穨Review. Pdf
Table 4.17 Independent Samples Test of Motivational Change (N=70)
Download 453.46 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Thesis Liang Tsailing
Table 4.17 Independent Samples Test of Motivational Change (N=70)
Exp Control n MD t p Pre 60.95 57.12 35 3.82 1.21 .22 Post 65.00 58.14 35 6.86 2.15 .03* * p < .05 According to Table 4.17, the score of the pre-test of the motivational questionnaire of the experimental group was 60.95 and that of the control group was 57.12. The mean difference between the two groups was not statistically significant (p=. 22). After the intervention of cooperative learning for one semester, the mean difference between the two groups in the post-test was 6.86, as shown in Table 4.17. Such a mean difference was statistically significant (p=. 03). In sum, the results of the inter- and the intra-group comparisons of the motivational questionnaire indicated that the experimental group gained significantly in terms of their motivation toward learning English as a foreign language. 4.2.2 Results of Teacher Interview on Students’ Motivation Part of the rater interview was related to the students’ motivation toward learning, especially the raters’ observation about the experimental group that was not identified in the control group. The raters’ recollection responded to the quantitative findings of the motivational questionnaire presented above. Some of the raters mentioned something valuable that they did not find in the control group: the application of previous knowledge that the students demonstrated in the experimental group. As English teachers, they were particular delighted to find some students using expressions or words they learned from previous lessons or from other learning materials than their textbooks. As Ms. Tsai mentioned, the students in the experimental group applied what they learned in the previous lessons to their dialogues on the post-test, like “long time no see,” the names of animals, seasons, and 107 food. She was very happy to see that some of the students were able to apply the expressions learned from previous lessons or from Let’s talk in English. l I saw the application of what they learned outside the classroom to their performance this time. I felt that they really liked English. Some students used the words from the menu of the McDonald’s, like ‘nuggets’ and ‘milk shake’ in their dialogues. It seemed to me that they were keen on English—even after class. I see real motivation here. (Ms. Chu) 4.2.3 Ms. Lee’s Reflections Ms. Lee was also interviewed about her reflections upon the experimental group. Some of her reflection helped to explain the statistical gain of the motivational questionnaire of the experimental group. First of all, she thought that cooperative learning helped her students to be attentive in class. She enjoyed this class because almost all of the students were attentive and engaged in class. She said: l I felt more relaxed and encouraged to teach this class [experimental group]. I did not have to spend a lot of time on classroom management. Because we had so many group activities going on in each class, the students became more and more creative, spontaneous, and most of all, attentive. Almost all of the students were on-task and engaged in class. There was hardly any students falling asleep, dozing off, or being absent-minded. I guess the group activities and the well-defined role assignment for each of them kept them very busy. They did not have time to “fool around” in class. (Ms. Lee’s oral reflection made on June 01, 2001) Ms. Lee also mentioned that she learned a lot from the experimental group 108 because of the execution of group presentation and group designing of vocabulary cards. During the time frame for the experiment, each group was to share some of the learning responsibilities in class that used to be sorely the teacher’s job. Because the students were supposed to share the learning responsibilities, they got the opportunities to exhibit their sub-culture in the classroom. Ms. Lee said that she learned a lot from her students’ presentations: l I never realized that teaching could be so enlightening and relaxing when my students started to share the learning and teaching responsibilities by drawing the vocabulary cards, working out group presentations, and most of all, the role play of the dialogue. I never realized that students could do so much on their own. Sometimes I learned a lot from the way they presented the teaching materials designed by them. I was thinking that I might never be as creative as they were. They were more sensitive to the blind spots or learning difficulties of their classmates’ than me. And they could use their own language to solve those problems for their classmates. For example, they drew their favorite comic figures in the worksheet to practice the dialogue. I never thought of that before. I did not know the magic power of those comic figures. The worksheets I designed were not as attractive as theirs. And the vocabulary cards they drew were so funny and full of their own sub-culture . . . . They proved that they had more potential than I expected. (Ms. Lee’s oral reflection made on June 01, 2001) As for the comments on the control group, her observations explained why the control group did not perform as well as the experimental group. She felt drained in the class because she was the only one to shoulder all teaching/learning 109 responsibilities in this class. She had to do all the work by herself: trying hard to elicit student talk by appointing some students to talk and trying hard to maintain students’ attention. She said: l About two thirds of the students were afraid to talk in class. I had to try very hard to elicit their talk, sometimes by appointing someone to answer the questions. They were very passive and quiet. Maybe it was because they sat individually facing each other’s back and that made them feel uneasy or insecure to talk. They were more anxious about making mistakes in front of the whole class. The role-play of the dialogue was therefore more mechanic and rigid. There was hardly any student-student interaction in and after class in this traditional learning context . . . In such traditional classroom, I felt separated from my students . . . I needed to call so many students’ names to get their attention back to class. Many of them fell asleep or started daydreaming in the middle of class while I was lecturing. (Ms. Lee’s oral reflection made on June 01, 2001) Ms. Lee’s impressions about the students’ passivity and difficulty of paying attention in class in the control group might serve as a good explanation of why the control group did not gain significant difference in the motivational questionnaire. Download 453.46 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling