EMERGENCY REMOTE TEACHING IN INDONESIA: A MISSED OPPORTUNITY FOR GREATER LEARNER AUTONOMY

M. Defianty, K. Wilson
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The sudden switch to learning from home during the COVID-19 pandemic impacted teachers across the world. In Indonesia, schools were closed from early March 2020 onwards. This paper presents the findings of a qualitative research project that investigated how Indonesian teachers of English responded to the challenges of Emergency Remote Teaching (ERT) and whether ERT would lead to greater learner autonomy. Ten teachers responded to an invitation to participate in focus groups and individual interviews on Zoom and to contribute examples of their lesson plans from the lockdown period. All teachers found that WhatsApp was the most efficient and effective platform for remote teaching, allowing synchronous and asynchronous sharing of audio, video and text-based materials. Despite the challenges of poor connectivity and lack of face-to-face contact, the teachers were able to continue involving their students actively in integrated, communicative tasks that pushed them to extend their communicative competence. Unexpectedly, however, the move to online teaching did not herald a shift towards greater learner autonomy. The data from this research shows that English language teaching in Indonesia is still firmly teacher-controlled despite the affordances of online learning.
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印度尼西亚的紧急远程教学:错失了提高学习者自主权的机会
在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,突然转向在家学习影响了世界各地的教师。在印度尼西亚,学校从2020年3月初开始关闭。本文介绍了一项定性研究项目的结果,该项目调查了印度尼西亚英语教师如何应对紧急远程教学(ERT)的挑战,以及ERT是否会导致更大的学习者自主权。10名教师回应了邀请,参加了Zoom的焦点小组和个人访谈,并提供了封锁期间的教学计划示例。所有教师都发现,WhatsApp是最高效、最有效的远程教学平台,可以同步和异步地共享音频、视频和文本材料。尽管面临着连通性差和缺乏面对面接触的挑战,但教师能够继续让学生积极参与整合的交际任务,从而推动他们扩展交际能力。然而,出人意料的是,转向在线教学并没有预示着向更大的学习者自主权的转变。这项研究的数据表明,尽管有了在线学习,印度尼西亚的英语教学仍然牢牢地由教师控制。
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