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MEd TESOL Candidate Seeking Your Opinions and Experiences

 
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stoth1972



Joined: 16 May 2003
Posts: 674
Location: Seattle, Washington

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 5:06 pm    Post subject: MEd TESOL Candidate Seeking Your Opinions and Experiences Reply with quote

Hello sister/fellow ESL teachers!

I'm a student at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, and I'm collecting data for my study on the occurrences of target language culture (that's any culture associated with English-speaking countries) in ESL coursebooks. I've got a questionnaire that should take less than 10 minutes to complete, and I've included it in the body of this message. If you would prefer to receive it via email, please don't hesitate to PM me and say so. Thank you in advance for participating.

Q U E S T I O N N A I R E

1. Check the answer that best completes this sentence as it pertains to your class(es):

Ideally, the coursebook(s) I use for second language learners would�

0 include very few references, if any, to English-speaking culture
(s).
0 include some references to English-speaking culture(s), but no
more than other than references to non-English speaking
cultures.
0 include many cultural references to English-speaking culture(s).

1a. Please explain your choice here (use as much space as necessary):

________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

2. Check the answer that best completes this sentence as it pertains to your class(es):

Overall, my students� motivation to learn English is _______ by the inclusion of content associated with English-speaking culture.

0 increased
0 decreased
0 unaffected

3. Check the answer that best completes this sentence as it pertains to your class(es):

Overall, my students� language acquisition is ____ by content specific to English-speaking culture(s).

0 helped
0 hindered
0 neither helped nor hindered


4. Does content associated with English-speaking culture(s) ever impair the forward movement of your class?

0 Yes
0 No


4a.If yes, please explain (specific examples are welcome):

_______________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________

5. Check the task types below that you believe present a challenge to your students based on cultural differences.

0 Students listen to a recorded conversation and answer
questions.
0 Students practice a scripted conversation from the text.
0 Students fill in the blanks to complete a written task.
0 Students complete matching exercises in written form.
0 Students role play.
0 Students write and deliver a speech in class.
0 Students are asked argue their own opinions in a debate.
0 Students are asked to argue opinions that are not their own in
a debate.
0 Students are asked to look at illustrations, images, charts and
then come to conclusions based on what they see.
0 Students work individually on an assigned task and then
compare their answers with other students.
0 Students must complete a task with very little help from the
teacher, but can ask their peers for help.
0 Students work as a whole class to complete a task.
0 Student work in pairs/groups to complete a task.
0 Students think hypothetically about a topic in order to
complete a task.
0 Students answer questions based on a passage they�ve read.
0 Students discuss a set topic in pairs/small groups.
0 Students write an essay.
0 Students write a letter.




5a. Please elaborate on the challenges those task types present to your students. Specific anecdotes from the classroom are appreciated.

___________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________

___________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________


Please feel free to comment openly about target language culture and its place in the ESL curriculum.

________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

________________________________________________________

Thank you for your time!
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JaredW



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Posts: 105
Location: teaching high school in Sacramento, CA, USA

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 5:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hello sister? fellow ESL teachers? Did I die and re-energize into a politically correct forum.

Good luck on your questionnaire.
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stoth1972



Joined: 16 May 2003
Posts: 674
Location: Seattle, Washington

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 5:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Jared,

Are you currently teaching ESL, and would you be interested in taking the questionnaire?

Very Happy
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JaredW



Joined: 24 Aug 2005
Posts: 105
Location: teaching high school in Sacramento, CA, USA

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 5:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

stoth1972 wrote:
Jared,

Are you currently teaching ESL, and would you be interested in taking the questionnaire?

Very Happy


I do teach ESL, but in a public high school in northern California.
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Glenski



Joined: 15 Jan 2003
Posts: 12844
Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN

PostPosted: Sat Jun 09, 2007 4:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Stoth,
ESL is for people teaching English in native English speaking countries, while EFL is for people teaching English in a land that does not have English as its L1. So, to begin with, your poll is off base in a Japan forum.

If you don't care and want the data anyway, I'd suggest rewriting it quite a bit before asking others to submit answers.

Example:
1) I would check every single item in #5, as I expect many teachers would.
2) Your essay questions are too broad so as to be pointless to score.
3) To say that something "increased or decreased" is also poorly measured because you haven't given the responder a way to say how MUCH.
4) Most importantly, you have not even asked what kind of students the responders teach.
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stoth1972



Joined: 16 May 2003
Posts: 674
Location: Seattle, Washington

PostPosted: Sat Jun 09, 2007 4:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
ESL is for people teaching English in native English speaking countries, while EFL is for people teaching English in a land that does not have English as its L1. So, to begin with, your poll is off base in a Japan forum.


This isn't an entirely accurate statement. Where the student is located has less to do with it than the environment in which they learn, as well as the reason that they study English. Students in Egypt in an English-medium school that excludes use of Arabic in all classes except for Arabic Language and Religion are truly 2nd language learners.

University students in Dubai who come from various Mid-eastern nations use books like Cutting Edge and the Tapestry series (books that one might normally consider to be "EFL"), yet these students are again in an English-medium university. They are using some of the very same texts that their counterparts are using in an academia in Madrid.

For the sake of argument, though, let's say it is under the ESOL umbrella. I'll be looking at variety of texts ranging from those used in community college classrooms in the US, to Cambridge Exam preparation coursebooks, to ESP texts, and so on. Essentially, the sample I'm looking at will include coursebooks used in classrooms around the world that include only non-native speakers learning English, be it a language academy in Japan, a kindy in Korea, or an international school in Brunei.

As for changing the questionnaire, it will have to wait until the next degree. It's been approved by my dissertation supervisor, and has been distributed extensively.

Thank you for your feedback, Glenski.
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G Cthulhu



Joined: 07 Feb 2003
Posts: 1373
Location: Way, way off course.

PostPosted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 4:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

stoth1972 wrote:
Quote:
ESL is for people teaching English in native English speaking countries, while EFL is for people teaching English in a land that does not have English as its L1. So, to begin with, your poll is off base in a Japan forum.


This isn't an entirely accurate statement. Where the student is located has less to do with it than the environment in which they learn, as well as the reason that they study English. Students in Egypt in an English-medium school that excludes use of Arabic in all classes except for Arabic Language and Religion are truly 2nd language learners.


Utter bollocks, my dear chap. Smile IMO you've completely missed the point of what glenski was saying. He's not talking about neat and tidy theory. He's talking about the reality of teaching English in Japan: in the context of Japan glenski is 100% right. You're poll, the way it's written, simply isn't going to capture the Japanese experience: there are, IIRC, a grand total of two total immersion schools in Japan that would actually meet the scenario you describe in your reply above.


And didn't anyone ever tell you that ad hoc modification and justification in order to defend a position is a sure sign of crappy research standards?
Wink (Narrowing your definition in order to sustain it is all good and well, but only if you then only claim the results only apply across that narrowed sample - which means, whatever result you get, it still won't apply to the reality of EFL in Japan for 99.999% of the student population, so glenski's objection still stands.)
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stoth1972



Joined: 16 May 2003
Posts: 674
Location: Seattle, Washington

PostPosted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 5:05 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
And didn't anyone ever tell you that ad hoc modification and justification in order to defend a position is a sure sign of crappy research standards?
(Narrowing your definition in order to sustain it is all good and well, but only if you then only claim the results only apply across that narrowed sample - which means, whatever result you get, it still won't apply to the reality of EFL in Japan for 99.999% of the student population, so glenski's objection still stands.)


1) All experiences teaching non-native speakers of English are valid in this study. You cannot comment on whether or not they are valid w/o knowing the research questions themselves.

2) I stated in my previous comment that my sample includes a wide range of books used under the ESOL umbrella. My mistake for typing "ESL" without full disclosure of what the study entails, chap.
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G Cthulhu



Joined: 07 Feb 2003
Posts: 1373
Location: Way, way off course.

PostPosted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 8:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

stoth1972 wrote:
Quote:
And didn't anyone ever tell you that ad hoc modification and justification in order to defend a position is a sure sign of crappy research standards?
(Narrowing your definition in order to sustain it is all good and well, but only if you then only claim the results only apply across that narrowed sample - which means, whatever result you get, it still won't apply to the reality of EFL in Japan for 99.999% of the student population, so glenski's objection still stands.)


1) All experiences teaching non-native speakers of English are valid in this study. You cannot comment on whether or not they are valid w/o knowing the research questions themselves.


Yes, you are entirely correct in what you say above. But, if you want to take another stab at reading what I actually wrote you'll see that you haven't answered the questions I raised; If all experiences are valid in your study then you should structure you questions to capture all experiences accurately. You current questions, as first pointed out by glenski, do not capture the typical Japanese experience at all. Either your questions are crappy or you're simply guilty of ad hoc modifications to your research - either way, you're not painting yourself well there, laddie.


Quote:

2) I stated in my previous comment that my sample includes a wide range of books used under the ESOL umbrella. My mistake for typing "ESL" without full disclosure of what the study entails, chap.


Keep practicing those vernaculars - you'll figure them out one day. Smile
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