A free professional development opportunity from the OER Foundation
3 - 14 December 2012
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Scooped by Shona Whyte onto TELT |
A free professional development opportunity from the OER Foundation
3 - 14 December 2012
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Discourse domain approach to teaching ESP and application to task-based university courses.
Shona Whyte's insight:
Slides from a conference presentation I gave at the ESP workshop during the French annual conference of university English teachers and researchers. http://saes2013.u-bourgogne.fr/ateliers/41-atelier-23-anglais-de-specialite-geras.html
I argue that we can use the notion of discourse domain to inform task-based teaching for all kinds of ESP, including students who are traditionally classified as "specialist" (pre-service EFL teachers) and "non-specialist" or "specialists in other disciplines" (LANSAD; or usual ESP fields such as medicine, law etc.).
Shona Whyte's curator insight,
May 21, 4:20 AM
Un travail de recherche à partir de cours hybride pour étudiants LANSAD en master et doctorants. Article ici : http://asp.revues.org/ (mars 2013) Delete the scoop?
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Calico 2011 Opening Keynote by Bryan Smith on the links between CALL and SLA theory Delete the scoop?
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Does research engagement by teachers (i.e. reading and doing research) enhance the quality of their classroom practices? In this talk I draw on a series of studies which examine language teachers’ and managers’ views on this issue. The findings I report highlight a range of positive, hesitant and negative perspectives on the relationship between research engagement and teaching quality. What also emerges in the views expressed by teachers and managers are diverse conceptions of what ‘research’ means, typically emphasizing personal, practical and informal activities or, in contrast, those which are more formal, theoretical and academic. Neither of these conceptions of research provides a satisfactory basis for promoting research engagement as a productive professional development strategy. I will thus conclude the talk by outlining a conception of teacher research engagement which is feasible and rigorous and which has the potential to contribute positively to the quality of language teachers’ work.
Shona Whyte's insight:
Borg highlights differing views of what consitutes "research" - unsurprisingly, teachers and researchers don't use the same definition, making collaboration challenging. Delete the scoop?
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