scholarly journals A Language Course to Teach Administrative Staff English for Communication in an International University

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barry Lee Reynolds ◽  
Melissa H. Yu

A qualitative case study was conducted to triangulate student interviews, a teacher’s reflection report, and classroom observation data to understand how a local language course prepared Taiwanese administrative staff for international communication across working contexts in an international university. The findings firstly show that the teacher treated course planning as a teacher and student process of co-developing, co-moderating, co-revising, and co-managing learning resources and content. The teacher empowered the administrative staff by giving them the authority to select language targets for study that the staff thought would be useful to fulfil their job duties. Secondly, participation of the administrative staff was important in creating and managing language resources for international communication. The teacher used vocabulary and dialogue writing and speaking practices that were contextualised to the needs of the administrative staff. The targeted vocabulary was selected by the administrative staff based on gaps in their knowledge and was then used to co-construct dialogues that addressed scenarios the staff had previously encountered that necessitated the use of English with internationals. Thirdly, developing the course to address the administrative staff’s communication needs was a process of rebalancing teacher autonomy, learner autonomy, and course development. Both the teacher and the students perceived the course effective in encouraging practical changes in the administrative staff’s learning and use of English, which they mostly attributed to the non-formal nature of the course and the support from higher management. Implications for planning and implementing English language courses for international communication were drawn from the findings

2021 ◽  
Vol VI (IV) ◽  
pp. 34-41
Author(s):  
Hina Iqbal ◽  
Muhammad Saeed

Academic writing plays a pivotal role in developing research proposals. The present study aimed to explore the grammatical errors that M.Phil/PhDs scholars commit in academic writing. The present study employed a qualitative case study designed to explore the challenges in the English language faced by the M.Phil and PhDs scholars. The 20 Ph.D. and 36 M.Phil scholars were selected by busing purposive sampling technique. Data were collected by using two self-developed semi-structured interviews protocol. Thematic analysis approach was employed for data analysis. The findings revealed that all the participants reported that correct use of tenses was a big hurdle that entailed the other grammatical mistakes and reduced the report quality because all the lexical aspects are linked with these mechanics. The study recommended that English language courses be offered to postgraduate, M. Phil and Ph.D. scholars to learn the technical aspects of the language and provide students with online interactive programming.


Author(s):  
Irina Shelenkova ◽  
Laula Zherebayeva

Special skills, abilities and knowledge, necessary for professional growth and/or education in a foreign academic environment can be developed by means of foreign language learning. English language training in the context of academic mobility development should be based on high educational quality; advanced level of English demonstrated by students and academics; their informational, social and cultural preadaptation. The aim of the research is to apply this concept in practice and make Turkey more attractive for academics and students from other countries. The main result of the research will be the creation of the coursebook ‘Study, Teach and Research in Turkey. English for Academic Mobility’ for Intermediate/Upper-Intermediate learners, including Students’ Book, Teachers’ Book, DVD with audio and video material. The course development involves several stages. The course can be useful for university students and academics and language courses in Turkey and abroad. Keywords: Academic mobility; cultural preadaptation; higher education; teaching English.


2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor Carson ◽  
Hidenori Kashihara

The goal of this study was to elucidate how students’ preferences regarding their first language use (L1, or Japanese) in the second language (L2, or English) class varied with proficiency. Participants were 305 first- and second-year students in English-language courses in International Studies and Information Technology departments in a Japanese university. Research questions: 1) Did desires for L1 support vary with proficiency (“Proficiency Effect”); did proficiency levels influence when L1 support was 2) desirable; and 3) undesirable? Participants selected yes/no or multiple choice answers in an anonymous questionnaire. Agreement percentages, classified by participants’ scores on the Test of English for International Communication (TOEIC) into five proficiency levels, were analysed using Excel. Results revealed two Proficiency Effect patterns, influencing when L1 support was most and least desired in varying classroom situations. Participants preferred more instructive than affective L1 support. Recommendations for educators and future research were suggested. 本論の目的は、第2言語(L2または英語)授業における第1言語(L1または日本語)使用に関して、学生のL2習熟度に応じて、学生の希望がどのように変化するかを把握することにある。本研究は、日本の大学で国際学部および情報科学部に在籍する、1・2年生305名を被験者として行った。リサーチ・クエスチョンは、以下の通りである:(1)L1サポートに対する希望の強さは、学生の習熟度に応じて変化するのか(「習熟度効果」の有無)、(2)・(3) 学生の習熟度レベルは、どういった状況でL1サポートが望ましいのか、または望ましくないのかを左右するのか。前述の学生は、無記名方式のアンケートにおいて、「はい/いいえ」を選択、または多岐選択方式で回答した。質問に同意した学生の割合を、学生のTOEICスコアに応じて5段階の習熟度に振分け、Excelを用いて分析した。調査結果は、2通りの習熟度効果の存在を示唆した。これらの効果は、英語授業における様々な状況で、L1サポートが最大限および最小限に必要とされるか否かに影響を及ぼしていた。情意のL1サポートと教室内の指示に関するL1サポートを比べた場合、本論の被験者は後者に関してより多くのL1サポートを希望していた。英語教育者向けにいくつかの提言を行い、今後の研究計画についても言及した。


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 164
Author(s):  
Osama Wdidi

The current study is conducted to evaluate the English language textbook used for university students who specialized in engineering; the case study of this research is the textbook which is indorsed to teach English to the university students of engineering college at Sudan International University. The main objective of this evaluation is to analyze the textbook to recognize whether it suits the engineering students. The adopted method for this study was descriptive analytical method. The researcher used the questionnaire, (an Arabic version) for a sample of (90) engineering college students. The findings of the study have shown that an overwhelming majority of the students agreed that the layout of the textbook is perfect and its design is suitable. Besides, they acknowledged that textbook is quite satisfactory in terms of its activities. Based on the above findings, the researcher comes to the conclusion that the textbook which is taught in this university, with all these positive views is definitely a favorable and useful textbook for the engineering students and at Sudan International University.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 74-84
Author(s):  
Fienny M Langi

This study intends to analyze student learning difficulties in English language courses. This case study was conducted at IAKN Manado, specifically 30 students in the first semester of the 2019/2020 school year from 3 different study programs. Researchers use a classic and individual approach to combine data, and analyzed with qualitative descriptive methods. The results showed that students' learning difficulties occurred due to feelings of compulsion in learning, poor mastery of learning concepts, being unable to remember lessons, and not having the opportunity to practice English. Referring to the findings, it is recommended that the teacher and institutions should facilitate and provide high motivation for the learning process of English.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 174-196
Author(s):  
Maria Sabaté Dalmau

Abstract This paper analyzes English-Medium-Instruction (EMI) lecturers’ ambivalent orientations towards neoliberal language policies and linguistic entrepreneurship. The data includes interviews with six case-study lecturers’ biographic narratives, audiologs and video/audio-recorded observations, collected in a market-oriented Catalan university. I show that lecturers problematize Englishization policies but operationalize them by presenting themselves as leading actors in the deployment of EMI. Following “managerialism” logics, they envision English as an economically-convertible “career skill”, imperative to meet new employability/workplace demands. They carve advantaged professional ethos linked to their self-attained English-language resources. They devalue their “non-native” accent but present themselves as content and English-language lecturers, distinguishing themselves from “ordinary” colleagues who teach in local languages, in narratives of “competitiveness” whereby they naturalize a socioeconomically-stratifying system of meritocracy/revenue grounded on the marketization of English. This contributes to understand neoliberal-governance regimes which impose language-based mechanisms for lecturers’ profiling based on views of education as the corporatized “making” of productive workers-to-be.


2021 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 78-108
Author(s):  
LINA JASSIM

This study aims to examine using and learning English by administrative staff. Questionnaire and interview were employed to examine the ability of 10 administrative staff in using and learning English for communication purposes in School of Business Management at UUM. The data analysis reflected the linguistic diversity depending on the communicative needs across university workplaces. The administrative staff practiced various strategies to exploit the effectiveness of learning and using English for communication. They exploited the opportunities of learning for using English for communication purposes. Thus, the suggestions of this study are that the disciplinary knowledge about using and learning English to the communication needs of English for Specific Purposes (ESP) research and other areas widens the English as an International Language (EIL) paradigmatic scope for research and pedagogy to import ESP courses in the future should be regarded simply for learners with related needs and backgrounds. The aim of this case study was not to overgeneralize the results to a broader population, but instead to narrowly assess the impact of English learning on a certain group of learners with the present EIL and ESP literature. Keywords: Administrative staff; An international language ;International Students; Communication purposes; Learning


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 414-423
Author(s):  
Fatma ZAGHAR ◽  
El-Alia Wafaâ ZAGHAR

In this day and age, it is absolutely indispensable for acquiring competence in English to grapple with the real impediments and huge challenges of the modern epoch. The emergence of English as a global language is among the factors that could explicate its vitality and its expansion. The basic burden of making language courses more relevant to learners’ needs resulted in the advent of languages for specific purposes movement, known in English Language Teaching circles as English for Specific Purposes. ESP then, has since its inception in the early 1960s become one of the most dynamic branches of applied linguistics in general, and of Teaching English as a Foreign Language in particular. To amass relevant data, a case study was conducted through a combination of a questionnaire, classroom observation, and informal interviews with language teachers and subject specialists. The main aim of this present paper is to precisely delineate the teaching/learning process of ESP in the department of Computer Sciences at the University of ORAN1 in Algeria, and the learners’ attitudes towards this teaching. For this purpose, it is necessary to explore the utility of ESP as perceived by learners, and to address problems faced by instructors. The results indicate that the students have a positive attitude towards ESP and that their poor achievement was due to multiple reasons. This digest concludes by offering some suggestions and implications as remedial actions to the major confronted concerns.


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