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‘Makes head hurt’: School-aged learners’ perceptions in the language classroom
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Abstract:
This paper presents a research study which investigates the ways in which school-based language
learners perceive the classroom. Concerned with the ‘ecology’ of the classroom, the aim of the
study is to take language learners’ own perceptions as a basis to understand more about the extent
and types of learner engagement in the pedagogical dimension of the classroom. The study uses
the repertory grid technique to collect data from lower-secondary language learners, and was
chosen for the way it allows learners to speak for themselves. The data indicate that the schoolbased
learners respond primarily with affect to classroom activities, and that behavioural,
cognitive, and affective dimensions of learner engagement are not perceived as distinct categories
by learners. The findings also show the development of a learner culture, where metacognitive
strategies are used that allow learners to negotiate ‘being taught’ and serve purposes that diverge
from the pedagogical purposes of the classroom as a space for language learning. The implications
of these findings and possible teacher action in response to them are presented.
Description:
Date:
2021
Authors:
Sarah Boye
Ishamina Athirah Gardiner
Andrew Littlejohn
Publisher:
Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah Institute of Education (SHBIE)