Listening to learners' voices

R. Neilsen, R. Arber
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Abstract

This 2018 issue was initially intended as unthemed, but in fact a theme does emerge from the three papers – that of language learners’ voices, reminding us as educators of how much we need to listen – and the kinds of things we need to listen to more reflexively. Anna Filipi’s paper points to the frequent absence of the voices of international students in investigations, giving an account of their identities through a critical examination of English language learner categorisation. Suma Sumithran then asks how EAL/D teachers speak about their adult students’ language learning experiences, indicating that sometimes students’ voices are not heard in crucial ways, resulting in a perpetuation of cultural stereotyping, even if their teachers engage with them with the best of intentions. In an Australia characterised by cultural and linguistic diversity, an examination of the hybrid and fluid identities of its peoples reveal that ‘othering’ based on geographical nation-state boundaries is highly problematic. Finally, Nicholas Carr and Michiko Weinmann look at written corrective feedback from a sociocultural angle to give an account of how the voices of adult English language learners in Japan reveal their experiences of processing teacher feedback through collaboration, both with peers and with the language teacher.
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倾听学习者的声音
2018年的这一期最初是没有主题的,但事实上,这三篇论文确实出现了一个主题——语言学习者的声音,提醒我们作为教育工作者,我们需要倾听多少,以及我们需要更条件反射地倾听哪些东西。Anna Filipi的论文指出,在调查中经常缺少国际学生的声音,并通过对英语学习者分类的批判性检查来解释他们的身份。Suma Sumithran随后询问EAL/D教师如何谈论他们成年学生的语言学习经历,指出有时学生的声音在关键方面没有被听到,导致文化刻板印象的延续,即使他们的教师带着最好的意图与他们交流。在以文化和语言多样性为特征的澳大利亚,对其人民的混合和流动身份的检查表明,基于地理民族国家边界的“他者”是非常有问题的。最后,Nicholas Carr和Michiko Weinmann从社会文化的角度研究了书面纠正反馈,以说明日本成年英语学习者的声音如何揭示他们通过与同伴和语言教师合作处理教师反馈的经验。
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Penton Herrera, L. J. (2022). English and Students with Limited or Interrupted Formal Education: Global perspectives on teacher preparation and classroom practice Using teacher-researcher collaborations to respond to the demands of ‘real-world’ EAL/D learning contexts across the curriculum Implications for Initial Teacher Education (ITE) programs in preparing mainstream teachers for culturally and linguistically diverse classrooms Commercialisation in Australian public education and its implications for the delivery of English as an Additional Language/Dialect: An EAL/D teacher perspective Cenoz, J. & Gorter, D. (2021). Pedagogical Translanguaging. Cambridge University Press.
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