An Investigation of English Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Using Cantonese in English Classrooms

An Investigation of English Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Using Cantonese in English Classrooms

Author: Suet-Ying Kylie Ng

Publisher: Open Dissertation Press

Published: 2017-01-26

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781361271209

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This dissertation, "An Investigation of English Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Using Cantonese in English Classrooms" by Suet-ying, Kylie, Ng, 吳雪瑩, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: The policy on "Teaching English through English" has been proposed by the Hong Kong Government for decades. However, teachers find it difficult to follow the policy and the use of Cantonese is necessary due to the realistic need of students. The present study aims to investigate the patterns and functions of the use of Cantonese in English lessons, and to examine English teachers' and students' views towards the use of Cantonese in English classroom. This study involved three S4 teachers and twelve students from their classes. Data was collected through audio recording of lessons and interviews with teacher and student participants. The results show that Cantonese was widely used for teaching vocabulary, explaining relatively complicated tasks and classroom management. Teachers seldom reverted to the target language once they have switched to Cantonese. Both the teacher and student participants believed that the use of Cantonese could facilitate the teaching and learning of grammar and vocabulary. Also, it was effective in maintaining classroom discipline, enhancing communication within the classroom, and creating a conducive learning environment. Despite the perceived pedagogical value of Cantonese in English classroom, findings suggest that teachers tended to use Cantonese as a time-saving device rather than a facilitative teaching tool, and the potential pedagogical functions of using Cantonese in English classroom were not fully utilized because of the teachers' lack of strategic planning when using it. It is important for English teachers to reflect on their language choice, and to develop an awareness of using Cantonese effectively to facilitate students' learning of English. DOI: 10.5353/th_b4696028 Subjects: English language - Study and teaching - China - Hong Kong English teachers - China - Hong Kong - Attitudes Students - China - Hong Kong - Attitudes


An Investigation Into Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Vocabulary Learning and the Effectiveness of Different Techniques in Hong Kong School Certificate Examination English Class

An Investigation Into Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Vocabulary Learning and the Effectiveness of Different Techniques in Hong Kong School Certificate Examination English Class

Author: Marion Irene Hughes

Publisher: Open Dissertation Press

Published: 2017-01-26

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781361125519

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This dissertation, "An Investigation Into Teachers' and Students' Perceptions of Vocabulary Learning and the Effectiveness of Different Techniques in Hong Kong School Certificate Examination English Class" by Marion Irene, Hughes, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. DOI: 10.5353/th_b3196164 Subjects: Vocabulary - Study and teaching (Secondary) - China - Hong Kong Vocabulary - Study and teaching (Secondary) - Chinese speakers High school students - China - Hong Kong - Attitudes English teachers - China - Hong Kong - Attitudes


CHANGING ASSESSMENT PERCEPTION

CHANGING ASSESSMENT PERCEPTION

Author: Jiming Zhou

Publisher: Open Dissertation Press

Published: 2017-01-26

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9781361041727

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This dissertation, "Changing Assessment Perceptions and Practices in Chinese College English Classrooms" by Jiming, Zhou, 周季鳴, was obtained from The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong) and is being sold pursuant to Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 Hong Kong License. The content of this dissertation has not been altered in any way. We have altered the formatting in order to facilitate the ease of printing and reading of the dissertation. All rights not granted by the above license are retained by the author. Abstract: This study examines teachers' and students' perceptions and practices of classroom assessment in an English curriculum innovation at a Chinese university. It slices through the layers of the innovation onion to reveal the agentive spaces in which teachers and students interpret and enact assessment for learning (AfL) in first-year college English classrooms. This study adopts a case study approach. A university which actively engaged itself in a change towards AfL was selected as a critical case. Individual and focus group interviews, classroom observations and a documentary analysis were conducted to collect a variety of data from a key change initiator, a faculty leader, three teachers and their students. Data analysis generally followed the qualitative-analysis protocols established by Miles and Huberman (1994). The three teachers demonstrated different awareness of and competence in assessing higher-order learning skills, enhancing learning-facilitating feedback and transforming the students' role in assessment and feedback. A recurring theme emerging from the comparison of teachers' assessment practices is the distinction between convergent and divergent approaches to planning, framing, conducting and using assessment. Teachers' assessment knowledge and their perceptions of English language learning and assessment interplayed with their assessment practices. Perceptual gaps were detected between teachers and their students with regard to the learning goals, the content and forms of classroom assessment, and the way to deliver and use feedback. The interplay between assessment perceptions and practices was interpreted from a perspective of Wenger's social theory of learning. The perceptual mismatches between different stakeholders were bridged through conferring legitimacy of reification and participation to members in other communities of practices. This study contributes to an enhanced understanding of culturally appropriate ways to implement AfL in a Chinese tertiary education context. A convergent-divergent classroom assessment continuum is proposed based on classroom assessment data. An exploratory model is developed to understand change stakeholders' legitimate peripheral participation in assessment innovation. This model advances the argument that change stakeholders' engagement in assessment innovation is interdependent and interrelated. Coordination, transparency, and the negotiability of assessment practices and standards were found to facilitate teacher and student learning. Implications on disseminating assessment changes are discussed on the basis of empirical findings and theoretical abstraction. This study also incorporates a discussion on the implications for teaching Chinese first-year university students and the design, use, and validation of a classroom observation scheme. Future research is needed to explore whether and how teachers' and students' cognitive and metacognitive gains through their participation in assessment innovation can be sustained and transferred to teaching and learning scenarios in the future and/or in other disciplines. Subjects: English language - Study and teaching (Higher) - China


Chinese-Speaking Learners of English

Chinese-Speaking Learners of English

Author: Ryan M. Damerow

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-12-05

Total Pages: 154

ISBN-13: 1000769194

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A compendium of the latest developments in research regarding English language education for Chinese-speaking learners, this volume combines cutting-edge research from multiple internationally-known scholars. The chapters offer unique insights into some of the most salient issues related to this broad topic. The seventh volume in the Global Research on Teaching and Learning English series, co-published with The International Research Foundation for English Language Education (TIRF), this book features chapters with original research written by TIRF Doctoral Dissertation Grant awardees. The volume addresses the crucial and growing need for research-based conversations on the contexts, environments, goals, and measures of success for Chinese-speaking learners of English. It includes sections on language assessment, perceptions in university contexts, and technology, especially in relation to young learners, in order to promote in-depth discussion of the teaching and learning of English for native speakers of Chinese. The volume’s 13 research-based chapters discuss topics such as the impact and implications of using emerging assessment tools; the increase in English for Specific Purposes (ESP) courses; academic speaking and writing; and teaching in an online or hybrid environment. Throughout the book the authors draw on their knowledge of their multiple contexts, as well as their learners’ needs and goals. This volume brings together innovative research for TESOL and TEFL students, language teacher educators, language policy specialists, language assessment scholars, and language teachers. Readers will become familiar with how these issues related to Chinese-speaking learners of English are being addressed in academic circles around the world.


On Becoming a Chinese Language Teacher

On Becoming a Chinese Language Teacher

Author: Pamela Pui-wan Leung

Publisher:

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 636

ISBN-13:

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Abstract: The continual decline of Chinese proficiency has caused serious concerns in Hong Kong. Although most Hong Kong people speak Chinese as their first language, they have not been strongly motivated to learn it in part because of the socio- economic status of English, and in part because of the discrepancies between the spoken and the written forms of Chinese. The absence of a link between the spoken dialect (Cantonese) and the written Modem Standard Chinese language (based mainly on the syntax of Mandarin) makes the learning of Chinese in the 'trilingual' (Cantonese, Mandarin and English) and 'biliterate' (Chinese and English) society laborious. The perception that Chinese proficiency is waning has led to criticisms of the quality of language teachers and language teacher education in the community. Hence, a study of the problems in Chinese language teacher education in Hong Kong is an indispensable step in improving the quality of Chinese language education in Hong Kong. This study takes pre-service teachers' (PST) perceptions as the predomhant factor in understanding how they learn to become a teacher of Chinese. As both students and teachers, the PSTs in this study provide insights into learning, teaching, and learning to teach, the Chinese language. Famous for its cultural tradition, Chinese teaching is typically transmissive. In particular, teachers of Chinese are expected to teach with a missionary zeal for 'educating' students by acting as exemplars. As a result, how a teacher teaches is often determined by how he or she was taught to interpret the nature of Chinese Language. The use of texts written by distinguished authors as teaching materials further encourages language teachers to give higher priority to literature, culture and moral education than language use. Inheriting such a tradition, modem Chinese language teacher education is faced with multiple challenges: to promote cognitive developments in teachers and cognitive teaching approaches to meet the needs of rapidly developing society, and to prepare teachers to maintain a proper balance between moral education and appreciation of culture and literature on the one hand, and teaching language use on the other. This study draws on the literature on Chinese language education, TESOL (teaching English to speakers of other languages), learning to teach, teacher knowledge, beliefs and perceptions, and develops a conceptual framework to interpret the relationships between perceptions and practices as a reciprocal cycle. Perceptions of self as a teacher, the subject matter, and teaching and learning of the subject matter are inseparable from the beliefs and knowledge of the PSTs, which affect how they prepare lesson plans to teach and actually teach in the classrooms. Planning and classroom practices are realised in teaching objectives, instructional strategies and evaluation of teaching effectiveness, which then reinforce knowledge, beliefs and perceptions. The cycle goes on as the PSTs learn more about teaching and accumulate teaching experiences. From this recurring cycle, the PSTs generate personal theories of teaching a specific subject. This study is longitudinal in design, which follows a logical procedure of inquiry. It first examines the PSTs' perceptions of teaching and learning Chinese on entry to, during and on exit from a.two-year teacher education program. Then it turns to the perceptual development and the sources of perceptions and perceptual changes, and how they impact on the PSTs. Finally, the complex relationship between perceptions, lesson planning and classroom practices are elaborated. In particular, data collected in some stages were dependent on the findings of the preceding stage. This adds complexity to the overall research desip of the study. This study uses a multimethod approach with two research populations -the questionnaire surveys of the entire cohort and qualitative data collection from twelve sub-sample participants. Because of the lack of well-established research instruments in the Chinese research context, all methods of inquiry have been revised according to the results of pilot studies. The multimethod approach in this study demonstrates how questionnaire surveys, repertory grids, individual interviews, focus groups, classroom observations and the analyses of lesson plans and reflective journals can be used in a complementary manner to assure the validity of the research. Questionnaire surveys yield the overall perceptions of the cohort on entry to and exit from the teacher education program. The perceptual development of the entire cohort is understood by the findings of the two surveys. Against the backdrop of the overall perceptions of the cohort, the qualitative methods are used to study the sub-sample. Repertory grids reveal the participants' views of teachers of Chinese from different perspectives, whereas individual interviews and focus group discussions tap more deeply into the participants' thinking about how they have learned to teach Chinese. Other qualitative methods such as classroom observation and the analyses of lesson plans and reflective journals provide compelling evidence for indicating the extent that the participants have grasped the craft of teaching. This study suggests from the persistent perceptions and perceptual development of the PSTs that Chinese language education in Hong Kong has been ineffective. Ineffective Chinese language education has a long-lasting negative impact on students including the PSTs. The strong emphasis on literature, culture and moral education, and the knowledge telling and teacher-led traditions have led to a low level of cognitive demand in Chinese teaching. The procedures recommended for teaching a text in Chinese and the assessment criteria of the teacher education program have encouraged the,PSTs to become more didactic in teaching, although they themselves are aware that they should pay more attention to the needs of students. This study argues that student teachers' perspectives form a critical element in reforming Chinese language teacher education in Hong Kong, and that language teacher education should first be ameliorated before language education can be effectively improved. Not only should PSTs of Chinese Language be equipped with better subject matter knowledge, general pedagogical knowledge and pedagogical content knowledge, but Chinese language teacher educators should also be cognisant of the necessity for change. Because learning to teach is often discipline-based, it is more cost-effective and consistent if the teacher educators' Chinese language classes also emphasise cognitive development in the PSTs. To be real exemplars for the PSTs, the Chinese language teacher educators should be involved in continuing critical evaluation of their own practices.


Native and Non-native English Speaking Teachers in China

Native and Non-native English Speaking Teachers in China

Author: Zheng Huang

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 192

ISBN-13: 9789811052859

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This book explores the responses of Chinese English teachers (CETs) and learners to the Native English-Speaking Teacher/Non-Native English-Speaking Teacher (NEST/NNEST) issue by examining the self-perceptions of Chinese English teachers, the perceptions of Chinese learners, and the real practices of the two groups of teachers in the classroom. It reveals how Chinese students' and teachers' perceptions are influenced by the combined forces of Chinese traditional culture and globalization, how Chinese English teachers' classroom practices reflect their perceptions, and how Chinese English teachers struggle to (re)construct their professional identity as English teachers in the dominant ideology and disempowering discourse of native-speakerism. The findings also shed light on the impacts of globalization on Chinese English teachers' professional identity and provide ways to empower them as English language teaching professionals. This book wi ll appeal to a broad readership, including foreign-language teachers - especially NNESTs - around the world, graduate students majoring in sociolinguistics, and scholars of globalization.


Native and Non-Native English Speaking Teachers in China

Native and Non-Native English Speaking Teachers in China

Author: Zheng Huang

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-07-02

Total Pages: 201

ISBN-13: 9811052840

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This book explores the responses of Chinese English teachers (CETs) and learners to the Native English-Speaking Teacher/Non-Native English-Speaking Teacher (NEST/NNEST) issue by examining the self-perceptions of Chinese English teachers, the perceptions of Chinese learners, and the real practices of the two groups of teachers in the classroom. It reveals how Chinese students’ and teachers’ perceptions are influenced by the combined forces of Chinese traditional culture and globalization, how Chinese English teachers’ classroom practices reflect their perceptions, and how Chinese English teachers struggle to (re)construct their professional identity as English teachers in the dominant ideology and disempowering discourse of native-speakerism. The findings also shed light on the impacts of globalization on Chinese English teachers’ professional identity and provide ways to empower them as English language teaching professionals. This book will appeal to a broad readership, including foreign-language teachers – especially NNESTs – around the world, graduate students majoring in sociolinguistics, and scholars of globalization.


Nonnative Speaker English Teachers

Nonnative Speaker English Teachers

Author: George Braine

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2010-04-05

Total Pages: 125

ISBN-13: 1135152020

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This book traces the origins and growth of the nonnative speaker teacher movement in TESOL since its birth a decade ago, summarizes the research that has been conducted, highlights the challenges faced by NNS teachers, and promotes NNS teachers’ professional growth.


The Pedagogy and Practice of Western-trained Chinese English Language Teachers

The Pedagogy and Practice of Western-trained Chinese English Language Teachers

Author: Pu Hong

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2015-06-19

Total Pages: 197

ISBN-13: 1136211969

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Providing an East-West flow of language teaching knowledge and know-how to balance prevailing Western-centric perspectives, this book is an in-depth investigation of the impact of Western-based language teacher education on the pedagogy and practice of Chinese English language teachers who received their training in Western institutions or those that emphasize Western-based teaching approaches. A significant and growing number of these teachers will influence millions of language learners in China over the next decades. The Pedagogy and Practice of Western-trained Chinese English Language Teachers: Forefronts Chinese teachers’ voices and experiences in the context of their workplaces and classrooms Connects and balances theory and practice using a sociocultural lens Discusses the Chinese government’s policies on the training of teachers and analyzes them in terms of their impact on both American and Chinese higher education institutions This is a must read book for anyone interested in learning theory adopted from a Western perspective and applied within an Asian setting.