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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.
61

The language learning strategies used by L2 English learners in the processing of corrective feedback: a casestudy from a secondary school in Hong Kong

陳浩然, Chan, Ho-yin, Tony. January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Applied English Studies / Master / Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics
62

Learning Spanish in Hong Kong: a study of a lone language learner's experience

林繼豪, Lam, Kai-ho. January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Applied English Studies / Master / Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics
63

A study of teachers' perceptions of how they teach writing in English language classes at the British council in Hong Kong

Towey, David Andrew Douglas. January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Applied English Studies / Master / Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics
64

Teacher's language alternation in an ESL classroom in an English as the medium of instruction (EMI) secondary school: a case study

Chan, Ching-yan, Sammi, 陳靜欣 January 2009 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Applied English Studies / Master / Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics
65

Investigating the effect of metacognitive strategies training on CSL learners in Hong Kong

Ng, Siu-wah, 吳笑華 January 2014 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
66

A case study : task-based language teaching in a Chinese foreign language context

Mak, Ting-fung, Martin, 麥庭峰 January 2014 (has links)
This project mainly looks at the teachers’ and students’ views on ‘Task-based Language Teaching’ (TBLT) in a context of learning Chinese as a foreign language. This project first discusses the three pedagogical characteristics of TBLT – ‘meaning-focused’, ‘reinforcement’ and ‘flexibility’. It then discusses the limitations of previous literature on how TBLT can motivate students to learn Chinese as a foreign language. To feedback the current curriculum for teachers to carry out TBLT and to enrich the literature in this field, feedback from the users (i.e. teachers and students) was collected through systematic and methodical research methods. At the end of the research, two theoretical frameworks to evaluate TBLT design and how far it can motivate students are constructed in this project. / published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
67

Identifying core academic vocabulary in IGCSE science textbooks and exploring ways of teaching them in a senior secondary LAC class

Zhang, Lijiao, 張麗嬌 January 2014 (has links)
This study identifies the academic vocabulary from the IGCSE science textbooks by using online software. Then compare the words identified with the new Academic Vocabulary List (AVL) (Gardner & Davies, 2013a) to generate 139 academic core vocabulary (ACV) from Chapter 1 of the science textbooks. A trial lesson is conducted to explore ways of teaching those ACV to a group of ESL/EFL students in an international high school programme in Mainland China, where English is the medium of instruction. The researcher utilizes an inductive, inquiry-based approach to teach the lesson, with visuals as the main teaching aids. The measurement instruments include a pre-test, an immediate post-test and a one-week delayed post-test. A questionnaire is employed after students’ participation of the trial lesson unit, in order to get students’ perspectives on and perceptions of such an academic vocabulary learning LAC programme. The results suggest that learning the meaning of ACV through pictures is effective to students. The majority of students (93.3%) believe that the learning of ACV will benefit them in academic study, although almost half of them (40%) think that participation of such an academic vocabulary learning programme is not necessary. Although students have shown improvement in the tests, the research result is very likely to be only applicable to this particular group of students at this specific time of the academic year. This is because these students are generally positive about learning and have very good interaction with the teacher and classmates in the classroom. They are from Class A, which consists of students of relatively higher English ability. Another important factor is that this study is taken at the end of an academic year for Year 10 students. One implication of the findings is that for future study of this type, it is important to test students’ vocabulary size with reference to the new AVL so that the research can be more focused on students’ real needs. The study implies that the time of the study (at the beginning of a new semester or at the end of an academic year), the students’ English proficiency level and the instructor of the lesson are crucial factors that might affect the study. The current study also indicates that the students’ own content teacher plays a vital role in their science key academic vocabulary learning, i.e., the content teacher seems to be in the best position to teach content vocabulary, as the study finds that students are more likely to learn academic vocabulary during class time, rather than spending extra time on vocabulary learning after class. / published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
68

Imitation in the writing process: Origins, implications, applications.

Dickinson, Barbara Ann. January 1988 (has links)
Imitation, modeling, emulation: these are terms frequently appearing in reference to the teaching of writing. Their history includes the model teacher, the materials used as models, and the modeling method. Two-thirds of this work focuses on imitation's applications in the teaching of composition in America 1636-1988 (an overview of the "petty" or grammar schools, the private academies, and the early colleges). The remaining third traces imitation's use from pre-Greco-Roman times through the Renaissance. Imitation methods date back to the beginnings of rhetoric; they were the teaching paradigm until at least the Middle Ages. The ideal model teacher had a close relationship with few students at a time, was a moral model, and was a practicing professional. Models were at first current speeches, but expanded to include poetry, sermons, letters, and finally all types of prose. Problems in application occurred when models became dated or removed from their purpose. The imitation method included imitation of the teacher, practice, prelection (criticism and analysis), and emulation, the point at which the student takes off to write original work. In America imitation was clearly the inherited paradigm, but it was weighed down by its legacy from the Middle Ages and Renaissance: over emphasis on style and grammar. Today imitation methods are surfacing as ways of teaching composition. Research is in the embryonic stages. The use of models and of classical imitation methods in today's classrooms seems to be increasing. A study of what imitation was and how it was used may help in avoiding its possible problems and applying its many merits.
69

Early literacy in all-Irish immersion primary schools : a micro-ethnographic case study of storybook reading events in Irish and English

Ó Cathalláin, Seán January 2011 (has links)
This thesis examines ways in which literacy practices are shaped by local norms in all-Irish immersion schools, as evidenced in storybook reading events in Irish and English. Within a sociocultural framing, the thesis takes as presuppositions that (i) reading is not a set of autonomous, transferable skills but is embedded in social settings; (ii) contexts and literacy practices co-emerge; (iii) children learn ways of being readers through participation in classroom literacy events; and (iv) language, literacy and identity are inextricably linked in all-Irish immersion programmes. In a classroom the teacher and pupils co-construct their own particular models, understandings, and definitions of literacy through their actions and the events they engage in. In the present study literacy is theorized as a performative accomplishment co-constructed by the participants in the event including those not directly present such as authors and illustrators. A micro-ethnographic case study approach was used to examine literacy practices in infant classes in all-Irish schools. Taking a phenomenological approach data were gathered using video-recording, observation, and pupil and teacher interviews and data were analysed using inductive analysis and interpretive discourse analysis. Key findings from the study are that (1) local norms, filtered through teachers' intentions and motivations, shaped the storybook reading events; (2) classroom literacy practices constructed during the Irish events were being transferred to the English events; and (3) children selected from their first and second language linguistic resources during storybook reading events to support their reading development. These three processes together were part of how children negotiated their socially situated identities as bilinguals and bilingual readers. Parental support for speaking Irish as well as social proximity to the Gaeltacht community, were factors closely associated with positive attitudes to speaking Irish and to reading in Irish. One implication of the findings is that teachers in all-Irish schools will need to make explicit their views of knowledge and of what it means to be a reader in an all-Irish school as they consider young children's agency in constructing their interpretations of texts.
70

Effects of culturally specific prior knowledge on Taiwanese EFL students' English reading comprehension

Lin, Lufang. 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.

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