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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.
1

På väg mot en effektiv modersmålsundervisning : Olika uppfattningar av effektivitet i undervisningen

Zolotarova, Yuliya January 2017 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe and analyze the perceptions of mother tongue teachers regarding the effectiveness of teaching and various factors that may affect the effectiveness based on a phenomenological approach. For this purpose, ten interviews with mother tongue teachers were conducted. The results show that teachers have clear perceptions of what effectiveness is and use different methods to make teaching more effective. Three extensive categories that affect positively effectiveness were identified: personalized education, teacher leadership and motivation. The findings suggest that there are also factors that negatively affect effectiveness. These factors are teaching time and inappropriate scheduling, difficulty in forming reasonably large and homogeneous groups, inappropriate teaching facilities and lack of collegial learning. The results correspond to the latest research in the field. Overall, the results suggest the variety of perceptions about effectiveness and factors that can affect it.
2

Exploring Spanish Heritage Language Learning and Task Design for Virtual Worlds

King, Brandon J. 24 April 2018 (has links)
In this exploratory case study, I take a constant comparative methods type approach to exploring a shift in second language acquisition (SLA) away from approaches built on the assumption that language participants in the U.S. are monolingual English speakers (Block, 2003; Ortega, 2009, 2013; Thompson, 2013; Valdés, 2005), with little initial investment in the language or its culture (Rivera-Mills, 2012; Valdés, Fishman, Chavéz, & Pérez, 2006). This bias has entrenched a monolingual speaker baseline for statistical analysis within many experimental designs (Block, 2003; Ortega, 2009, 2013; Thompson, 2013; Valdés, 2005). Further, I redress this methodological bias by applying sociocultural theoretical (SCT) (Vygotsky, 1986) approaches to investigating Spanish heritage language learners (SHLLs). Heritage Language Acquisition (HLA) has an established tradition of situating its research within socio-cultural context when considering language-learning phenomena, laying groundwork for relating these contextual factors to the issues in delivering pedagogically sound HL instruction. Ducar (2008) identifies a specific gap in HLA literature, where HLL voices are underrepresented and Valdés et al. (2006) further highlights the need for the development of resources and strategies for accommodating HLLs specifically. I attempt to fill these gaps under SCT by using qualitative methods that incorporate HLL voices into the broader HLA discussion (Ducar, 2008). I take a bottom up approach to resource and task design targeted to serve Spanish heritage language learners (SHLLs) in the U.S. by first surveying the population’s backgrounds and motivations at universities that serve an over 20% student body of Hispanic/latin@ students. Next, I propose a supplemental resource whose agile design is able to adapt to the unique needs of these SHLLs. Further, I investigate in what ways one technological resource, the virtual world Second Life (SL), may be adopted to meet Spanish HLL (SHLL) needs. In this second part, I analyze how one SHLL, who I will refer to as David, used this SL resource. I was guided in this analysis by asking: “In what ways does differentiating HL instruction with SL afford identity mediation through symbolic artifacts within SL?” and “In what ways can task design and extension activities be adapted to meet specific SHLLs’ needs without overly constraining their creative language use or the open format of SL?”. I do this by first taking a snap shot via anonymous survey of 47 SHLLs across the U.S., attending 133 universities with a high level of undergraduate latin@/Hispanic students (20% or higher) that offer concentrations in Spanish (see http://www.collegedata.com). The respondents needed to be currently enrolled in a course advancing them beyond the Novice High level of proficiency as defined by ACFTL (2012). My analysis and discussion of these responses is organized around trends illuminated with descriptive statistics in their backgrounds and then motivations. Finally, I draw on open ended responses to create a qualitative analysis and present vignettes that highlight SHLL voices, while exemplifying trends found through word count analysis and axial coding of the data. Next, I explore the case of a single SHLL, reporting a familial connection to the language and studying intermediate Spanish at a university in the U.S, and his experience with SL. My analysis of David’s case draws on data from a pre-survey that was designed to elicit data on his background, align discussion with established criteria for matching HLL backgrounds to learning needs, and elicit his emic perspective about using SL to study his HL. Additionally, the community of inquiry framework (COI) (Arbaugh, Cleveland-Innes, Diaz, Garrison, Ice, Richardson, & Swan, 2008) guided me in meticulously designing SL tasks that elicited data about David’s engagement with the SL environment, its affordances, and the HL. These also provided insights into what ways that he chose to expand or deepen his command of the HL. I coded these data with Dedoose, a qualitative research tool, using a three-stage coding process similar to axial coding, building code trees and constantly relating themes to one another until saturated thematic categories emerge. I build a critical discussion of what this coding process reveals in relation to the case-study’s research focuses above, the guiding research questions, and relate the resulting findings to possible implications for teaching Spanish to SHLLs in the U.S., instructional design for this population within specific intuitional constraints, and for task design that leverages specific affordances that SL may offer SHLLs. In Part I, I present a rationale for introducing two new research questions to help guide my investigation of the survey of 47 SHLLs: “In what ways do SHLL motivations for studying their HL differ and how might these motivations be best accommodated through instructional design?” and “In what ways do SHLL backgrounds differ and influence their objectives for studying their HL?”. I then used these research questions to analyze these data and weave a discussion. At the beginning of each stage of this analysis I explain the methodology behind the analysis and the generation of any figures or tables that helped me in interpreting the data and answering the research questions. Ultimately, I create vignettes to highlight SHLL voices (Ducar, 2008) and weave a narrative grounded in the major trends and themes sown together throughout the chapter. In Part II, I present rationale for modifying my original three research questions, removing the second one completely due to lack of data: “In what ways do SHLL backgrounds differ and influence their objectives for studying their HL?” and “In what ways do SHLL motivations for studying their HL differ and how might these motivations be best accommodated through instructional design?”. I interweave my exploratory analysis and discussion about David’s background and motivations with that of the previous chapter to related David’s case to the larger data set. Further, I use the COI framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000, 2001) and Dörnyei’s (1994, 2005, 2009, 2014) work on motivation to analyze my instructional design in relation to David’s experience within the SL Lab. I analyze David’s motivational attractor states from a qualitative perspective as he progressed through to completion of the lab and compare motivational factors between David and pilot study participants. Based on these findings I offer some recommendations for both revising the proposed resource’s design and for the design of other resources that might capitalize on what I have learned during the course of this investigation. During the course of these investigative efforts I also encountered some challenges and surprising rewards. I reserve a section of this study to discuss some of these challenges, such as institutional barriers, demands on student time, strains on student motivation, and instructional design adaptations that frequently failed to address these challenges despite being research supported approaches. I correspondingly recount how these challenges coupled with moments of collegial collaboration to help both myself as a researcher and the project to grow, persevere, and adapt during the long course of the investigation. It is my sincere hope that sharing this personal perspective provides greater context to the study and insight for other researchers that would take on similar research endeavors.
3

Soziolinguistisches Profil herkunftssprachlicher Studierender im universitären Russischunterricht: Lernermerkmale und didaktische Perspektiven

Ermakova, Natalia 13 September 2023 (has links)
Die vorliegende Dissertation trägt mit ihren Erkenntnissen zu einem besseren Verständnis der sprachlich-kommunikativen Voraussetzungen herkunftssprachlicher Russisch-Lernenden im Tertiärbereich bei und schafft damit eine wichtige Grundlage für die Diagnose seitens der Lehrenden, die wiederum eine differenzierte und individualisierte Unterrichtsgestaltung gewährleistet. Im theoretischen Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die wichtigsten Erkenntnisse früherer Forschung auf den Gebieten der Soziologie und Migrationsforschung, Sozio- und Kontaktlinguistik, Fremdsprachendidaktik und Spracherwerbsforschung in Bezug auf die Herkunftssprecher*innen des Russischen zusammengetragen. Diese Erkenntnisse bilden die Grundlage für die eigene empirische Untersuchung, die durch folgende zentrale Forschungsfrage geleitet wird: Welche Faktoren bzw. Merkmale der Lernenden sind als Indikatoren für den herkunftssprachlichen Russischunterricht im Tertiärbereich relevant und wie hängen diese zusammen? Dabei wurden anhand der Erkenntnisse aus der Fachliteratur folgende Faktoren und Merkmale definiert: Einreisealter und Aufenthaltsdauer in Deutschland, Schulbesuch im Herkunftsland, Russischunterricht nach der Migration, Alphabetisierung, Input, Output, Identität. Auf Basis dieser Merkmale wurde eine Fragebogenstudie entwickelt und in den Jahren 2014-2017 mit vier Kohorten (insg. 80 Teilnehmende) von herkunftssprachlichen Erstsemester-Studierenden eines russistischen Studiengangs der Universität Potsdam durchgeführt. Die Daten wurden in Form einer beschreibenden Statistik aufbereitet. Als eine allgemeine Schlussfolgerung kann festgehalten werden, dass alle untersuchten Merkmale in ihrer Verknüpfung als unterrichtsrelevant betrachtet werden müssen. Dennoch liefern sie für sich alleinstehend (mit Ausnahme des Sprachgebrauchs im schriftlichen Bereich) keine ausreichend aufschlussreiche Informationen über die Sprachkenntnisse der Studierenden und können deshalb immer nur bedingt zur Diagnose der Sprachkenntnisse herangezogen werden. / The following dissertation contributes with its findings to a better understanding of the linguistic-communicative preconditions of heritage learners of Russian in tertiary education and thus creates an important basis for diagnosis on the part of teachers, which in turn provides for differentiated and individualized instructional design. The theoretical part of this study compiles the most important findings of previous research in the fields of sociology and migration research, socio- and contact linguistics, foreign language didactics, and language acquisition research in relation to the native speakers of Russian. These form the basis for our own empirical study, which is guided by the following central research question: What factors or learner characteristics are relevant as indicators of tertiary Russian heritage language teaching and how are they interrelated? Based on the findings from the literature, the following factors and characteristics were identified: age of entry and length of stay in Germany, school attendance in the country of origin, Russian language instruction after migration, literacy, input, output, identity. On the basis of these characteristics, a questionnaire study was developed and conducted between 2014 and 2017 with four cohorts (80 participants in total) of first-year heritage-speaking students of Russian studies programs at the University of Potsdam. The data were presented in the form of descriptive statistics. This study concludes that all investigated characteristics in their interconnection must be regarded as relevant for teaching. Nevertheless, these characteristics by themselves do not provide sufficient information about the students' language skills (apart from language use in writing) and can therefore only be used to a limited extent to diagnose language skills.
4

Výuka angličtiny na českých středních školách z pohledu bilingvních žáků, kteří mají anglofonního rodiče či žili v anglofonní zemi / Teaching bilingual adolescents for whom English is a heritage language or who have lived in an Anglophone country, and who are studying in Czech secondary school English classrooms: the students' perspective

Jirásková, Anna January 2015 (has links)
(in English) The present thesis explores the issue of teaching heritage language learners and returnee students in English as a foreign language (EFL) classes in Czech secondary schools. The aim of the thesis is to examine the experiences of heritage language learners and returnees in the EFL classroom, their strengths and weaknesses in English, their attitude towards English language learning in terms of potential anxiety and motivation, as well as heritage language learners' wishes in relation to language instruction. These issues are investigated from the perspective of the students themselves. The theoretical part reviews the relevant literature on heritage language acquisition and teaching, and on the effects of experience abroad on language acquisition. Moreover, it is complemented by discussions of differentiated instruction and language education for the gifted, two areas which can prove helpful in terms of finding suitable solutions to the problems encountered by the target population in foreign language classes. The empirical part is qualitative and consists of the analysis of in-depth semi-structured interviews with three participants, gymnázium students from Prague. Insights are provided about the interconnectedness of the students' life experiences, their general beliefs about language...

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