TELT
88
Teacher Education for Languages with Technology / Formation des enseignants de langue avec les TICE
Curated by Shona Whyte
Follow
Scooped by Shona Whyte onto TELT
Scoop.it!

Teachers’ beliefs and practices regarding learner autonomy

Borg, S., & Al-Busaidi, S. (2012). Teachers’ beliefs and practices regarding learner autonomy. ELT Journal, 66(3), 283-292.

 

Abstract

This paper describes a project about the beliefs and practices regarding learner autonomy (LA) held by English language teachers in a university language centre. A distinctive feature of this project was the manner in which professional development workshops for the teachers were informed by prior research about these teachers’ perspectives on LA. Following a brief rationale for the project, we outline its research component before illustrating how this shaped the teacher workshops. The model for relating research and professional development we illustrate here is one that we believe can be applied more generally in supporting teacher development and institutional change in ELT.

Shona Whyte's insight:

Watch an 18 minute video of Simon Borg presenting a paper he co-authored with Saleh Al-Busaidi on teachers' beliefs about learner autonomy

http://www.tesolacademic.org/Video%20clips/2012/RPNov12SB.wmv

 

 

The paper is published in ELT Journal and accessible via subscription.

No comment yet.
Shona Whyte is also curating
Learning technologies for EFL au service de l'innovation pédagogique
Discover Topics Shona Whyte is following
formation 2.0 Content Curation World Digital Presentations in Education Connectivism Tools for Learners ICTmagic
and 45 others
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Shona Whyte
Scoop.it!

Language Change in Philadelphia | William Labov

Language Change in Philadelphia | William Labov | TELT | Scoop.it

Shona Whyte:

Take a minute to hear William Labov on language change in the US.  Literally a minute, part of the University of Pennsylvania's 60 second lecture challenge by different speakers on different topics (https://www.sas.upenn.edu/60second/)

 

Here more from this major figure in modern sociolinguistics in an NPR interview

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5220090&sc=emaf

 

and the atlas of North American English can be accessed here http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/home.html

 

No comment yet.