Supporting EAL students in regional education contexts: “It creates a huge workload and often times disappointment”

M. Barnes, Seham Shwayli, Pamalee Matthews
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

There has been increasing attention on mainstream teacher beliefs on English as an Additional Language (EAL) students in their classrooms, particularly in regards to how these beliefs impact on teacher expectations and actions. With many teachers holding deficit beliefs towards EAL students, many have argued that professional development is one way to counter these beliefs. However, with a push for the regional settlement of migrants in Australia, there is limited understanding of mainstream teachers’ beliefs about EAL students in regional contexts. Drawing on Bourdieu’s concepts of habitus and field, this study investigates the beliefs of teachers and principals in two regional secondary schools in Victoria, Australia. The findings suggest that while many teachers hold common misconceptions regarding EAL students, their views regarding the inclusion of these students are generally positive and both the teachers and principals are open to additional training and support. However, the prevailing issue regarding supporting EAL students is time and/or timing—a commodity that both teachers and students do not have. This paper argues that EAL support in a regional context needs to be further interrogated, identifying a variety of approaches, such as professional development for mainstream teachers, additional EAL specialist support, and after-school programs, to better meet the needs of EAL students in regional areas.
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在地区教育背景下支持EAL学生:“这带来了巨大的工作量,而且常常令人失望。”
越来越多的人关注主流教师对课堂上英语作为附加语言(EAL)学生的看法,特别是这些看法如何影响教师的期望和行动。由于许多教师对英语教育的学生持有错误的信念,许多人认为专业发展是对抗这些信念的一种方法。然而,随着移民在澳大利亚地区定居的推动,人们对主流教师在地区背景下对EAL学生的看法的理解有限。利用布迪厄的惯习和场域概念,本研究调查了澳大利亚维多利亚州两所地区中学的教师和校长的信念。调查结果显示,虽然许多教师对外语教育学生有普遍的误解,但他们对接纳这些学生的看法普遍是积极的,教师和校长都愿意接受额外的培训和支持。然而,关于支持EAL学生的主要问题是时间和/或时间,这是教师和学生都没有的商品。本文认为,区域背景下的EAL支持需要进一步研究,确定各种方法,如主流教师的专业发展,额外的EAL专家支持,以及课后计划,以更好地满足区域EAL学生的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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