2001
DOI: 10.14507/epaa.v9n10.2001
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Japanese EFL Teachers' Perceptions of Communicative, Audiolingual and Yakudoku Activities

Abstract: In recent years, the learning of English as a Foreign Language in Japanese high schools has become the focus of new educational policies applied at the national level. One of these is The Course of Study issue by the Ministry of Education, in which teachers are, for the first time in a long series of curriculum guidelines, adjured to develop students' "positive attitudes towards communicating in English." Another is the JET program, which has put thousands of native English speaking assistant language teachers… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…More importantly, while Ms. Q was able to exploit the space and resources that were available to her and make agentic decisions that reflected her teaching philosophy, her disappointment with this profession and her frustrations with the private EFL industry in China resonate with a similar serious problem that other EFL teachers in the broader Asian context face. Kim (2004) and Gorsuch (2001), for example, report similar findings encountered by EFL teachers in Korea and Japan, respectively. In light of this solemn reality, we call for future LTI research to shed light on teacher retention, especially in a rapidly increasing EFL industry where neoliberalism has…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 56%
“…More importantly, while Ms. Q was able to exploit the space and resources that were available to her and make agentic decisions that reflected her teaching philosophy, her disappointment with this profession and her frustrations with the private EFL industry in China resonate with a similar serious problem that other EFL teachers in the broader Asian context face. Kim (2004) and Gorsuch (2001), for example, report similar findings encountered by EFL teachers in Korea and Japan, respectively. In light of this solemn reality, we call for future LTI research to shed light on teacher retention, especially in a rapidly increasing EFL industry where neoliberalism has…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 56%
“…Tajino and Tajino (2000) argue that NETs 4 and LETs in Japan should have their distinctive roles in the classroom and what is important is team learning, whereby teachers as well as students are encouraged to be open-minded in learning from each other. They acknowledge that this was rarely the case and much of the literature reports challenges with unclear roles and lack of training or experience in collaborative forms of teaching being particular problems (Gorsuch, 2001;Mahoney, 2004).…”
Section: Previous Findings On Collaboration In Net Schemesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With respect to the Japanese context, in spite of curriculum reform over the past decade there still seems to be difficulties associated with moving towards more communicative language teaching and even more so a recognition of the importance of intercultural literacy (Ingram, Kono, O'Neill & Sasaki, 2008). The results of Gorsuch's (2001) national survey of Japanese high school EFL teachers' across nine prefectures identified several factors that may influence teachers' lack of use of communicative language learning experiences. These included large class size (in excess of 40), the need to prepare for university entrance examinations, students' expectations, the need to focus on the set text book, students' and teachers' English proficiency levels and teachers' professional development.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%