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An Investigation into Vocabulary Learning, Vocabulary Learning Strategies and Mind Mapping Use among Saudi Tertiary EFL Students
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Alsaleh, AAA. - : University of Exeter, 2022. : Education, 2022
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Examining Student-completed Teacher Evaluation and Stakeholder Perception in a Korean EFL University Context
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Kim, J. - : University of Exeter, 2021. : College of Social Sciences (Graduate School of Education), 2021
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Understanding the Situation of Learner Autonomy within the Context of Higher Education in Kurdistan-Iraq
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An Investigation into the Use of Word Lists in University Foundation Programs in the United Arab Emirates
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Issues in the Implementation of CLIL in Pre-Vocational Education in The Netherlands
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Participating in a shared cognitive space: An exploration of working collaboratively and longer-term performance of a complex grammatical structure
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Scotland, James. - : University of Exeter, 2017. : The University of Exeter Graduate School of Education, 2017
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The Influence of Features of Collocations on the Collocational Knowledge and Development of Kurdish High School Students: A Longitudinal Study
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The Education of Bilingual Teachers: Preparation of Thai Pre-service Teachers of English to Teach in Thai-English Bilingual Schools
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Phongploenpis, Sasiporn. - : University of Exeter, 2016. : College of Social Sciences and International Studies, 2016
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An inquiry into TESOL teachers’ perspectives on professional development in the workplace at a university in Saudi Arabia
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Identity Matters: Stories of Non-native English-speaking Teachers’ Experiences under the Shadow of Native Speakerism.
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Ashraf, Sabina. - : University of Exeter, 2016. : Graduate School of Education, 2016
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Abstract:
This thesis develops a better understanding of the lived experiences of NNES teachers, coming from diverse racial, cultural and linguistic backgrounds, and the complex negotiations and constructions of their professional identities against the prevalent NS fallacy in the Arab Gulf states. This study employs a Postcolonial theoretical framework. In order to unravel NNESTs’ perspectives and understand how they make sense of their experiences, this study adopts a life history approach. The results suggest that participants view nativeness as a fixed identity, dependant on elements, such as being born into a language and learning it in early childhood. The participants had both confidence and concern about their linguistic abilities, which indicated that their non-native identity resulted in complex situations for them to deal with. The findings also revealed that the participants managed to find ways in which to inhabit these non-native identities confidently and to construct themselves as effective teachers who did not have to be NSs by nature. The participants narrated that the issue of pronunciation and accent had a significant impact on their professional identities. NS norms in accent was seen as eliciting stereotyped judgements of NNESTS as the inferior Other, and resulting in hiring policies that were greatly skewed against NNESTs. The participants also believed that stereotyped notions about the superiority of education acquired from the Center privileged NESTs in employment and led to the devaluation of indigenous knowledge. The participants also spoke about encountering direct and indirect challenges, which made it difficult for them to position themselves as legitimate teachers of English. They also believed that perceptions about the superiority of the NS would be impossible to overcome in the near future since the language policy of the Gulf states was strongly intertwined with its economic and political interests. The study, therefore, provides recommendations for theory, practice, and policy.
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Keyword:
Native Speakerism; Non-native English-speaking Teachers; Professional Identity
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24106
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A Dynamic Assessment of Interactional Competence in Japanese Learners of EFL: The Act of Requesting
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Investigating the Process of EAP Course Design by Teachers at a Tertiary Level, English Department, a Private College in Oman from the Perspectives of Teachers and Students
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To what extent is the Academic Vocabulary List relevant to university student writing?
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The vocabulary learning behavior of Romanian high school students in a digital context
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Cojocnean, Diana Maria. - : University of Exeter, 2015. : College of Social Sciences and International Studies, Graduate School of Education, 2015
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International Teaching Faculty and a Monocultural Student Population: An Interpretive Analysis of Tertiary Teachers’ and Students’ Perceptions in the United Arab Emirates
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Using PTE Academic to predict achievement and measure proficiency gains in an intensive EAP foundation programme
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The Developing Relationship between Spoken and Written Syntax in an English Secondary School
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