1 / 20

第五届中国英语教学国际研讨会 暨第一届中国应用语言学大会 Autonomy in Subcultures: An Exploration of Possibilities and Constraints HUANG Jing ( 黄景 )

第五届中国英语教学国际研讨会 暨第一届中国应用语言学大会 Autonomy in Subcultures: An Exploration of Possibilities and Constraints HUANG Jing ( 黄景 ) University of Hong Kong, PhD candidate peterjh@hkusua.hku.hk ; peterjhuang@yahoo.com.cn http://www.edu.hku.hk/RPGS/profiles/peter.htm. Outline. Background

jatin
Download Presentation

第五届中国英语教学国际研讨会 暨第一届中国应用语言学大会 Autonomy in Subcultures: An Exploration of Possibilities and Constraints HUANG Jing ( 黄景 )

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 第五届中国英语教学国际研讨会 暨第一届中国应用语言学大会 Autonomy in Subcultures: An Exploration of Possibilities and Constraints HUANG Jing (黄景) University of Hong Kong, PhD candidate peterjh@hkusua.hku.hk; peterjhuang@yahoo.com.cn http://www.edu.hku.hk/RPGS/profiles/peter.htm

  2. Outline • Background • Researcher’s story: Why learner autonomy? • PhD dissertation research • The study (presentation today) • National/ethnic culture VS subcultures (small cultures) • Subcultures in the Chinese EFL context • A case study: BA Graduation Paper Writing • Towards conclusion: Points and questions

  3. Background: Researcher’s story • Metacognition and metacognition training (MT); problematizing MT/LT for autonomy (Huang, 2005a, 2005b, 2006a) • Learner difficulty and learner autonomy • Teacher autonomy and teacher development • Returning to learner autonomy, and bringing in related concepts of identity, agency, affordances, communities of practice, etc.

  4. Background: Researcher’s story Reasons for getting back to learner autonomy: • personal interest • emerging issues of learner autonomy in research • grounding PhD research in my publications • Benson and Huang, 2006, forthcoming; Huang, 2005a, 2005b, 2005c, 2006a, 2006b, 2006c, 2007a, 2007b, 2007c

  5. Background: PhD research Tentative titles • From student to teacher: A dynamic account of autonomy, identity and agency in EFL learning and teaching • Autonomy, identity and agency in EFL learning and teaching: Stories of the Chinese learners

  6. Background: PhD research Overall objectives • To identify and examine a possible “Chinese” interpretative model of foreign/second language learner autonomy that takes into account of the culture of learning in a particular institution; • To establish and examine a “Chinese” pedagogical model of second/foreign language learner autonomy; and • To document (non-)autonomy, self-identity construction and learner agency in EFL learning and teaching and explore their interrelationship.

  7. Study 1: • An exploration of teacher-learner role relationships in EFL learning in the Chinese university context Study 2: • An investigation into Chinese university students' in-class and out-of-class EFL learning Study 3: • Autonomy in the Chinese EFL context: Possibilities and constraints Study 4 (optional): • Learning to teach EFL: Student teachers’ stories of self-directed language learning and teaching

  8. The study (presentation today) Purpose: • To examine the possibilities for and constraints on the exercise and development of autonomy Focus: • Small cultures (Holliday, 1999)/subcultures

  9. National/ethnic cultures • National/ethnic cultures (Japanese culture, Chinese culture, etc.) are often viewed as a hindrance in promoting autonomy: • Cortazzi & Jin, 1996; • See a brief review in Huang, 2007a; • Contributions in Watkins & Biggs, 1996, and Pemberton et al, 1996). • Generalizations about national/ethnic groups may be useful as heuristics, but are insufficient.

  10. Small cultures/(non-ethnic) subcultures • In distinguishing national/ethnic culture and non-ethnic cultures (subcultures), the traditional tie between culture and nation is unpicked. • Culture: • “a value system current in a particular group or setting” (Palfreyman, 2003: 11).

  11. The kinds of culture that are most relevant to autonomous language learning (Palfreyman, 2003: 12): • Educational and academic cultures • Professional cultures of language teaching • Organizational cultures • Social class- or gender-associated cultures

  12. Subcultures: Examples • Examination culture; • Certification culture; • Teacher and student evaluation; • Teachers’ professional freedom; • Administration; • Policies, rules, regulations; • Discourses, (power) relationships.

  13. A case study: BAGP • An academic exercise that does not take into account learner difficulty (Huang, 2005b); • Little pre-BAGP preparation for students; • Oral defense VS poor administration: • Oral defense must happen even though student work does not meet the basic requirements; • Difficulty in failing a student who does not produce: • “You have to pass me sooner or later!”

  14. Huang, 2006b, p.47 [Fieldnotes 2006, in English]: • At today’s staff meeting to set standards and formats for BAGP, supervisors were urged to note matters concerning an external evaluation on the university in the following year. • Then there was a shift of focus, quite naturally. Supervisors were keen to know and asked repeatedly what’s the minimum mark to enable students to get the BA degree: jige (pass, or 60 out of 100), zhongdeng (a good pass, or 70 of 100) or lianghao (very good, 80 out of 100)? • Many said the degree-guaranteed grade was zhongdeng last year, so they wanted to know whether there would be any change this year. Finally the answer was found in a university document distributed recently: zhongdeng. • Another interesting thing was the administration of GP: only when students had made a lot of complaints in the university’s website (BBS), did the department call a meeting to set the overall format and standard (length of abstracts, order of English and Chinese abstracts, English and Chinese within-text and end references, etc.).

  15. Huang, 2006b, pp. 47-48 (interview data): HJ: • In an interview with students today, they said they expected teachers to give them pressure to push them forward with their BAGPs. T1: • Pressure alone doesn’t solve the problem. There is something wrong with the administration, because we have to pass students who produce rubbish. • In my group, I gave two students respectively 64 and 65, but XX said he couldn’t give very higher marks to upgrade students to 70 or plus [each BAGP was evaluated by two teachers but the supervisor’s evaluation counted more]. • If students can’t get 70 and commit suicide, will they find fault with me? I am a bit scared…I think I need to adjust my marks.

  16. Towards conclusion: Ps and Qs • Subcultures are influential in the exercise and development of learner and teacher autonomy. • Fostering autonomy within constraints may begin with creating spaces for the existing sense of autonomy. • Possibilities for autonomy entail learner/teacher agency and a general approach of negotiation and mediation (Huang, 2006b). • A need for ethnographic studies. • Does the discussion so far give rise to any “Chinese” interpretative and pedagogical models of autonomy?

  17. Towards conclusion: Ps and Qs If “control” is a key construct of autonomy (Benson, 2001), we need to ask the following Qs (cf. Benson, 2007): • Who actually assumes control over the learning and teaching processes? • What important aspects of learning/teaching are controlled by students/teachers themselves, by others, or can not be controlled at all? • How does the (re-)configuration of student/teacher control, other control, and no control work towards or against autonomy?

  18. References • Benson, P. (2001). Teaching and researching autonomy in language learning. Harlow, England: Pearson Education. • Benson, P. (March 2007). Testing the untestable: Autonomy in language learning. Presented at HASALD (Hong Kong Association for Self-Access Learning and Development) monthly seminar, City University of Hong Kong. • Benson, P., & Huang, J. (2006). Autonomy in language learning: A thematic bibliography. In T. Lamb & H. Reinders (Eds.), Supporting Independent Learning: Issues and Interventions. Frankfurt: Peter Lang. • Cortazzi, M., & Jin, L.X. (1996). Cultures of learning: Language classrooms in China. In H. Coleman (Ed.), Society and the language classroom (pp. 169-206). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Holliday, A.R. (1999). Small cultures. Applied Linguistics, 20(2), 237-264.

  19. Huang, J. (2005a). Metacognition training in the Chinese university classroom: An action research study. Educational Action Research, 13(3), 413-434. • Huang, J. (2005b). A diary study of difficulties and constraints in EFL learning. System, 33(4), 609-621. • Huang, J. (2005c). Teacher autonomy in language learning: A review of the research. Research Studies in Education, Volume 3 (Faculty of Education, University of Hong Kong). • Huang, J. (2006a). Learner resistance in metacognition training? An exploration of mismatches between learner and teacher agendas. Language Teaching Research, 10(1), 95-117. • Huang, J. (2006b). Fostering learner autonomy within constraints: Negotiation and mediation in an atmosphere of collegiality. Prospect: An Australian Journal of TESOL, 21(3), 38-57. • Huang, J. (2006c). On offering training in learner autonomy to pre-service teachers. AILA Research Network on Learner Autonomy in Language Learning Newsletter, Issue 10 – October 2006. Available at: http://www.aiu.ac.jp/~renlanews/#_Research_Projects

  20. Huang, J. (2007a). Learner autonomy in the Chinese university classroom: An insider perspective on teacher-learner role relationships. In P. Benson (Ed.), Learner autonomy 8: Teacher and learner perspectives (pp. 84-103). Dublin: Authentik. • Huang, J. (2007b). Teacher autonomy in second language education. Teaching English in China, 30(1), 30-42. • Huang, J. (2007c). Research on teacher and learner autonomy in the context of English curriculum standards, to appear in Curriculum, Teaching material and Method. Published in Chinese as:黄景. 基于课程标准的教师和学习者自主性研究.《课程.教材.教法》,2007年第6期(拟定)。 • Palfreyman, D. (2003). Introduction: Culture and learner autonomy. In D. Palfreyman & R.C. Smith (Eds.) (2003). Learner autonomy across cultures: Language education perspectives (pp. 1-19). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. • Pemberton, R., Li, E.S.L., Or, W.W.F., & Pierson, H.D. (Eds.) (1996). Taking control: Autonomy in language learning. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. • Watkins, D.A., & Biggs, J.B. (Eds.) (1996). The Chinese Learner: Cultural, Psychological and Contextual Influences. Hong Kong: Comparative Education Research Centre, University of Hong Kong / Victoria, Australia: Australian Council for Educational Research.

More Related