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2022 ◽  
pp. 1089-1110
Author(s):  
Chaehyun Lee

Many Korean parents in the U.S. send their children to heritage Korean language schools so that they maintain and further develop Korean as they acquire English. It is, thus, worthwhile to investigate how a Korean teacher and Korean students (as emergent bilinguals) used Korean and English in a Korean heritage classroom. The chapter addresses two research questions: (1) How did the teacher use Korean and English to make her instruction comprehensible during discussions about multicultural children's literature? (2) To what extent were there differences in the two groups of students' (Korean-American and Korean immigrant) use of translanguaging in their oral responses? The findings show that the teacher uses both Korean and English to make her instruction comprehensible and to facilitate her students' participation in class discussions. The findings further reveal differences in the two groups of students' use of language in their oral responses to multicultural texts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-304
Author(s):  
Anna A. Sorokina ◽  
Anastasiia M. Katrich ◽  
Anna N. Shilina

The perspectives of modern South Korean youth on Russia and perspectives of Russian youth on South Korea respectively are reconstructed and interpreted in this article. The research was conducted on the basis of analysis of 100 in-depth interviews with Russian and South Korean student youth (50 students in each group), specializing in Russian-Korean relations, intercultural communications and language of the country studied. Natural and geographic factors, historical and cultural associations, the image of the countrys citizens are found to be the main South Korean students perspectives on Russia. Economic system, the image of the countrys citizens, historical and cultural features of the country represent the main Russian students perspectives on South Korea. In general, mutual images of each country contain many stereotypes which are mediocre for common perception. Such stereotypical thinking and the lack of knowledge about modern socio-economic realities among future specialists in Russian-Korean relations may be a serious obstacle that places under risk effectiveness of further cooperation between the two sides.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 1053-1061
Author(s):  
Oh Hyeok Kwon

This study aims to compare and analyze learning satisfaction and learning immersion among Koreans and foreign students in the Corona 19 era and to prepare the need and alternatives for blended learning classes (face-to-face + non-face) among various class methods. In this study, 208 questionnaires were distributed to every students in the Department of Beauty Design Management at H University in Seoul, and 206 questionnaires were used for the final analysis. The statistical processing was analyzed using SPSS 21.0 as follows: First, a frequency analysis was conducted to identify the general characteristics of the subjects surveyed; second, an exploratory factor analysis was conducted for the verification of the subjects surveyed; and third, a reliability test was conducted to verify the validity of the measurement tool. Fourth, we conducted t-test, ANOVA to find differences in learning satisfaction and immersion according to demographic characteristics, and conducted a Scheme-test as a post-test of ANOVA. Female students showed higher proportion than male students, and the proportion of Korean and foreign students was about the same. The Blended Learning course found that 39.8% of students take more than five courses, meaning that online classes alone are not enough to satisfy students' needs. Foreign students showed higher satisfaction in learning according to nationality than Korean students, and foreign students also showed higher immersion in learning than Korean students.


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