Transcript
Page 1: Teaching in cultures averse to uncertainty

Bob AshcroftSoka University

Teaching in Cultures Averse to Uncertainty

37th JALT Annual International ConferenceSaturday 19th November 2011National Olympics Memorial CentreYoyogiTokyo

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Overview

1. Educational Scaffolding2. EFL: A Cultural Interface3. Measuring Culture4. This Research5. Scaffolding to Avoid Uncertainty

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Educational Scaffolding

• Lev Vygotsky

• More Knowledgeable Other (That’s us!)

• Gradually Removed

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Scaffolding in EFL

• Advice

• Feedback

• Examples

• Materials

• Instructions

• Activities

• Goals

• Assessment

Teachers: What Kind & How Much

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Culture and EFLEFL ═ inter-cultural interface:

Cultural differences can cause different classroom expectations of teachers and students. The best way to reduce the effect of these inter-cultural incompatibilities is by understanding their sources.

(Richards & Lockhart, 1996 )

Teachers need to consider:

• Cultural variation• Potential problems• Teaching solutions

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Measuring Culture

Geert Hofstede (1980)

• How?

Questionnaires116,000 employees same company40 countries

• Results:

Individualism/CollectivismPower DistanceMasculinity/FemininityUncertainty Avoidance (UA)

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UA in Japanese EFL Classrooms

(Hofstede, G.J. et al., 2002)

TEACHERS STUDENTS British 35 Irish 35 Australians 45 Americans 46 Canadians 47 New Zealanders 50

Japanese 92

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UA in Japanese EFL Classrooms

(Hofstede, 1986)

TEACHERS STUDENTS

•cope with ambiguity

•find rules inhibitive

•loose codes of conduct

•tolerance of diversity

•structure and

predictability

•strict codes of conduct

•prefer absolute truths

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Research Questions

• What is the classroom impact of low UA teachers with high UA students?

• Are teachers adapting their teaching to manage these differentials?

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Methodology

Semi-structured Interviews:

A planned framework, but which also allows interviewees to contribute longer answers and digressions.

(Mills, 2001)

• Interviews Recorded• Clarified the Research Purpose• Between 20 -35 minutes

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Methodology

1 week before the interview:

• Definition of UA

• A summary of current research on UA 

• “Are UA differentials between you and Japanese students the source of different classroom expectations?”

• “How do you adjust your approach to account for these differences?”

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Methodology

Interviewees

• 9 Native-speaker EFL Teachers (UK, USA & Canada)

•  Master’s TESOL/TEFL or Applied Linguistics

• Same Tokyo University

• Aged between 32 and 60

• Between 5 and 14 Years Teaching at Japanese Universities

• 20-25 Student EAP Classes

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Results

UA impacts the following: • Accuracy / Fluency Preferences

• Student / Teacher- Centredness Preferences

• Flexibility / Formality Preferences

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Results

TEACHERS STUDENTSDIFFERENCES

Fluency & communication Accuracy & correction

PROBLEMS

Teacher frustrated: quiet, shy, unresponsive students

Students expect feedback relating to form, not content

Students don't see the communicative applications of English

SOLUTIONS

Rapport building

Visits from post-sabbatical seniors

Preparation + practice → communicative activities

Individual → Pairs → Small Groups → Whole Class

Assign Roles

TBL

Exposure to non-standard Englishes

1. Accuracy versus Fluency

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Results

TEACHERS STUDENTSDIFFERENCES

T ═ facilitator not controller Prefer Teacher-centered Classes

Want active participation Compulsive note-takers

Want student collaboration

Encourage critical thinking

PROBLEMS

Teacher frustration: Students lacking initiative, shy, uncooperative

Stalled activities

Student Confusion / Panic

SOLUTIONS

Realistic Goals – break tasks down into achievable steps

Incremental handover of initiative

Modeling

Preparation + practice → communicative activities

Individual → Pairs → Small Groups → Whole Class

2. Student versus Teacher- Centredness

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Results

TEACHERS STUDENTSDIFFERENCES

Improvisation Transparent activity / class / course objectives, aims and

content

Flexibility Visible measures of achievement

Deviation from lesson plan Formal codes of class conduct

PROBLEMS

Teacher frustration: students inflexible

Anxiety → demotivation

SOLUTIONS

Clear Instructions

Modeling

Start of course: Detailed syllabus and schedule

Start of Class: Objectives and H/W on the whiteboard

3. Flexibility versus Formality

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Results

• Most teacher adaptations are examples of Scaffolding

• Scaffolding reduces Uncertainty (McKenzie,

1999)

• Providing well-scaffolded activities is particularly important in high UA cultures like Japan

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A Scaffolded Exercise

Reading Journal

• A model

• Clarifies expectations

• Achievable activities in manageable steps

• Clear instructions

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Conclusions

• Different levels of uncertainty avoidance of Japanese students and foreign teachers can lead to problems:

o Accuracy / Fluencyo Student / Teacher- Centrednesso Flexibility / Formality

• Teachers adapt their teaching in order to deal with such problems.

• Scaffolding reduces uncertainty, and is therefore particularly relevant to teaching here in Japan.

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THANKS FOR LISTENING!

ANY QUESTIONS?

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Works Cited

Hofstede, G. (1980). Cultures Consequences. International differences in Work-related Values. Beverly Hills: Sage.

Hofstede, G. (1986). Cultural Differences in Teaching and Learning. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, Vol. 1O, pp.301-320.

Hofstede, G.J. et al. (2002). Exploring Culture. London: Inter-cultural Press.

McKenzie, J. (2000). Scaffolding for Success. [Electronic version] Beyond Technology, Questioning, Research and the Information Literate School Community. Retrieved January 17, 2011, http://fno.org/dec99/scaffold.html

Mills, J. (2001). Self-construction through conversation and narrative in interviews. Educational Review, 53, 285-301.

Richards, J.,C. & Lockhart, C. (1996). Reflective Teaching in Second Language Classrooms. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press.


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