EFL Teachers Individuallyguided Activities to Keep Their English

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EFL Teachers’ Individually-guided Activities to Keep Their English Alive? Çağrı Özköse-Bıyık, Ph. D. Yaşar

EFL Teachers’ Individually-guided Activities to Keep Their English Alive? Çağrı Özköse-Bıyık, Ph. D. Yaşar University, Turkey Öner Uslu, Ph. D. National Education Directorate in Kemalpaşa County, Izmir

Marie Curie Career Integration Grant • Scholars coming to Europe and the Associate Countries

Marie Curie Career Integration Grant • Scholars coming to Europe and the Associate Countries from other countries • Scholars moving within European countries • Within the first year of their career • Applications twice a year: September and March

Name of the Project: • Revitilizing EFL Teachers’ Professional Development in Europe through Innovative

Name of the Project: • Revitilizing EFL Teachers’ Professional Development in Europe through Innovative Programs

An interdisciplinary approach… SLA Research Professional development (reflective practice) Instructional technology & design

An interdisciplinary approach… SLA Research Professional development (reflective practice) Instructional technology & design

Project Objectives • Objective 1: Investigating foreign language teachers’ professional development activities in Turkey

Project Objectives • Objective 1: Investigating foreign language teachers’ professional development activities in Turkey in order to identify any needs for new professional development programs • individually guided activities • transcendence

Project Objectives • Objective 2: Analyzing the current professional development practices in two European

Project Objectives • Objective 2: Analyzing the current professional development practices in two European countries: Sweden and Italy in order to benefit from best practices and learn from weaknesses

Why Italy and Sweden? • 2013 Education and Culture Management Plan prepared by the

Why Italy and Sweden? • 2013 Education and Culture Management Plan prepared by the European Commission: • 80% of Swedish students are stated to be competent in their first foreign language (as opposed to 15% in France or England).

Why Italy and Sweden? Country 2013/60 countries 2012/54 countries 2011/44 countries Turkey 41 st,

Why Italy and Sweden? Country 2013/60 countries 2012/54 countries 2011/44 countries Turkey 41 st, score: 49. 52, 32 nd, score: 51. 19 43 rd, score: 37. 66 low proficiency very low proficiency 32 nd, score: 50. 97 24 th, score: 54. 01 23 rd, score: 49. 05 low proficiency moderate proficiency low proficiency 1 st , score: 68. 69 1 st, score: 68. 91 Italy Sweden 4 th, score: 66. 26 very high proficiency 1 st Norway, 69. 09

Project Objectives • Objective 3 and 4: Resource and program development in light of

Project Objectives • Objective 3 and 4: Resource and program development in light of state-of-the-art technologies (videos, website, webinars) and dissemination of these

Today’s focus: Objective 1 • «EFL teachers’ individually guided activities (professional development) 1 st

Today’s focus: Objective 1 • «EFL teachers’ individually guided activities (professional development) 1 st • individual interviews 2 nd • developing the questionnaire

Selection Criteria • A) twelve statistical regions determined by the Turkish Statistical Institute (2009)

Selection Criteria • A) twelve statistical regions determined by the Turkish Statistical Institute (2009) • B) the location of the teachers (city or rural areas), and • C) the type of institution they work at (state school, private school or university).

Cities we collected data

Cities we collected data

Participants 14 teachers: • 3 instructors at universities, • 3 MNE teachers, village or

Participants 14 teachers: • 3 instructors at universities, • 3 MNE teachers, village or small town • 6 MNE teachers, in city centers • 2, in private schools

Interview Protocol • • structured interviews questions developed by the authors reviewed by two

Interview Protocol • • structured interviews questions developed by the authors reviewed by two field experts pilot-tested with a teacher before it was used

Interviews • four interviews conducted face-to-face; all others via Skype • recorded • all

Interviews • four interviews conducted face-to-face; all others via Skype • recorded • all of the participants read and signed an informed consent form. • the duration of the interviews changed between 45 minutes to 2, 5 hours.

Data analysis • all interviews were transcribed verbatim • constant comparison technique using Nvivo

Data analysis • all interviews were transcribed verbatim • constant comparison technique using Nvivo 8

Results (Use of English to obtain info) • Teachers used English when they needed

Results (Use of English to obtain info) • Teachers used English when they needed to reach more reliable and comprehensive information on something and • Turkish when they needed local information. • One teacher said that “I can search things in English because it is more comprehensive. ”

Results (Following news) • In terms of following the news in English, 9 teachers

Results (Following news) • In terms of following the news in English, 9 teachers reported that they check the news websites; however the frequency differed • they read international papers particularly when there is a serious political event regarding Turkey • 4 teachers said that they read news in English three or four times a week.

Results (Using interactive tools) • Teachers use forums more often than blogs and wikis.

Results (Using interactive tools) • Teachers use forums more often than blogs and wikis. • Passive users of forums, wikis; one way • 2 follow blogs in English • 7 uses wikipedia • “I skim through forums to obtain lesson plans and materials”

Results (Emails, social media, Apps) • 8 teachers get e-mails in English but do

Results (Emails, social media, Apps) • 8 teachers get e-mails in English but do not pay attention. • 6 teachers use social media for interactions with English speaking people. • As for mobile applications, instructors and younger teachers tend to use applications such as TED talks. A few teachers utilized only dictionaries as mobile applications.

Results (Reading printed materials) • 4 teachers • Teachers who get their master’s degrees

Results (Reading printed materials) • 4 teachers • Teachers who get their master’s degrees read academic publications • 3 teachers prefer reading novels in their original language • Teachers who live in rural areas can hardly find magazines and books in local bookstores; however they are able to obtain them via online shopping.

Results (Interactions) • 6 teachers have friends to communicate in English on social media.

Results (Interactions) • 6 teachers have friends to communicate in English on social media. • teachers who work in rural areas have very little opportunity to communicate with foreigners in English.

Some observations & discussion • Teachers who work in private schools and at universities

Some observations & discussion • Teachers who work in private schools and at universities are more versatile in terms of individually-guided activities and tend to get involved in these more often. • Teachers who raise small children hardly have any opportunities for individually-guided activities outside the school. • Teachers who work at state schools do not have much motivation for professional development since the conditions do not let them transfer these newly-gained experiences to the learning environment.

What do we suggest? • Virtual platforms that can provide them the opportunity for

What do we suggest? • Virtual platforms that can provide them the opportunity for professional development such as webinars. • Awareness towards the importance of individuallyguided activities needs to be raised. • Teachers also need to get familiarized with technological tools available out there forums, blogs, wikis, etc. This can be obtained through a website designed specifically for the needs of EFL teachers.

Thank you for listening. • Contact Information Dr. Cagri Ozkose-Biyik Yasar University School of

Thank you for listening. • Contact Information Dr. Cagri Ozkose-Biyik Yasar University School of Arts and Sciences Department of Science Culture • cagriozkose@yahoo. com

EF’s methodology • The EF English Proficiency Index calculates a country’s average adult English

EF’s methodology • The EF English Proficiency Index calculates a country’s average adult English skill level using data from three different EF English tests completed by hundreds of thousands of adults every year. Two tests are open to any internet user for free. The third is an online placement test used by EF during the enrollment process before students start an English course. All three include grammar, vocabulary, reading, and listening sections. The online placement test is a 30 -question adaptive exam, so each student’s questions are adjusted in difficulty according to his previous correct and incorrect answers. The two non-adaptive tests are 60 and 70 questions in length. All scores have been validated against EF’s course levels. The test administration is identical for all three tests with students completing the exam on their own computers at home. There is no incentive for students to artificially inflate their scores on these low-stakes tests by cheating or cramming as the results do not lead to certification or admission to a program.