Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom

<p>In Japan, English has been a compulsory school subject from Year 5 of elementary school since 2011 (Japanese Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, 2008). English conversation schools and after school programs have also become increasingly popular. To help bolster Japan’s English educa...

Mô tả đầy đủ

Chi tiết về thư mục
Tác giả chính: Aiken, K
Định dạng: Luận văn
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: 2022
Những chủ đề:
_version_ 1826315975140573184
author Aiken, K
author_facet Aiken, K
author_sort Aiken, K
collection OXFORD
description <p>In Japan, English has been a compulsory school subject from Year 5 of elementary school since 2011 (Japanese Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, 2008). English conversation schools and after school programs have also become increasingly popular. To help bolster Japan’s English education, many public and private schools alike have marketed English-only instruction or “No Japanese” environments as the best way to facilitate learning to children. However, in Japan and across the world, teachers may not always be willing or able to carry out such curricula or policies. </p> <p>Using a mixed methods approach, this paper aimed to uncover how teachers at various teaching establishments in Japan feel about banning the use of Japanese in the English classroom. Through an online questionnaire, in-class observations, and teacher interviews, participants were asked if and when they use their students’ first language (Japanese) and how they view their current teaching situation as well as their ideal situation. </p> <p>Correlation analysis of the questionnaires showed that the age of students taught was related to how much teachers use Japanese in the classroom. It also uncovered that the teachers’ school’s policy showed some relationship to how the teacher viewed using Japanese. In other words, teachers with more liberal views of first language use in the classroom tended to work for schools that shared those views or supported first language use in the curriculum. </p> <p>Qualitative analysis of the observations and interviews showed that a teacher’s education and experience may influence their opinions as well. Although the data collected was limited due to the restraints of the COVID-19 pandemic, this paper highlights the trend that English-only may not be favored by all teachers and may not be entirely realistic within the contexts of English education in Japan. </p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:19:24Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:273b9e32-cfad-4fe8-9fd9-1e1b6df10ee9
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:35:50Z
publishDate 2022
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:273b9e32-cfad-4fe8-9fd9-1e1b6df10ee92024-12-01T19:24:58ZExamining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroomThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:273b9e32-cfad-4fe8-9fd9-1e1b6df10ee9English language--Study and teachingEnglishHyrax Deposit2022Aiken, K<p>In Japan, English has been a compulsory school subject from Year 5 of elementary school since 2011 (Japanese Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, 2008). English conversation schools and after school programs have also become increasingly popular. To help bolster Japan’s English education, many public and private schools alike have marketed English-only instruction or “No Japanese” environments as the best way to facilitate learning to children. However, in Japan and across the world, teachers may not always be willing or able to carry out such curricula or policies. </p> <p>Using a mixed methods approach, this paper aimed to uncover how teachers at various teaching establishments in Japan feel about banning the use of Japanese in the English classroom. Through an online questionnaire, in-class observations, and teacher interviews, participants were asked if and when they use their students’ first language (Japanese) and how they view their current teaching situation as well as their ideal situation. </p> <p>Correlation analysis of the questionnaires showed that the age of students taught was related to how much teachers use Japanese in the classroom. It also uncovered that the teachers’ school’s policy showed some relationship to how the teacher viewed using Japanese. In other words, teachers with more liberal views of first language use in the classroom tended to work for schools that shared those views or supported first language use in the curriculum. </p> <p>Qualitative analysis of the observations and interviews showed that a teacher’s education and experience may influence their opinions as well. Although the data collected was limited due to the restraints of the COVID-19 pandemic, this paper highlights the trend that English-only may not be favored by all teachers and may not be entirely realistic within the contexts of English education in Japan. </p>
spellingShingle English language--Study and teaching
Aiken, K
Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title_full Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title_fullStr Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title_full_unstemmed Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title_short Examining teachers’ perceptions and attitudes of Japanese use in the English classroom
title_sort examining teachers perceptions and attitudes of japanese use in the english classroom
topic English language--Study and teaching
work_keys_str_mv AT aikenk examiningteachersperceptionsandattitudesofjapaneseuseintheenglishclassroom