scholarly journals Teachers’ and Students’ Attitudes towards the Implementation of Content-Based Instruction in Higher Education in Ho Chi Minh City

2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 106
Author(s):  
Bui Phu Hung ◽  
Tran Thi Hai

<p>Content-based instruction programs carried out in higher education in Ho Chi Minh City rests against national language-in-education policy and planning. However, in the first phase of implementation, this kind of courses proves problematic. This present study investigated teachers’ and students’ opinions on the implementation of content-based instruction (CBI) courses at three universities to make necessary recommendations for institutional developments. More than half of the students found the curricula problematic and thought their teachers should develop themselves more. In addition, teachers believed the institutions which they were working for should offer them opportunities to study overseas. The one thing which most of the teachers and students agreed on was that CBI was a good language-in-education policy.</p>

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 120
Author(s):  
Carlos Miguel Ferreira ◽  
Ana Isabel Santos ◽  
Sandro Serpa

The use of electronic slide presentations (ESP), usually through PowerPoint or Prezi software, has become widespread in higher education and is part of the expectations and perceptions of both teachers and students of how a successful and quality class should be. Is this dissemination of ESP use justified by the pedagogical quality fostered in learning? While its use can help focus attention on the content of the subject during classes, there are also limitations in this process, both in the dimension of teaching, by the teacher, and in the dimension of learning, by the student. This paper seeks to provide a contribution to the debate on this topic, and the advantages and limitations in using ESP. It is concluded that there is a need, on the one hand, to define the use of ESP, by assaying their application, as well as, on the other hand, to simultaneously develop other pedagogical ways of teaching, whose articulation can make the student’s role more active and pertinent, and enable the feedback to the student on the part of the teacher, so that it may be possible to regulate the teaching and learning process in a timely manner.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-22
Author(s):  
Robert Krzysztofik ◽  
Agata Zagórowska ◽  
Iwona Kantor-Pietraga ◽  
Dominika Malchar-Michalska ◽  
Marzena Lamparska ◽  
...  

Abstract The determinants of higher education policy have their sources in various spheres, such as economic, social, educational, national policy, administrative, and demographic. Problems for the development of higher education also stem from these spheres. One of them is the challenging demographic situation that is a significant element of developing higher education in southern Poland (particuarly in the Silesia region). Given this context, this article aims to indicate the policies of the universities in the region which respond to the existing demographic threats. This relationship is to confront student opinions regarding their vision for their education and future career within the current demographic situation. Using research-based on an analysis of university and regional local government strategic documents and surveys carried out among students, we conclude that higher education development policy is responding to the demographic transformation. Meanwhile, students’ attitudes to the challenges of the demographic situation is quite “flexible” and relatively ambivalent. This article presents the contrast between the increasingly tricky demographic situation in Silesia, Poland, and the limited response in the two main groups of stakeholders – academic authorities and students – that require shaping higher education ipolicy towards future demographic challenges.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ince Dian Aprilyani Azir

This paper discusses language policy and planning in the context of Indonesia as a multilingual country. Indonesia becomes the second largest linguistic diversity in the world with 742 local languages (Martí et al., 2005, p. 48) spreading to its 17,508 islands. With such a long history towards the language planning and policy in Indonesia, the Youth Pledge 1926 formulated the national language that was officially called as Bahasa Indonesia derived from Malay language (Paauw, 2009, p. 4). Since 1928, Bahasa Indonesia becomes the official and the national language of the Republic of Indonesia.To answer the challenges of the globalisation era, a language policy was issued by the Ministry of Education and Culture in 1998. It allows English as the first foreign language of the country in which it can be used as the medium of instruction notably to the higher education (Darjowidjojo, 2002, p. 51). This 1998 Official Policy opens up the opportunities to the tertiary level education institutions to compete in serving the monolingual (English-only) environment to the academic atmosphere. However, in practices, as English is still in position as the foreign language, there are only a few exposures occurring in the higher academic institutions. This directing the classroom practices are expected to conduct English-only instruction during the learning activity. It just means that in Indonesian EFL context, the monolingual approach is ideally preferable.Despite the policy in which the English-only environment is desirable in Indonesia, in fact, the use of mother tongue cannot be avoided. Thus, in this paper, I discuss on whether the Indonesian higher education institutions should fully implement the monolingual approach or these tertiary level institutes should still allow the mother tongue (Bahasa Indonesia) as the medium of instruction. To consider it, I use some previous published journal articles that have conducted some research in higher education institutions. The field of language planning could take benefit from a critical assessment of its past performances not only from the real-world approach but also from the construction of a particular discourse on language and society (Blommaert, 1996, p. 215). The journals discussed in this paper are: 1.Manara, C. (2007). The Use of L1 Support: Teachers' and Students' Opinions and Practices in an Indonesian Context. The Journal of Asia TEFL, 4(1), 145-178.2.Usadiati, W. (2009). Contribution of L1 in EFL Teaching. k@ta-Petra Christian University, 11(2), 171.3.Saputra, W. A., &amp; Atmowardoyo, H. (2015). Translanguaging in Indonesian University Classroom Context: A Discourse Analysis at Muhammadiyah University in South Sulawesi. ELT WORLDWIDE, 2(1), 42-62.All the journal articles deal with the language planning and policy in the Indonesian classroom context. The subjects of the research are at the level of the tertiary education in which they have already got some English learning years at school before getting admitted into the university. These subjects are also the ones whom the government through the 1998 Official Policy expected to have the monolingual approach in the classroom practice. Additionally, they also have English subject as the compulsory subject to be taken during their university levels (Achmad, 1997).The first article is such a good initiation to get to know the teachers' and students' perspectives towards the classroom practices, when and for what purposes they use the first language in learning English as a foreign language. It is kind of giving picture from the educational subjects in the level of practices. The second article tries to provide the evidence of the L1 support through the classroom actions. The study results strengthen the argument that the L1 should be still using in the EFL Indonesian classroom to have the effective and efficient outcomes. The last article proposes the way to bridge between the use of L1 and L2 collaboratively in the term called translanguaging.


1970 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 187-211
Author(s):  
Cezary Kościelniak

The paper analyses how the changes of the welfare state meets the transformation of the higher education policy in the cultural perspective. Culture plays an important role in building the concept and practice of the Western welfare state institution, also the knowledge institutions. The idea of the contemporary university is suitable to the welfare expectations. On the one hand, the universities are expected to provide mass education and minimize the differences between social strata’s. On the other, after 50 years of the welfare regime in Western Europe, the state of the art universities and departments did not expand their accessibility to the students from lower social classes. What is more, in some cases, the access to is more difficult than before. The next part of the paper includes analyses of the Polish exception of the welfare state, based on the concept of the “post-grange culture” and its application to the higher education policy.


2007 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerhard Leitner

Australia’s policies on languages of the late 1980s were characterized by a balance between the community and broader needs of the nation on the one hand and European and Asian languages on the other. In a climate of ever stronger economic rationalism, globalization and shrinking resources these policies shifted to economic benefit arguments in the 1990s; community-based policies came under attack. European languages suffered more at first, but recently Asian languages have also been jeopardized. This raises several questions: Should Asian (and other) languages continue to be promoted for community or for national needs? Should there be an emphasis on English, the national language, and should migrants be incited to shift to it in light of the growing use of English worldwide and especially in the Asia-Pacific region? This paper explores different facets of the debate about policy and planning with regard to English and Asian languages and the political tension that links them.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 30-35
Author(s):  
O. Sakaliuk ◽  
F. Trishyn

The organization of education for persons who are studying is carried out in accordance with the coursestimetabling. Courses timetabling should provide an effective implementation of the curriculum in full.The problem of creating the courses timetabling has been given sufficient attention during the last decades. But even today,the process of creating the courses timetabling requires a fairly large part of human control. The typical problem of creatingthe courses timetabling is to plan a set of meetings between teachers and students over a period of time that requires someresources and should meet some additional requirements. Significant requirements in scheduling are those in which theteacher, student, or audience is not used more than once at the one-time interval. Creating the courses timetabling ininstitutions of higher education is carried out every semester. Preparing the timetabling of the courses is a labor-intensive,tedious process that requires a significant amount of human resources and time.In this scientific article, an analysis of process creation of the courses timetabling is carried out. In the course of work areinvestigated basic guidance documents for the creation of the courses timetabling. On the basis of controlled observation,where the observer was included in the process and conducted in real conditions, on the basis of the dispatch of educationaldepartment of the Odessa National Academy of Food Technologies, the process of creation of the courses timetabling isdescribed, and the main structures of the institution of higher education, which are involved, are determined. On the basis ofcontrolled observation, where the observer was included in the process and conducted in real conditions, on the basis of thedispatch section of educational department of the Odessa National Academy of Food Technologies, the process of creation ofthe courses timetabling is described, and the main structures of the institution of higher education, which are involved, aredetermined. Constraints which must be observed during the process are divided into hard and soft. Actual solutions areinvestigated, such as: genetic algorithm, greedy algorithm, graph coloring method, method of logical programming withconstraints, etc. Describes what determines the performance of these methods and algorithms.


Author(s):  
O. V. Drobot

Social tendency to distance various forms of social interaction, including learning, is intensifying in the times of highly developed information and communication technologies. Online communication of teachers and students — in chats, online forums and conferences — becmes an alternative to traditional learning. During the quarantine related to the COVID-19 pandemic, distance learning (DL) was introduced in higher education institutions of Ukraine. The aim of the present study is to reveal the characteristics of students’ motivation for distance learning within the pandemic. Following methods were used for this purpose: the author’s questionnaire «Attitude to Distance Learning in Higher Education»; the method of «Eductional Motviation in Higher Education» by T. I. Ilyina, «Method of Diagnosing Personality for Motivation to Avoid failure» (by T. Ehlers), «Method of Diagnosing Personality for Motivation to Succeed» (by T. Ehlers). The empirical study continued throughout July-August 2020. The survey of students’ attitudes to DL showed three types of such attitudes: 48 % are positive about distance learning, 30 % are neutral, and 22 % are negative. Diagnosis of motivation to get higher education in students with different attitudes to distance learning revealed following trends: the highest rate of motivation to acquire knowledge is observed in students with a positive attitude to DL; the motive for obtaining a diploma dominates among students with a negative attitude to DL. High levels of motivation to succeed do not depend on the type of attitude to DL. The dominance of high levels of motivation to succeed compared to low levels of motivation to avoid failure is inherent in students with a positive attitude to DL. Significant differences were found between the parameters of «motivation to succeed» and «motivation to avoid failure» (p> 0.05) among students with a neutral attitude to distance learning. Thus, based on our empirical observation, we noted the correlation between the type of attitude of students to DL and their motivation to avoid failure, and the lack of such correlation between the type of attitude of students to DL and their motivation to succeed.


Author(s):  
Claudia Patricia Alvarez Ayure

The world continues to evolve, where globalization has been the driving factor behind changes in society, thereby creating challenges that could be seen as opportunities in education. Areas such as collaboration, teamwork along with intercultural awareness and communication are just a few of the areas that are being addressed in the educational arena amongst practitioners. Approaches such as Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL), Content Based Instruction (CBI) and English as a Medium of Instruction (EMI) have proven to be viable options for bi/multilingual educational environments across the globe. This editorial discusses research from four continents – the Americas, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East (The United States of America, Taiwan, Iran, Mexico, Turkey, Colombia, Puerto Rico, and Italy) – reporting on the diversity in integrating content and language in bi/multilingual teaching environments. Key issues such as children’s literature and CLIL, reading comprehension in English as a Foreign Language (EFL), language objectives in lesson plans and assessment in content-based instruction. Furthermore, EMI and the internationalization of higher education, teachers’, and students’ beliefs on the use of Spanish in an advanced English classroom and the implementation of CLIL in the field of pharmacology will also be discussed, where insights into how content and language are integrated at the different educational levels.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document