28
Student perceptions of TL use in the secondary classroom Bernadette Brouwers and Luc Le

Student perceptions of TL use in the secondary classroom Bernadette Brouwers and Luc Le

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Student perceptions of TL use in the secondary classroom

Bernadette Brouwers

and

Luc Le

The Assessment of Language Competence

• Annual international certificate program

• Listening and reading comprehension tests

• Multiple choice format

• Six languages – CH, FR, GE, IN, IT, JA

• Three levels – Certificates 1-3

• Some questions in TL at level 2 and 3

Research Methodology

Data

• 2010 ALC student results

• Certificates 2 & 3 listening & reading tests in

Chinese, French, German, Indonesian, Italian and

Japanese

• Approx 20, 000 students

• Student survey data

Research Methodology

• Research question

• How does students’ perceived use of the target language in the classroom and school/community environment affect their results on the ALC?

Why is this interesting or useful?

• Queries about nature of language programs

• Expectations about use of TL

• Developments in the national curriculum

• Development of professional standards

• Focus on intercultural language learning

Assumptions

• The purpose of language learning is to be able to communicate proficiently in the target language

• learners learn a language best when they are provided opportunities to use the target language to communicate in a wide range of activities … in meaningful situations … . P 41, ACTFL Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Century

• teacher use of the target language is crucial as it provides the learners’ principal, even only, source of live, scaffolded input … p 7, Crawford in RELC Journal 35:1

Research Methodology

Analysis

• Item calibration using Rasch modelling

• Item discrimination and test reliability index

• Relationship between perceived TL use and

purpose and student performance in ALC tests

ALC student survey

Survey frequency

Certificate Frequency Percent Valid percent

Cumulative percent

Chinese 2 1287 6.5 6.5 6.5

French 2 5476 27.7 27.7 34.2

French 3 2333 11.8 11.8 46.0

German 2 1815 9.2 9.2 55.2

German 3 672 3.4 3.4 58.6

Indonesian 2 853 4.3 4.3 62.9

Italian 2 2333 11.8 11.8 74.7

Italian 3 808 4.1 4.1 78.8

Japanese 2 2701 13.7 13.7 92.4

Japanese 3 1501 7.6 7.6 100.0

Language use local community

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language use teacher in classroom

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language use most students in classroom

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language purpose give information

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language purpose instructions

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language purpose discuss

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language purpose explain

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Language purpose social purposes

• 1 never• 2 sometimes• 3 usually• 4 always

Correlations

-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35 Correlation between Listening and Language use

Q1

Q2

Q3

Discussion - listening

• Small but significant correlations

• Strongest languages for community use:– Chinese – French 3– German 3– Italian 2 and 3– Japanese 2 and 3

Correlations

-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35 Correlation between Listening and Language purpose

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Discussion - listening

• Small but significant correlations

• Strongest languages for instructional use:– Chinese 2– French 2 and 3 – German 2– Indonesian 2– Italian 2 and 3

Correlations

-0.10

-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35 Correlation between Reading and Language use

Q1

Q2

Q3

Discussion - reading

• Small but significant correlations• Strongest languages for community:

– Chinese 2, German 3, Italian 3, Japanese 2, Japanese 3

• Strongest languages for teachers:– Italian 2

• Strongest language for students– French 2

– German 2

– Indonesian 2

Indonesian

French 3

Italian 2

Italian 3

Correlations

-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35 Correlation between Reading and Language purpose

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q5

Discussion• Small but significant correlations• Strongest languages for instructions:

French 2, German 2, Indonesian 2, Italian 2, Italian 3,

Japanese 2, Japanese 3

• Strongest languages for discussion:Chinese 2, French 3

• Strongest language for social purposes:German 3

NB No languages showed their strongest correlation for information or explanation purposes

French 2 Chinese 2

German 2 French 3

Indonesian 2 SocialItalian 2 German 3

Italian 3 ExplainJapanese 3 Japanese 2

Limitations

• Data not triangulated

• Teacher background not taken into

account

Summary

• Some variance according to language

• Positive correlation with performance on ALC tests

• Effect greater at Certificate 2 than at Certificate 3

level

• Effect slightly greater for listening than for reading

How can I use this information in my school?

• to stimulate discussion with colleagues

– What are my school’s views/practices on the use of the TL?

– How does the practice in my school reflect the ALC data?

– Do we expose students to authentic interactions optimising the use of the

TL?

– How does the use of the TL relate to our understandings of our own

professional knowledge and practice?

• to review the languages program and look at any underlying

assumptions about the use of the TL