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In-service teacher development: some basic principles
Oleh:
Hayes, David
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
ELT Journal = English Language Teaching Journal (Full Text) vol. 49 no. 3 (Jul. 1995)
,
page 252-261.
Fulltext:
1995.3.252.full.pdf
(611.24KB)
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan PKBB
Nomor Panggil:
405/ELT/49
Non-tandon:
tidak ada
Tandon:
1
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Isi artikel
This paper looks at experience gained from the Rural Primary English Programme (RuPEP) in Sabah, Malaysia, and the Project for Improvement of Secondary English Teaching (PISET) in Thailand. In both countries, especially outside the major towns, there are few opportunities to use English, and motivation to learn the language is limited. Classroom teaching methods are often unimaginative and heavily teacher-centered, further depressing learner interest. Top-down directives mandating curriculum change have led RuPEP and PISET to attempt to ameliorate situation through in-service teacher development, aimed at improving teaching and, thereby, learning in schools. Most of the teacher-development sessions they organize are led by trainers who are themselves practising teachers of English. The paper explores the procedures used in teacher development which common to RuPEP and PISET, and the principles underlying them. It attempts to show how resistance to change among teachers can gradually be overcome if, as Prabhu (1987) puts it, their 'sense of plausibility' is engaged with regard to what constitutes effective teaching and learning activities. The paper also tries to draw lessons from the experience organizations by compiling a list of basic principles which might relevant in the establishment and operation of similar INSET programmes elsewhere.
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