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English written proficiency as a contributing factor to academic performanceChanning, O. Ernestien January 2017 (has links)
Internationally English is increasingly being used as a language of instruction in education. This is also true within the South African context, a country with eleven official languages. Many non-native English speaking (NNES) students, for whom English might be their second, third or even fourth language, are studying through the medium of English. Previous studies on this topic acknowledge that the level of English proficiency which NNES students have, affects their academic performance. The problem under investigation in this case study was the relationship between students’ academic performance in particular modules and how their written responses in examinations contributed to them failing a module. The purpose was to establish to which extent limited English proficiency contributed to the poor academic performance of NNES preservice teachers studying through distance education. This study is underpinned by Cummins’ theory of Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills and Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency (1984). It is supported by related literature which emphasises the challenges NNES students experience in understanding academic content and responding to written assessment tasks in a language other than their home language. A quantitative approach was used which focused on the written responses to examination papers of thirty undergraduate B Ed students who had failed a particular module, at a private higher education institution. The contribution of inadequate or incoherent English, as the reason why marks were not allocated to answers, was calculated and analysed. Results indicated that students’ English grammatical proficiency does have an influence on their academic performance, though it is not the main contributing factor to students failing their modules. For this case study it was determined that the pre-service teachers’ inadequate English written proficiency contributed almost a third (25,6%) of the reasons for their poor academic performance. This finding suggests the need to develop new teaching strategies to accommodate and offer language support to NNES students in higher education institutions that offer qualifications using English as the medium of instruction. / Dissertation (MEd)--University of Pretoria, 2017. / Humanities Education / MEd / Unrestricted
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Explicit Instruction in Second Language Self-Assessment: Exploring the Potential for Improving Calibration Through TrainingReynolds, Rachael 14 April 2022 (has links)
This study explores the effect of an explicit training module on improving language learner ability to accurately self-assess second-language proficiency. There was a total of 409 intermediate and advanced level participants across six languages: French, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. Most of the participants had extensive immersion backgrounds. The Language Ability Self Evaluation Resource (LASER) was used to measure the perceived proficiency of the participants (self-assessed language ability). The Oral Proficiency Interview – Computer (OPIc) was used to measure the actual proficiency of the participants (rater-assessed language ability). The participants were randomly assigned to either the control or experimental group. Both groups started and ended the self-assessment the same way, with the experimental group receiving the training directly before the self-assessment questions. The training module was designed to include clarification, instruction, modeling, practice and immediate feedback while only adding 10 minutes to the overall assessment time. The limited time was dictated by the overall desire for maximum usability within already busy curricula and by already busy students. All participants completed the OPIc within 30 days of taking the LASER. The results were unexpected, revealing that those learners who received the training were more likely to over-assess their own proficiency level than learners who received no training at all. Possible reasons for this outcome are explored and possible ways to improve the assessment tool are discussed.
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Predicting Speaking, Listening, and Reading Proficiency Gains During Study Abroad Using Social Network MetricsHall, Timothy James 01 December 2018 (has links)
L2 proficiency gains during study abroad vary widely across individuals and programs, and much of the research in the study abroad literature attempts to identify the causes of this variance. Social network data has proven useful in explaining some of the variance in oral proficiency gains (Baker-Smemoe, Dewey, Bown, & Martinsen, 2014; Isabelli-García, 2006), and the current study builds on those findings by applying the same methodology to listening and reading proficiency in addition to speaking. Proficiency gains in listening, reading, and speaking were measured for 17 students from a US university studying abroad in Nanjing, China for one semester. Social network measures focused on interaction with native speakers (NS) were taken at the beginning, middle, and end of the study abroad program using the Study Abroad Social Interaction Questionnaire. Linear regression analyses showed that social network measures accounted for nearly 46% of the variance in listening gains, nearly 82% of the variance in reading gains, and nearly 46% of the variance in oral proficiency gains. These findings make a strong case for applying social network methods to understand listening and reading proficiency gains in study abroad.
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Development and Validation of a Portuguese Elicited Imitation TestReynolds, Braden Beldon 13 April 2020 (has links)
Elicited imitation (EI) is a method of assessing oral proficiency in which the examinee listens to a prompt and attempts to repeat it back exactly as it was heard. Research over recent decades has successfully established correlation between EI testing and other oral proficiency tests, such as the Oral Proficiency Interview (OPI) and the OPI by computer (OPIc). This paper details the history of oral proficiency assessment as well as that of EI. It then outlines the development process and validation of a Portuguese Elicited Imitation test. The processes of item selection and item validation are detailed followed by the criterion-related validation through a statistical correlation analysis of participants' results on an official American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) OPIc and their predicted OPIc scores which were based on their results of the Portuguese EI calibration test. Results of the statistical analysis revealed a strong correlation between the predicted scores of the EI test and the actual OPIc scores. In order to go beyond previously completed EI research, this paper addresses the issue of face validity which has been a challenge for the proliferation of EI testing. Analysis of a survey administered after participants' completion of the two tests (OPIc and EI) addresses the experiences and reactions of the participants to the two testing formats. Suggestions for future use of EI as well as future research will be presented.
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The Role of Vocabulary Size in Assessing Second Language VocabularyZimmerman, Kevin John 21 July 2004 (has links) (PDF)
This study investigated the role of vocabulary size in assessing learners from various L1 backgrounds and for institutional placement. Participants included native speakers of Spanish, Korean, Japanese, and Mandarin, who took a test that estimated the size of their productive English vocabulary. First, the vocabulary size of students from each language group was compared and the relationship between vocabulary size and institutional placement level was examined. Then, scores were analyzed to determine how cognates and loan words influenced the participants' performance on the vocabulary test. Further, students' vocabulary size scores were correlated with their placement scores that evaluated reading, writing, speaking, listening, and grammar. Finally, the vocabulary size of new students was compared to returning students within the same institutional placement level. Within the same institutional placement levels, speakers of Spanish and Korean had larger English vocabularies than speakers of Japanese and Chinese. It was also found that there is a clear distinction between students at varying institutional placement levels in terms of their vocabulary size. The cognate analysis revealed that students learn cognates faster than non-cognates. The correlation analysis revealed that vocabulary size correlated most with speaking, and listening, followed by grammar, then reading and writing. Finally, the cross-sectional analysis indicated that the vocabulary size of newly placed students was generally larger than that of continuing students.
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Workplace skills and the skills gaps related to employee critical thinking ability and science education curriculumAlexander, William A. 07 June 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Levels of the Oral Proficiency Skills of Foreign Language Teacher Candidates as Rated by Teacher Educators: A Descriptive StudyBall, Mary Isabelle 17 December 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Selection for remedial intervention: The validationDockrat, Shafeeka 23 February 2007 (has links)
Student Number: 9109265Y
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for
the degree of Master of Arts (Psychology) / The Academic Proficiency Assessment battery evaluates language and study
skills. This study focused on the internal consistency reliability and predictive
validity of this battery for Information Technology students.
In terms of reliability, the Time management, Note-taking skills, and Debilitating
stress scale on the achievement anxiety questionnaire were found to be
internally consistent. However, the items in the English proficiency, Reading
comprehension, Memorisation skills, concentration skills and motivating stress
scale on the achievement anxiety questionnaire require modification or
replacement. Intercorrelations across questionnaires necessitate further
streamlining.
In terms of predictive validity, a significant negative relationship was found
between Note-taking Skills and academic performance (R2
adj = 8,3%). Matric
results remain the best predictor accounting for 11% of the variance in CGPA.
Cumulatively, Matric results and Note-taking skills accounted for 13,34% of the
variance. None of the biographical variables significantly predicted CGPA.
Despite the apparent lack of relationship between individual predictors and the
criterion, a discriminant function analysis indicated that all the academic
proficiencies, with the exception of English proficiency, correctly predicted pass
or failure in 72% of the cases. The lack of relationship between English
proficiency and pass/failure can be accounted for in terms of the type of courses
studied as part of an Information Technology programme.Overall, the results would suggest that Matric results remain the best predictor of
academic performance in Information Technology courses, but at a very low
level. Given the lack of reliability in the majority of the subtests of the Academic
Proficiency Battery, the use of the APA battery for selection for remedial
intervention for Information Technology students is not yet justified.
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IMPROVING QUALITY OF PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES IN ENGLISH AS A LANGUAGE OF LEARNING INSTRUCTIONManditereza, B January 2014 (has links)
Published Article / The issue of language of learning and instruction in communities with diverse
linguistic and cultural backgrounds, globally and in South Africa, is always
shaped by socio-economical, political, ideological and hegemonic factors. The
language of instruction and learning in South Africa is politically charged, not only
because of colonial legacy, but more profoundly because of the apartheid legacy.
This article reports on the results of the pedagogies of teachers teaching in
English. The researcher found that most non-native English teachers use their
native language pronunciation when teaching English, which results in mother
tongue interference. On-native speakers end up transferring articulation habits
of first language to second language. There is thus a need to improve quality in
pedagogical practices in this diverse South African background since the
language of instruction is different from the learners' first language for the
majority of the population. The research in this article aims to investigate current
pedagogic practices engaged by teachers from different cultural backgrounds
when teaching English as a medium of instruction and how their practices affect
learners in acquiring knowledge of the English language. The study uses an
interpretive paradigm and in particular, adopts social constructivism to embed
discussions. The study mainly implements a qualitative approach although the
quantitative approach is used to quantify biographical data. The researcher
found that two educational systems seem to exist in South African schools: some
educators use English as a medium of instruction only, whereas others allow
code switching. Education thus becomes a reproductive mechanism of social
class differences.
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Variability in Comprehension: A Look at the Proficiency Level and Working Memory Functions Among Nonnative Readers of ArabicAssaoui, Hicham January 2016 (has links)
This paper investigates the influence of readers' linguistic proficiency level and working memory functions on the reading behaviors and processes of readers of Arabic as a foreign language (henceforth RAFL). Two aspects of reading comprehension, speed and accuracy, are examined in light of readers' word decoding efficiency, recall performances, response times, scores, and readers' responses to two quantitative tests: a questionnaire and an interview. Twenty-four subjects participated in this study and were divided into two subgroups based on their proficiency level. The proficiency of these subjects was determined based on their academic level and their overall GPA in Arabic. All subjects completed a series of reading passages, in two separate sessions, followed by comprehension questions. Reading and answer time on the reading passages and questions were timed and scored. Data was also collected retrospectively using a questionnaire and an interview. The results suggest that reading comprehension and the ability to select and implement specific reading processes are impacted by the proficiency level of subjects as well as their word decoding skills. A strong correlation between comprehension outcomes and working memory functions was also found. That is, working memory capacity was found to be influential on the reading behaviors of readers especially at the sentence level with better performances reported for readers with larger and more elaborate vocabulary repertoire. Based on these results, some implications and conclusions are discussed for both Arabic reading research and foreign language classroom.
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