Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms

This article is about a qualitative study of teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms. Teacher cognition, defined by Borg (2003, p.81) as ‘what teachers think, know, and believe and the relationships of these mental constructs to what teachers do in the...

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Main Author: Trine Mathiesen Gilje
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: University of Oslo 2014-10-01
Series:Acta Didactica Norge
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/adno/article/view/1141
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spelling doaj-35d877f969ab451f938c595fd6efd4a92020-11-25T03:27:45ZdanUniversity of OsloActa Didactica Norge1504-99222014-10-018210.5617/adno.1141Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classroomsTrine Mathiesen Gilje0Sandnes videregående skoleThis article is about a qualitative study of teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms. Teacher cognition, defined by Borg (2003, p.81) as ‘what teachers think, know, and believe and the relationships of these mental constructs to what teachers do in the language teaching classroom’, is a relatively new field of research, with few studies focussing on its link to the teaching of EFL reading skills in state schools or in young language learner classrooms. The study therefore aimed to explore upper primary EFL teachers’ reading-related materials and practices, what knowledge, attitudes and beliefs formed the basis of their choices, and the role of teacher education in this context. The method was semi-structured interviews with eight randomly selected 6th grade EFL-teachers. The study showed that the teachers primarily based their teaching of EFL reading on textbooks, used them in similar ways, but also used additional reading materials to varying extents. The teachers thus appeared to be heavily guided by their textbooks, in addition to intuition and routines. The impact of formal teacher education varied from teacher to teacher. Nevertheless, it was argued that pre-service and in-service teacher education will play an important role in helping future EFL teachers make and understand the choices they make about reading materials and pracices, so that they can meet the demands of increasingly diverse classrooms due to differences in linguistic, social and national backgrounds between pupils.https://journals.uio.no/adno/article/view/1141Andrespråkstilegnelse
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Trine Mathiesen Gilje
spellingShingle Trine Mathiesen Gilje
Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
Acta Didactica Norge
Andrespråkstilegnelse
author_facet Trine Mathiesen Gilje
author_sort Trine Mathiesen Gilje
title Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
title_short Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
title_full Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
title_fullStr Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
title_full_unstemmed Teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms
title_sort teacher cognition and the teaching of efl reading in norwegian upper primary classrooms
publisher University of Oslo
series Acta Didactica Norge
issn 1504-9922
publishDate 2014-10-01
description This article is about a qualitative study of teacher cognition and the teaching of EFL reading in Norwegian upper primary classrooms. Teacher cognition, defined by Borg (2003, p.81) as ‘what teachers think, know, and believe and the relationships of these mental constructs to what teachers do in the language teaching classroom’, is a relatively new field of research, with few studies focussing on its link to the teaching of EFL reading skills in state schools or in young language learner classrooms. The study therefore aimed to explore upper primary EFL teachers’ reading-related materials and practices, what knowledge, attitudes and beliefs formed the basis of their choices, and the role of teacher education in this context. The method was semi-structured interviews with eight randomly selected 6th grade EFL-teachers. The study showed that the teachers primarily based their teaching of EFL reading on textbooks, used them in similar ways, but also used additional reading materials to varying extents. The teachers thus appeared to be heavily guided by their textbooks, in addition to intuition and routines. The impact of formal teacher education varied from teacher to teacher. Nevertheless, it was argued that pre-service and in-service teacher education will play an important role in helping future EFL teachers make and understand the choices they make about reading materials and pracices, so that they can meet the demands of increasingly diverse classrooms due to differences in linguistic, social and national backgrounds between pupils.
topic Andrespråkstilegnelse
url https://journals.uio.no/adno/article/view/1141
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