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Narratives of infertile Muslim women: the construction of personal and socio-cultural identities in weblogs
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The influence of student perception of teacher emotional intelligence and happiness on foreign language learning
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Science in exile: EAL academic literacies development of established Syrian academics
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The influence of L2 on L1: metapragmatic judgments of L1 non-verbal greetings by Saudi L2 speakers of English - a mixed methods study
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Whose Karate? Language and cultural learning in a multilingual Karate club in London
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Deux ou trois choses que je sais d’elles : les variantes émergentes en français multiculturel de la région parisienne
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Emotion recognition ability across different modalities: the role of language status (L1/LX), proficiency and cultural background
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Visual cues and perception of emotional intensity among L1 and LX users of English
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Closest conjunct agreement in replacives: experimental evidence from Estonian
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Do you see / hear / understand how he feels? Multimodal perception of a Chinese speaker’s emotional state across languages and cultures
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How to prepare psychotherapists for interpreter-mediated therapy?
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Academic socialisation through collaboration: textual interventions in supporting exiled scholars’ academic literacies development
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Negotiating the language(s) for psychotherapy talk: a mixed methods study from the perspective of multilingual clients
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The role of intellectual humility in foreign language enjoyment and foreign language classroom anxiety
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The East India Company Language Policy in the early 19th Century
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Activism signage, emplacement, and sense of public space: a mixed methods study of the linguistic landscape of Bloomsbury
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The foreign language classroom anxiety scale and academic achievement: an overview of the prevailing literature and a meta-analysis
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The predictive power of sociobiographical and linguistic variables on foreign language anxiety of Chinese university students
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Are EFL pre-service teachers’ judgment of teaching competence swayed by the belief that the EFL teacher is a L1 or LX user of English?
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Abstract:
This quasi-experimental study investigates whether knowing that an English Foreign Language (EFL) teacher is a ‘native speaker’ (NS) or not may elicit implicit biases in judgements of teaching competence. Participants were 266 pre-service teachers studying in Graz (Austria) and München (Germany). After watching the same identical 5-minute video of a teacher in front of a classroom, they were invited to rate her on four dimensions (language, teaching, assessment, communication) and asked whether they would love to have this person as an English teacher. Close to half of the participants were explicitly told that the teacher was a ‘NS’ and slightly over half that she was a ‘NNS’. No significant differences were found between both conditions. Multiple regression analyses showed that teaching skill was the strongest predictor of loving the teacher, followed by language skill. Analysis of feedback collected through an open question revealed that only a small minority of participants mentioned the words NS/NNS. These findings suggest that bias about ‘NS/NNS’ is minimal in this population. We conclude by pleading to retire the toxic terms ‘NS/NNS’ and to replace them with the ideologically neutral and more flexible dichotomy of first and foreign language (L1/LX) user (Dewaele 2018).
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/31075/ https://doi.org/10.1515/eujal-2019-0030 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/31075/3/31075.pdf
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