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Peer Assessment and Video Feedback for Fostering Self, Co, and Shared Regulation of Learning in a Higher Education Language Classroom
In: ISSN: 2504-284X ; Frontiers in Education ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03651135 ; Frontiers in Education , Frontiers, 2022, 7, ⟨10.3389/feduc.2022.732094⟩ (2022)
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Towards an international lexicon
In: ISSN: 1863-9690 ; EISSN: 1863-9704 ; ZDM ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03625972 ; ZDM, Springer Verlag, 2022, ⟨10.1007/s11858-022-01349-3⟩ (2022)
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Focus groups as a tool to reveal causes of resistance or openness to non-binary gender norms among kindergarten teachers
In: 11th European Feminist Research Conference: Social change in a feminist perspective ; https://hal.univ-lorraine.fr/hal-03573494 ; 11th European Feminist Research Conference: Social change in a feminist perspective, University of Milano, Bicocca, Jun 2022, Milan, Italy ; https://11efrc.unimib.it/ (2022)
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4
Exploring elementary teachers’ facilitation of discussion in developing students’ mathematical agency
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Perceptions and attitudes of music department chairs and faculty regarding global competence in North Carolina Community College music programs
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The Complex, Dynamic and Co-adaptive Relationship between Pronunciation Teachers’ Cognitions, Pedagogical Practices and Wider Contexts: A Case from Vietnamese Tertiary Education
Dinh, Ngoc Anh. - : Auckland University of Technology, 2022
Abstract: Although pronunciation has until recently been widely neglected in both teaching and research, there is universal acknowledgment of its importance in effective communication. This applies too in Vietnam, where good English pronunciation is seen as imperative in accessing social, educational, and occupational opportunities (Kieu, 2010; Vallely & Wilkinson, 2008; P. A. Vu & Nguyen, 2004). Because of this importance, attention needs to be given to the way in which pronunciation is taught in the Vietnamese EFL context. Evidence, however, appears to suggest that this instruction is often problematic and peripheral to the teaching of speaking and listening. Although there are many facets to this complex situation, one way to unpack it and explore possible solutions is to increase our understanding of pronunciation teachers’ cognitions, practices and contextual factors that might influence teachers’ thinking and their actual teaching. Despite an increasing research interest in teachers’ cognitions and practices in many international contexts (Couper, 2016a, 2016b; Foote, Trofimovich, Collins, & Urzúa, 2016), relatively little attention has been paid to the mental lives and actual teaching practices of pronunciation teachers at universities in Vietnam. The study reported in this thesis scrutinized the relationship between teachers’ cognitions of pronunciation teaching, their practices, and wider contexts at the tertiary level in Vietnam using a multiple case study design. The research involved four teachers. The data were obtained through four teachers’ initial interviews, classroom observations, stimulated (post-observation) recalls, and document analysis. This set of data was complemented by focus group discussions with a self-selected number of the teacher participants’ students (n = 20). The study found that the teachers and students held conflicting views on the value of pronunciation and pronunciation teaching at university. The Nativeness principle seemed to dominate in the teachers’ and students’ choice of goals, models and in their view of good pronunciation teachers. The teachers in this study employed traditional teacher-centred approaches to pronunciation teaching; their teaching was textbook driven with most classroom activities being controlled. The teachers’ cognitions and their teaching practices were diverse and influenced by a number of contextual factors at teacher-intrapersonal, micro, meso, and macro levels. Moreover, a complex, dynamic, and co-adaptive inter-relationship was found between the cognitions, practices of the teachers and these multi-layered contexts. The study has made important empirical, theoretical and methodological contributions. Empirically, it confirms findings of prior studies that (1) pronunciation teaching is often neglected due to teachers’ lack of confidence and training, (2) their practices feature controlled-practice and listen-and-repeat tasks, (3) the teachers advocate intelligibility in theory but follow nativeness in practice and (4) a number of factors mediate the teachers’ cognitions and practices, among others. Theoretically, it confirms the existing conceptualization of teachers’ cognitions as consisting of four constructs: knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and identities, and highlights the interactive nature of the four components. It also confirms that teachers’ cognitions can be explicitly professed or implicitly interpreted from teaching practices; they can also be core or peripheral in nature. Methodologically, the study sees the benefits of incorporating professional conversations rather than interviews in conducting qualitative research. The study provides a number of implications and suggestions for different stakeholders at different contextual levels, including EFL teachers, teacher educators, curriculum and course designers, university authorities, researchers and national policy makers.
Keyword: Pronunciation teaching; Teachers' attitudes; Teachers' beliefs; Teachers' cognitions; Teachers' identities; Teachers' knowledge; Tertiary education
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10292/14983
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A phenomenological study exploring GEAR UP students’ perceptions of post-secondary preparedness.
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8
Indigenous Language Revitalization: Success, Sustainability, and the Future of Human Culture
In: Capstone Showcase (2022)
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9
‘Twenty hearts beating as none’: primary education in Ireland, 1899-1922
Duggan, Michael. - : Dublin City University. School of History and Geography, 2022
In: Duggan, Michael (2022) ‘Twenty hearts beating as none’: primary education in Ireland, 1899-1922. PhD thesis, Dublin City University. (2022)
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10
What Happens in English Class Doesn’t Stay in English Class: How College Writers Remember, Story, and Inhabit the Past in the Present
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11
Understanding the Learning Experiences of Highly Educated refugees from Iraq and Syria en route to Economic Integration in Luxembourg
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12
Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
Lowe, H.; Henry, L.; Wallinger, J.. - : SAGE Publications, 2022
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Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: Perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
Joffe, V.; Wallinger, J.; Henry, L.. - : Sage, 2022
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14
National Languages, Multilingual Education, and the Self-proclaimed "Militants" for Change in Senegal
Iwasaki, Erina. - 2022
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Struggle Gives Birth to Solidarity: The Lived Experiences of Trans Spectrum College Students in Red States Since the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election
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The Paradox of Minzu Higher Education: Structural Inequity and Exclusion of Tibetans in China’s Tertiary Education
Lajiadou, Fnu. - 2022
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Energy Conservation Theory for Second Language Acquisition (Ect-l2a): A Partial Validation of Kinetic Energy– Aptitude and Motivation
Kim, Peter. - 2022
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18
Hybrid system and flipped classroom: digital lexiculturology in CFL ; Dispositif hybride et classe inversée : lexiculturologie numérique en CLE
In: Journées d’études Enseignement en ligne de la langue et de la civilisation chinoises. ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03643992 ; Journées d’études Enseignement en ligne de la langue et de la civilisation chinoises., Jun 2022, Paris, France (2022)
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19
Interaction between orthographic and graphomotor constraints in learning to write
In: ISSN: 0959-4752 ; Learning and Instruction ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03620980 ; Learning and Instruction, Elsevier, 2022, 80 (101622), pp.10.1016/j.learninstruc.2022.101622. ⟨10.1016/j.learninstruc.2022.101622⟩ (2022)
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20
Des corpus de textes pour développer le lexique des affects en FLE
In: Séminaire Modern Language Center ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03630507 ; Séminaire Modern Language Center, King's College London, Mar 2022, London, Royaume-Uni ; https://www.kcl.ac.uk/modern-language-centre (2022)
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