A CASE STUDY INTO PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS’ PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT TOWARDS LEARNER AUTONOMY AND LEARNER-CENTREDNESS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE EDUCATION

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Borja Manzano Vázquez
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 126-139
Author(s):  
Bakytzhan Zhakanovna Zhankina ◽  
◽  
Ekaterina Alekseevna Kostina ◽  
Bakhytgul Asylbekovna Zhetpisbayeva ◽  
Sergali Tuleubekovich Kargin ◽  
...  

RELC Journal ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 003368822110666
Author(s):  
Hyun-Ju Kim ◽  
Stewart Gray ◽  
Christopher Lange

As student creativity is increasingly emphasized in English as a Foreign Language education, it is necessary to consider instructional techniques to encourage it. This study examines the effectiveness of two instructional techniques on creative writing performance of English as a Foreign Language students in a South Korean university. These techniques are variations of brainstorming known as mind mapping and SCAMPER. Survey data from the participants ( n = 39) were analysed to determine which technique resulted in higher levels of perceived creative output (essays). Additionally, a creativity rubric was developed and used to assign analytic scores to the essays to examine the relative benefits of the two techniques for high and low creative ability students. Results show that SCAMPER produced statistically significantly higher levels of perceived creative output. The essays written using SCAMPER generally received higher creativity scores than those written using mind mapping, though this difference was not statistically significant. Finally, results suggest that both techniques may help to narrow the performance gap between high and low creative ability students.


Author(s):  
Linda van der Kroon ◽  
Kristi Jauregi ◽  
Jan D. ten Thije

The development of intercultural communicative competence is increasingly important in this globalised and highly digitalised world. This implies the adequate understanding of otherness, which entails a myriad of complex cognitive competences, skills and behaviour. The TILA project aims to study how the use of digital communication means in foreign language education can contribute to the development of intercultural understanding when communicating with peers across borders. Understanding is the result of a collaborative construction of shared knowledge, which can be supported through the use of meta-communicative devices (MCDs) (). This case study investigates how pupils used communication strategies during video communication sessions to achieve intercultural understanding. Results reveal that task-based telecollaboration sessions offer learners the opportunity to achieve mutual understanding by utilizing a variety of meta-communicative devices that help the learners to compare their cultures in relation to time, space and habits, verify meaning and clarify utterances.


Author(s):  
Phil Benson ◽  
Jing Huang

This paper discusses the historical development of the concept of teacher autonomy in foreign language education and its relationship to the idea of learner autonomy. Three major phases in the development of conceptions of teacher autonomy are reviewed, involving attention to teacher roles in autonomous learning projects, professional development and professional freedom. Different ways of conceptualising the link between teacher and learner autonomy are discussed and an alternative conception based on the notion of transition from learner autonomy to teacher autonomy in learning-teaching careers is proposed.


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