysis of the transcripts showed that speech prosody can function as a coordination tool for language learners to organise their social participation roles in collaborative learning activities (e.g. forming alignment, managing turn-taking, signalling repair sequences, etc.). The research also showed that prosody can function as a pedagogical tool for language teachers to manage classroom interactional ground (e.g. provide scaffolding, align academic task structure and social participation structure, frame classroom environment, etc.). Moreover, the research showed that prosodic analysis can be an effective tool in unfolding the pedagogical importance of classroom interaction (e.g. IRE/F sequences) in classroom teaching and learning.
27

An investigation into Libyan EFL novice secondary school teachers' current knowledge and practice of speaking assessment : a socio-cultural perspective

Grada, Taaziz Khaled A. January 2014 (has links)
This study sought to further understanding of EFL teachers’ knowledge of speaking assessment and how their knowledge informs their speaking assessment practices in classrooms. Based on a socio-cultural perspective, the present study aimed at investigating EFL novice teachers’ current knowledge and practice of speaking assessment in a Libyan secondary school context. The study is based on the interpretive paradigm and adopted social constructionism as a philosophical stance. Quantitative and qualitative methods of data collection were employed in two sequential phases. The findings of this study indicated that EFL novice teachers’ current knowledge of speaking assessment is complex and that was reflected in the different ways these teachers interpreted the concept of speaking assessment and in the ways they expressed their beliefs and values regarding how speaking assessment needs to be or is implemented in the classroom settings. Three main issues regarding teachers’ knowledge of speaking assessment emerged from the data. The first issue is that these teachers, although showing some variability in their knowledge and practice, seem to base their assessment practice on a view of spoken language being more about linguistic content than communicative effect. Secondly, that they mostly seem to afford more importance to summative assessment than to formative assessment. Thirdly, they have a view of assessment that focuses on the content to be assessed rather than on the process of assessment. The findings also indicated that while teachers refer to contextual factors that influence how they implement their knowledge into practice, their understanding of the notion of assessment seems to have more influence on their implementation of speaking assessment as process than that of the context. That is, their current understandings of the notion of spoken language seem to contribute to their current practice of speaking assessment. Also of significance are the participants’ views of the role of context. The results showed that although contexts are similar in some aspects, especially those related to institutional factors, teachers’ views show the uniqueness of the context, especially in the light of the unanticipated social, political and institutional changes. The implications of this study suggest that these EFL novice teachers’ current knowledge of language and of assessment goes beyond factual knowledge to their perceptions of language and their understandings of the purpose of assessment. They also suggest that context plays a role on their current knowledge and practice of speaking assessment. Thus, this study provides further understanding that what these teachers know and how they use their knowledge in practice arises from a complex interweaving of context and individual understandings.
28

The Effects of Reciprocal Instruction on EFL Reading Comprehension and Metacognition of Junior High School Students

Wang, Ching-Yi 29 January 2005 (has links)
The purposes of this study were to explore the effects of reciprocal instruction on EFL reading comprehension and metacognition of the ninth-grade students in junior high school. The researcher employed ¡§ET-RT model¡¨ (explicit teaching before reciprocal teaching). The students received the four strategies before the dialogues started. A quasi-experimental study was used. The research subjects were 68 students of two classes from a junior high school in Kaohsiung City. The experimental group was stratified randomly and received the reciprocal instruction, whereas the control group received the traditional instruction. The experiment was implemented in a 9-week session, 2 times a week, with each time 45 minutes of reciprocal teaching instruction. Before and after the experiment, both groups took the test of English reading comprehension, the questionnaire of reading metacognition and the questionnaire of reciprocal instruction. The data were analyzed by t-test and a one-way ANCOVA. The major findings of the study were as following¡G 1. The reciprocal instruction has significantly immediate and continued effects on English reading comprehension of the ninth-grade students. 2. The reciprocal instruction has significantly immediate and enlarged effects on reading metacognitive capability of the ninth-grade students. 3. Most of the students in the experimental group believed that reciprocal teaching promoted their English reading comprehension and interests of reading.
29

Language and Culture : A Study about the Relationship between Postcolonial Literature and Intercultural Competence in the EFL Classroom

Filip, Svensson January 2015 (has links)
Abstract The purpose of this study was to ascertain to what extent English teachers at the upper secondary level in Sweden use postcolonial literature in their teaching and in that case if it is used in order to teach intercultural competence. The reason for this was the claim that there is a strong connection between postcolonial literature and intercultural competence as well as between postcolonial literature and the curriculum for the upper secondary school, and specifically the English courses. The primary material used was gathered through interviews involving teachers working at an upper secondary school in the southern part of Kronobergs Län. Three out of five interviewees did use postcolonial literature and the main reason was that it provides a platform for students to learn about different cultures and societies in areas in the world where English is used. It also turned out that certain authors were used more frequently than others, namely J.M. Coetzee, Chinua Achebe and Doris Lessing. The theoretical basis for this essay has been the notion of intercultural competence, especially linked with language teaching. Developing intercultural competence provides students with the possibility of gaining increased understanding of different cultures, something that seems to be immensely important in a Swedish school system where the classrooms are becoming more and more multicultural. It is argued here that postcolonial literature lends itself particularly well when it comes to the combination of language- and culture didactics and teachers’ responses in the interviews have given reason to believe that this is in fact so.
30

A stylistic study of cohesive features in English prose fiction with some pedagogical implications for non-native contexts

Benham, Biook January 1996 (has links)
No description available.

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