77 results on '"Personal Autonomy"'
Search Results
2. Self-Concealment and Career Counseling Help-Seeking in South Korean College Students: A Moderated Mediation Analysis
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Suk Kyung Nam
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Identifying factors influencing career counseling services and providing interventions to increase utilization is crucial because only a few individuals facing career problems use these services. Utilizing the moderated mediation effect of career decision-making autonomy on the mediated model of self-concealment, career stress, and attitudes toward career counseling, this study analyzed 307 college students in South Korea. This study investigated whether career stress mediates the relationship between self-concealment and attitudes toward career counseling. Additionally, it examined whether career decision-making autonomy moderates this mediated model. The results suggest that career decision-making autonomy is crucial in seeking career counseling services to cope with stress. Implications for further research, limitations of this study, and interventions for increasing using career counseling are discussed.
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- 2024
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3. Implementing Competency Based Curriculum (CBC) in Kenya: Challenges and Lessons from South Korea and USA
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Muchira, John Munyui, Morris, Richard J., Wawire, Brenda Aromu, and Oh, Chorong
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This research examines the nature, enactment, and assessment of Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) models in the United States and South Korea to highlight lessons and strategies that Kenya can utilize to improve CBC implementation. A scoping review of various databases was conducted to search for peer-reviewed articles documenting empirical evidence on implementing and assessing CBC education models in the USA, South Korea, and Kenya. Two researchers from each country screened, extracted the data, and evaluated the records using a custom quality rating scale following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension checklist for scoping reviews. Evidence from the USA and South Korea indicated that the implementation of CBC resulted in improved problem-solving skills, lifelong learning skills, self-efficacy, and autonomy in learners. There is limited evidence from Kenya on the effect of CBC models on learners' key competencies. Challenges in the three countries include lack of teacher training opportunities, low funding for implementation, inconsistent pedagogical approaches and assessment techniques. The Kenyan government and education stakeholders can address the CBC implementation challenges by using evidence from other studies and countries on teacher training and aligning goals at the school, local authority, regional authority, and national levels.
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- 2023
4. The Effect of Outdoor Inquiry Program for Learning Biology Using Digital Twin Technology
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Jung-ho Byeon and Yong-Ju Kwon
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The outdoor inquiry has a significant meaning in learning biology, but it has a problem that is difficult to be frequently implemented in the school garden due to causes. On the other hand, alternative activities using the virtual world have been proposed, but due to a lack of reality and passive use, the continuity of the activities is low, and there are doubts about the effect on the affective domain. Therefore, this study developed a class program in which students directly construct a virtual world and explore living organisms using the digital twin platform. Also, researchers checked the changes in students' affective domain according to the application of the learning program. A teaching and learning strategy for learning biology was composed through the review of research and statistical analysis performed changes of the affective domain. The experimental group changed more positively than the control group in the affective domain of learning biology due to replicating the school garden so that living organisms can be explored indoors and outdoors. Consequently, class programs for learning biology can positively affect the learner's affective domain when it is provided with improved realism by digital twin, self-directedness, and autonomy to compare real space and object.
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- 2023
5. Translanguaging as an Agentive Action: A Longitudinal Case Study of Uzbek EFL Learners in South Korea
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Jang, Jinsil
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With the increase in linguistic and cultural diversity in South Korea, the landscape of English education in Korean classrooms has been changing. This has led to an increased need to explore the language and literacy practices of the emergent multilingual youth in Korea where one (official) language (Korean) has been predominantly used as the medium of instruction for English teaching and learning. Addressing this need for more research on how emerging multilingual children learn English in the diverse Korean classrooms of today, this four-year longitudinal case study explored out-of-classroom English language learning experiences of three Uzbek students in South Korea. Drawing upon the conceptual framework of "translanguaging" and "agency," data were collected from various sources. I found that the actions taken by these students to learn English depended on their interlocutors, practical and academic purposes, and language ideologies embedded in contexts, which in turn influenced learners' agency and translanguaging practices. More specifically, the findings show the students exercised agency over their choice of linguistic and non-linguistic resources in order to expand their linguistic repertoires on their own accord. These findings provide implications for EFL research and pedagogy, particularly within the context of the transition from monolingual to multilingual.
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- 2022
6. Trajectories of Learning Attitude Profiles in Korean Middle School Students: Examining Developmental Patterns and the Influence of Parenting
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Junsang Park, Heejae Lee, Joonsuk Kim, and Anne Q. Zhou
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Background: The development of learning attitudes during middle school transition and adaptation is critical, as shown by Self-Determination Theory (SDT). However, the development of adolescents' learning attitudes throughout middle school and the impact of parenting styles on this development remains largely unexplored. Objective: This research aimed to examine the development of adolescents' learning attitudes in South Korean middle school students, and the role of parenting styles in shaping these attitudes, applying the Self-Determination Theory framework and using longitudinal data. Method: Data was sourced from the Korea Children and Youth Panel Survey 2018 (KCYPS 2018), involving a national sample of 2,590 7th grade students. A Latent Transition Analysis (LTA) was employed to determine developmental trajectories and assess the impact of parenting styles on latent profile memberships, taking into account other covariates. Results: The analysis revealed three latent learning attitude profiles: Helpless, General, and Engaged. It showed a general tendency for learning attitude profiles to regress towards the General profile over time, but also a likelihood of consolidation. Significantly, autonomy-supportive and coercive parenting styles had a substantial influence on profile membership probabilities, though their effects varied in nuances. Conclusions: The findings indicate that while the autonomy-supportive parenting style fosters General or Engaged profiles among middle school students, curbing coercive parenting styles is necessary for developing the Engaged profile. In light of the timing and learning attitude profile, personalized and specific interventions in family and educational contexts are recommended.
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- 2024
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7. Teachers' Use of Motivational Strategies in the Synchronous Online Environment: A Self-Determination Theory Perspective
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Jeon, Jaeho and Lee, Seongyong
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With the development of synchronous videoconferencing technology, research on the professional practices of synchronous online teaching has been growing at an exponential rate. However, little is known about synchronous online teachers' use of motivational strategies, despite the important role of teachers in fostering student motivation. To address this gap, this mixed-methods study examined how synchronous online teachers utilized motivational strategies and explored the influence of the synchronous online environment on the use of motivational strategies. As an analytical framework, we drew on the need-supportive teaching principles of the self-determination theory, which present three types of motivational strategies: involvement, structure, and autonomy-support. The quantitative analysis of survey results collected from language teachers (N = 72) revealed the perception that autonomy-support and structure were relatively well suited to the online environment while involvement was difficult to implement. The qualitative analysis of follow-up interviews (N = 10) elucidated how the online environment influenced the teachers' use of each strategy while producing a new framework and specific strategy lists that may be applicable to synchronous online teaching. This study presents important theoretical implications regarding the application of self-determination theory in online education, while also providing practical implications for synchronous online teacher preparation and professional development.
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- 2023
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8. Effects of English Proficiency on Motivational Regulation in a Videoconference-Based EFL Speaking Class
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Kim, Jeongyeon and Kweon, Soo-Ok
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Despite the significance of motivational regulation in the development of second language speaking skills, few studies have scrutinized its relationship with an emergent learning context. This study investigates how differently tertiary level English as a foreign language (EFL) learners exert autonomy and regulate motivation by proficiency levels to acquire speaking skills in the target language via a videoconference platform. Specifically, it contrastively examines student and instructor responses to several contextual factors specific to EFL speaking class, including synchronous online video platforms, native English-speaking instructors, and an English-medium instruction (EMI) policy. Employing a mixed method, it analyzes questionnaire responses of 340 students from two Korean universities and subsequent interviews with students and their instructors. These analyses reveal that the learners employed instructor feedback and motivational self-talk most commonly to regulate their motivation while acquiring EFL speaking skills. Although students across all three levels of proficiency showed increased vulnerability to the learning context, those of the lower two were found to be less aware of the significance of the imminent context created by EMI and videoconferencing. They also sowed stronger tendency to the strategies depending on their perceptions of the contextual factors than the advanced group. These overt differences in motivational regulation among proficiency levels were hardly problematized by the instructors. Notably, their views on peer interaction via videoconference were distinctly positive, displaying a clear difference from those of the students. A discussion of these findings follows to give insight into EFL speaking instruction in the emerging higher education context.
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- 2023
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9. Motivational Regulation for Learning English Writing through Zoom in an English-Medium Instruction Context
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Kim, Jeongyeon and Kim, Victoria
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Due to growing concerns regarding the effectiveness of full-scale online education, this study investigated motivational regulation strategies employed by tertiary-level English as a foreign language (EFL) learners taking a writing course via Zoom. Using a mixed method, this study examined a dataset comprising questionnaire responses of 154 Korean students with two proficiency levels and subsequent semi-structured interviews. Findings showed that the learners with a high English proficiency level utilized the instructor's feedback significantly more than those having a low proficiency level. The high proficiency group also appreciated the Zoom context and the universitywide policy of English-medium instruction (EMI) significantly better than the other group. Finally, correlation analysis revealed significant relationship between the students' uses of motivational regulation strategies and their responses to the context-dependent factors. For example, the strategic choice of instructor feedback was positively related to their perception of EMI. These findings are discussed for effective online EFL writing instruction in the post-pandemic era.
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- 2021
10. Flipped Learning in Physical Education: A Scoping Review
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Østerlie, Ove, Sargent, Julia, Killian, Chad, Garcia-Jaen, Miguel, García-Martínez, Salvador, and Ferriz-Valero, Alberto
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The integration of digital technology into educational settings is expanding rapidly. One emerging didactical approach is flipped learning (FL), which leverages digital, internet-based technologies to deliver key instructions prior to classes. It then uses active learning opportunities during face-to-face meetings that encourage students to apply what they previously learned online. The format of FL naturally expands active learning during classes, which aligns well with the movement-based foundations of physical education (PE). Given the relative novelty of the approach within this subject, however, the purpose of this scoping review was to identify existing research, offer an initial FL approach for PE, and suggest directions for future study. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for Scoping Reviews guidelines directed this review, and four databases were searched. A total of 16 studies qualified for inclusion. Study contexts and methods varied widely, but a majority focused on motivation and learning as the primary outcome measures. Ten studies reported how the use of FL positively impacted student motivation, while nine studies illustrated how FL might be able to support student learning. Other studies indicated the potential of FL to increase motor skill development opportunities and autonomy during classes, although further research is necessary. Overall, FL in PE appears to have a positive impact on student variables. Research on the design and implementation of both the digital and in-class instructional components will be necessary to guide best practice more appropriately. Further, rigorous research is also necessary to extend understanding of the influence of FL on student outcomes.
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- 2023
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11. Developing an Agentic Engagement Scale in a Self-Paced MOOC
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Kim, Rang and Song, Hae-Deok
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This study aimed to develop and validate a scale of agentic engagement in massive open online courses (MOOCs). Initially, 14 items were derived through a literature review, from which 7 items were drawn through a Delphi survey. Sample sets were used to develop and confirm the constructs of the new scale proposed in this study. To examine exploratory factor analysis, a survey of 163 learners using the K-MOOC system was conducted. The items were clustered into three factors: agentic support requests, agentic learning strategies, and agentic learning construction. A survey was administered to 243 respondents to validate the scale. The data gathered were analyzed through confirmatory factor analysis and a reliability test. The results showed that the agentic engagement scale, with 7 items and 3 factors, was reliable and valid. Based on the findings, instructional strategies were identified to enhance agentic engagement in self-paced MOOCs.
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- 2023
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12. Profiles of Students' ICT Use in High-Performing Countries in PISA 2018
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Kim, Meereem and Kim, Hyesook
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This study aims to identify the profiles regarding students' familiarity with information and communication technology (ICT) and their relationships to reading literacy and background variables for high-performing countries in PISA 2018. We distinguished four classes in each of the six countries (Estonia, Hong Kong, Ireland, New Zealand, Poland, and Sweden), three classes in Finland and Korea, two classes in Macao, and five classes in Singapore. In most countries, the class with the highest perceived autonomy related to ICT use and low use of ICT at school showed the highest reading literacy. In contrast, the class with the highest overall ICT familiarity had the lowest reading literacy. Classes with a high ICT familiarity tended to have a higher proportion of male students. Finally, the SES of the class with the lowest ICT familiarity was significantly lower than that of other classes.
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- 2023
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13. Problematising Students' Agency in the Internationalisation of Higher Education
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Dylan G. Williams
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From a critical ecological linguistic perspective, this paper argues that South Korean English-language-policies are constraining students' agency. Since the millennium, as a legacy of neoliberalism universities of non-English-first-language contexts have implemented EMI (English-Medium Instruction) courses top-down to further internationalise. Faced with a declining birth rate, South Korea has been no exception to this trend; nevertheless, this "dominant policy path" has disregarded the linguistic challenges of students. These challenges are exacerbated by recent changes made to the English section of the University entrance examination which constrain students' linguistic capital. Gidden's "Structuration Theory" and Bourdieu's notion of "habitus" are used to problematise South Korean university students' agency within their structured-English-learning ecologies. In analysis, I use a constructivist approach enabling a theory of "Situated Linguistic Capital" to emerge. This theory conceptualises a dynamic between "trust" and "linguistic capital" which has been "shaped" by the past and which "affects" future affordances. Accounts of English educational experiences, collected from ten South Korean university students, are used to exemplify the theory. I conclude by arguing that conducting a needs analysis with students and EMI content instructors, to understand existing power relations, will encourage moves towards bottom-up, socially just directions in future South Korean English-language-policies.
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- 2023
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14. One Does Not Simply Teach Idioms: Meme Creation as Innovative Practice for Virtual EFL Learners
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Smith, Christopher A.
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To maximize the advantages of virtual learning, the present study highlights the potential for Internet meme design and creation in English language learning (ELL) courses as an innovative activity that raises student agency, increases multimodal literacy, inculcates intercultural communication, and teaches idiomatic expression. Memes resonate a multimodal feedback loop of popular culture. In the context of language education, multimodal literacy is a necessity for 21st-century education because the affordances of digital learning platforms present "the world told" alongside "the world shown." While some studies feature the usefulness of memes in English as a foreign language (EFL) learning, none have underscored meme creation as a learning activity. To demonstrate the activity in situ, a vignette at two Korean universities features two instructors who ask their respective students (N = 49) to design one meme using an idiom discovered in their ELL materials from a prescribed list, then asks: 1) What common power relations and ideologies emerge in the multimodal discourse of the collected pool of student "idiomemes"? 2) What do the findings tell us about student attitudes and engagement with the activity? 3) What do the findings tell us about the importance of multimodal discourse in EFL learning? Using a multimodal critical discourse analysis of the student-created Internet memes, the findings reveal that students chose culturally familiar images to complete the assignment, suggesting that their engagement and understanding of multimodal, English discourse increases commensurately with content intuitive to their culture. The implications suggest that empowering students with a measure of agency in expressing culturally relevant, multimodal discourse in ELL course content increases their engagement in virtual classrooms. Designing idiomemes, as a virtual learning activity, is further explored as a curricular augmentation that increases the value of a student's language-learning investment.
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- 2023
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15. How Has the Conceptualisation of Student Agency in Higher Education Evolved? Mapping the Literature from 2000-2022
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Torres Castro, Uriel Eduardo and Pineda-Báez, Clelia
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The objective of this article is to analyse the development and content of research in the global literature on student agency in higher education (SAHE) based on a bibliometric review of 224 articles published in the Scopus database during the period 2000-2022. VOSviewer, Excel, and Tableau software were used to analyse the texts. The review documented the growth trajectory and geographic distribution of the literature and identified the intellectual structure of SAHE. The findings show that the SAHE knowledge base has grown dramatically since 2017, particularly in the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Five schools of thought emerged from the literature as the main pillars of agency, or individuals' capacities to take actions to improve their lives (1): the socio-cultural approach of agency (2); the social cognitive framework of agency (3); feedback, assessment, and agency (4); students' motivation and engagement; and (5) learning analytics, online education, and agency. The results show that student agency is framed within a constructivist and sociocultural learning perspective. Findings also demonstrate that agency has significant effects on personalising and increasing the dynamism and potential of academic experiences if students take an active role in managing their own learning.
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- 2023
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16. Role of Achievement Value, Teachers' Autonomy Support, and Teachers' Academic Pressure in Promoting Academic Engagement among High School Seniors
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Lee, Taerim, Hong, So E., Kang, Jieun, and Lee, Sang M.
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This study investigated the effects of individual and contextual factors (students and classrooms) on academic engagement by adopting an analytical approach based on hierarchical linear modeling. The participants in this study included 906 high school students (42.7% male) from 42 classrooms in South Korea. We established that achievement value and teachers' autonomy support had a statistically significant positive impact on academic engagement at both the student and classroom levels. However, teachers' academic pressure had a positive impact on academic engagement only at the classroom level. Cross-level interaction effects between the student and classroom levels, achievement value (LV 1) and autonomy support (LV 2), teachers' academic pressure (LV1) and achievement value (LV 2), and those on teachers' academic pressure at both levels were also identified.
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- 2023
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17. Does ICT Matter? Unfolding the Complex Multilevel Structural Relationship between Technology Use and Academic Achievements in PISA 2015
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Li, Sandy C. and Petersen, Karen B.
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While infusion of technology into schools has been one of the top priorities of the education reform agenda across the world, findings from many large-scale international assessments indicate that students' use of information and communication technology (ICT) has mixed effects on their academic achievements. In this paper, we argue that these ambivalent findings were due to the oversight of the indirect effects of ICT use mediated by other ICT-related variables. We employed multilevel structural equation modelling to unfold the relationship between students' ICT use and their academic achievements based on PISA 2015 data. The results indicated that students' autonomy in ICT use and students' interest in ICT use were found to have significant positive direct effects on students' academic achievements at both within-school and between-school levels. These two variables played a significant role in mediating the indirect effects of ICT use outside school for schoolwork and ICT resources on students' academic achievements. On the contrary, ICT resources and ICT use at school exerted either no direct effect or a negative direct effect on students' academic achievements and students' perceived autonomy related to ICT use, suggesting that mere provision and use of ICT resources in school did not necessarily guarantee success in student performance. At the school level, school's transformational leadership and collaborative climate helped promote students' autonomy in ICT use.
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- 2022
18. The Role of Learners' Attitudes toward Parental Involvement in L2 English Learning
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Kim, Jung-Tae and Barrett, Rusty
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This paper seeks to examine Korean EFL learners' perceptions of parental involvement and how their attitudes toward parental involvement are associated with the success of parental involvement. Two hundred fifty four EFL children in South Korea participated in a survey asking the degree of their parent's involvement in seven involvement types and their attitudes towards parental involvement. The results showed that while all types of parental involvement were positively correlated with English proficiency for the group of children with positive attitudes towards parental involvement, no such correlations were found for the group of children with highly negative attitudes. In addition, for the group of children with moderately negative attitudes toward parental involvement, only less direct, autonomy-supportive parental involvement was found to be related to their achievement. These results suggest that learners' attitudes toward parental involvement may be a factor that delimits the positive influence of parental involvement on EFL learners' achievement.
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- 2019
19. A Theoretical Analysis of How Critical Literacy May Support the Progressive Goals of the Korean National Curriculum
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Pederson, Rod
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Many Korean scholars have praised progressive initiatives in the current Korean National Curriculum (KNC) and Korean National English Curriculum (KNEC), although they also state that the actual teaching practices have changed little. With each new iteration of the KNC it is apparent that the Korean Ministry of Education (MOE) is encouraging a pedagogical agenda that reflects the necessities of situated learning and 'student-centered' approaches to teaching and learning. The MOE's inclusion of 'micro-teaching' in tertiary teacher training program reviews also illustrates its increasingly active measures to affect educational change in Korea. Concomitant with the recent MOE initiatives, there has been a growing interest in practices of critical literacy/pedagogy in English education over the past 15 years in Korea. The purpose of critical literacy is to educate students to be knowledgeable, creative, and active participants in a democracy for the purposes of increasing social justice and agency. Thus, it becomes possible, and desirable, to undertake a theoretical analysis of the language and intent between the KNC/ KNEC and theories of critical literacy. This paper analyzes the language ant intent of the KNC and KNEC to determine the extent to which they reflect the theories and pedagogies of critical literacy. Results of this analysis indicate that that critical literacy supports the goals of the curricula and suggest that it should be included in tertiary teacher education programs.
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- 2019
20. 'I Want to Keep My North Korean Accent': Agency and Identity in a North Korean Defector's Transnational Experience of Learning English
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Park, Eun Sung and Lee, Heekyeong
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Over the past two decades, a growing number of school-aged North Koreans have migrated to South Korea. Studies examining their adjustment to South Korean schools have shown that these students face numerous challenges, particularly due to their struggles with English. Such studies have mostly regarded North Korean students as an underprivileged group, often comparing their achievements to those of their South Korean peers. Only a few studies have documented individual learners' narratives on their L2-learning trajectory, which can offer valuable insights into the transnational experiences that may have shaped their agency and identities across time and space. This paper presents one North Korean defector's personal narratives about his English-learning experiences in three sociopolitical settings of North Korea, South Korea, and the United States, to examine the role that learner agency plays in shaping and reshaping identities, investments, and aspirations in L2-learning. Data were collected via three separate interviews over a period of three years. The findings illustrate how the participant was able to utilize his North Korean identity as cultural capital and highlight the importance of learner agency and imagined future self as significant tools for understanding the complexity, multiplicity, and fluidity in L2 learning.
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- 2022
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21. An Exploratory Study on Learner Agency and Second Language Writing Practices of Korean High School Students
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Jang, Jinsil
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This qualitative study explores Korean high school students' exercising of agency in processing and producing L2 writing. Data were collected from off-line and online interviews, field notes, and other written materials over the course of two years and analyzed from a social view of agency (Ahearn, in: Jaspers, Östman, Verschueren (eds) Society and language use, John Benjamin Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 2010; van Lier in Sociocult Theory Teach Second Lang 163:186-193, 2008). The students' engagement in varied L2 writing projects and their writing artifacts consistently showed their enhanced awareness of linguistic and other semiotic resources which resulted in their frequent and continuous use of multiple languages and other placed resources. Meanwhile, they developed their strategies and reshaped their L2 writing practices considering the given context, placed resources, and their funds of knowledge. Findings from this study provide valuable insights into the open possibilities of EFL students' exercise and development of agency, which is an increasingly necessary feature of life-long learners in the post-pandemic era.
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- 2022
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22. Academic Hatred: Focusing on the Influence of a Supportive Classroom Climate
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Lee, Minyoung, Lee, Mi Kyoung, Yaung, Huk, Lee, Taerim, and Lee, Sang Min
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This study aimed to examine the effects of interpersonal factors (i.e., teacher and peers) on academic hatred using the hierarchical linear model analysis. The data were collected from 1,015 senior high school students from 43 classrooms (57.3% female) in South Korea. The results showed significant effects of teachers' academic pressure, autonomy support, and peer support on academic hatred at both the individual and classroom levels. Interestingly, teachers' academic pressure showed different effects on academic hatred at the individual and classroom levels: a negative effect at the individual level and a positive one at the classroom level. At the classroom level, peer support did not significantly influence academic hatred, while at the individual level, peer support negatively affected academic hatred by interacting with teachers' autonomy support. This paper discusses the practical implications for preventing academic hatred in the classroom.
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- 2022
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23. Between 'Shopper' and 'Owner': Emerging Agency of Lifelong Learner in South Korea's Marketing-Driven Expansion of Lifelong Education
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Lee, Kyunglim and Kang, Dae Joong
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This study explores the expansion of Korean lifelong education over the last two decades in terms of conceptualising the lifelong learner as identity and agency. Based on qualitative interviews with lifelong educators and learners at lifelong education institutions, the authors describe the lifelong educators' use of marketing strategies to turn learners into core members who continuously consume their programmes, which greatly resembles loyal customers. However, these loyal customers did not remain 'shoppers.' They came to exercise owner-agency since they felt like they were a part of the institution, which led them into conflict with the lifelong educators over the institutions' management. This study reveals that in Korea, marketing contributed to the expansion of lifelong education and cultivated the identity and agency of lifelong learners as both shoppers and owners.
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- 2022
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24. Effects of Early Morning Physical Activity on Elementary School Students' Physical Fitness and Sociality
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Park, Yongnam and Moon, Jongho
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As part of the Comprehensive School Physical Activity Program, we investigated how early morning physical activity affects elementary school students' physical fitness and sociality. Seventy-five boys in 6th grade of one elementary school located in G Metropolitan City, Korea comprised the experimental group that participated in early morning physical activity for 6 months. The control group did not perform said activities. Experimental design for this study adopted pre- and post-measurement and comparison methods between groups. Collected data were analyzed with analyses of covariance and Bonferroni post-hoc tests. The experimental group showed significant differences in the improvement of cardiorespiratory endurance and muscle strength among the sub-elements of physical fitness compared to controls. They also showed significant differences in the development of sociability, activity, autonomy, stability, and dominance among the sub-factors of sociality compared to controls. We elucidated the importance of early morning physical activity performed before school, which has implications for schools' physical education programs.
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- 2018
25. 'We Contribute to the Development of South Korea': Bilingual Womanhood and Politics of Bilingual Policy in South Korea
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Sohn, Bong-Gi and Kang, Mia
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Global flows of migration to South Korea bring a new challenge of how to negotiate the identities of migrants. Unlike other reported cases that reframe the value of migrants' first language as part of contingent practices of diversity management, the South Korean government has responded to this challenge by explicitly reframing so-called "damunhwa" mothers (foreign women married to Korean men) as bilingual workers, imagining them as self-governed, autonomous workers whose linguistic capital can be mobilized for the betterment of South Korean society. The government's adoption of linguistic entrepreneurship and ethnocentric nationalism becomes particularly salient in this process. This paper studies how four "damunhwa" mothers respond to this new bilingual worker identity as promoted in the bilingual policy texts. We examine the ways in which they negotiate their bilingual worker identities by echoing the government's new linguistic nationalism and linguistic entrepreneurship on the one hand, and by problematizing the insecure job markets, stratified linguistic needs, lack of systematic training for bilingual instructors, and native Korean's misunderstanding of their new roles on the other. Finally, we discuss the implications of Korea's bilingual policy, elaborating on the significance of linguistic entrepreneurship in language policy planning and practice and calling for more reflective accounts of ecological and translingual policy implementation in Korea.
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- 2021
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26. Transformative Potential of Writing Practices and Writer's Agency: Focusing on Emergent Multilingual Students' Cases in South Korea
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Jinsil Jang
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With the increasing number of young emergent multilingual language learners in transnational contexts, there is a growing need to explore and examine how emergent multilingual children develop their translingual competence and how they exercise their agency to engage in translingual practices across different settings (e.g., home and school). Yet, a few studies on emergent multilingual children's translingual practices and their agency were conducted in the L2 writing field due to the difficulties of the actual enactment of translingual writing pedagogy. In response to this, this qualitative case study attempts to investigate how, to what extent, and on what purposes emergent multilingual children engage in translingual writing practices within and across three different contexts (school, home, and community) as well as in a translingual writing program, a specially designed afterschool program in school, and the relationship between their participation in translingual writing practices and exercising their agency. Drawing upon the theoretical frameworks of translingualism and agency from a social view, this study employs multiple sources of data to build a multifaceted perspective on three focal participants' translingual writing practices and the enactment of their agency in school, home, and community over the course of four months. The data include video recordings of the program meetings, observations, fieldnotes, interviews, documents, and artifacts (e.g., surveys, writings, and literacy logs). The findings from this dissertation suggest that these emergent multilinguals participated in a wide variety of translingual practices for different purposes within and across the three contexts. An important finding here is that their engagement in translingual practices became more agentive and active under the circumstances in which their multilingual beliefs and competence were valued, and where a relatively large number of resources were available to them. Also, although the learners often utilized varied languages in their writing practices and processes, their multiple language use was hardly observed in their final products (e.g., writing samples) for the program and school projects. The findings also show that learners' Korean language proficiency influenced their translingual practices, particularly in school, having an impact on their use of Russian in educational contexts. The analysis of the learners' participation in the translingual writing program reveals the three affordances of the program: (1) exploration and examination of linguistic and cultural differences, (2) noticing the likelihood of multiple language use for varied purposes, and (3) becoming more agentive in using placed resources. The three affordances indicate that the learners' translingual experiences and growing translingual competence in the program enhance their language awareness which enables them to exercise their agency to (re)organize social conditions and relationships for meaningful negotiation. In the program, the emergent multilinguals reshape their agency to participate in translingual writing practices according to their linguistic and cultural repertoire, available resources, their purposes, and language values embedded in contexts. It provides evidence to the relationship between their agency and translingual writing practices which highlights the importance of offering a translingual space to emergent multilingual language learners and contributes to the in-depth understanding of the implementation of translingual writing pedagogy. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2021
27. Control and Agency in Student-Teacher Relations: A Cross-Cultural Perspective on Finnish and Korean Comprehensive Schools
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Yoon, Junghyun and Rönnlund, Maria
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Drawing on a cross-cultural, qualitative study in Finnish and Korean comprehensive schools, we explore how teacher control and student agency are manifested and exercised in the teaching and learning practices of the "official school" and in the student-teacher interactions of the "informal school". We also elaborate on how students reflect on control and agency. Bernstein's concepts of framing and classification are employed as a theoretical lens with which to examine control, agency and hierarchy. Data consists of school observations and interviews with students aged 12 to 14 and their teachers, conducted in six schools. The findings indicate that student agency is intensively constrained in their participation in teaching-learning practices. The analysis also reveals a paradox where students do not welcome increasing their agency through student-oriented lessons. Moreover, the controlling and caring roles of teachers and the exertion and limitation of student agency appear differently in the Finnish and Korean schools studied. Students seem to desire a refined balance between control and agency while revealing conforming and self-critical attitudes towards the school system and teacher control. Finally, our analyses of control, agency and hierarchy among school members leads this article into a discussion of democratic school culture from a cross-cultural perspective.
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- 2021
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28. Adoptees SPEAK: A Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis of Adult Korean Adopted Persons' Adoption Narratives on Instagram
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Suh, Emily K.
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This multimodal critical discourse analysis of the Adoptees SPEAK Instagram feed examines how Korean adopted persons create a counterpublic of adoption which recenters the adoption narrative around the agency and identity of adopted persons. First, thematic analysis was conducted to determine dominant themes within the captions. Then, transitivity analysis of the feed's captions was paired with image analysis. Findings supported the dominant theme of "Being an Adopted Person" and illustrate how contributors' use of material processes in text, as well as gaze, distance, and visual metonymy establish adopted persons as the subject of a complex and ongoing adoption narrative. The resulting counterpublic challenges mainstream discourses about adoption as child-rescue and representations of adoptive persons as passive subjects. Through verbal and visual metonymy which complexified historic discourses of adoption, the adopted persons in Adoptees SPEAK (re)positioned themselves within discourses of race, ethnicity, power, language, and social action. This study outlines how marginalized individuals and groups can use language and self-images to reclaim their identities and linguistic agency while simultaneously engaging in social action.
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- 2021
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29. Korean Women's Speaking in #MeToo Movement
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Han, Garam
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Through the story of Korean Bible Women and the South Korean #MeToo movement today, this paper explores how Korean women's innate creativity and imagination have challenged the patriarchal and hierarchical standpoints of the Korean Protestant church and society. Furthermore, this paper invites the Korean Protestant Church to confront the reality of women's struggles and to remember and re-value Korean women's agency by co-operating and listening to the survivors of sexual violence in the community so that they can participate in God's ongoing creation by responding #WithYou to the voices of #MeToo in church and society.
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- 2021
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30. IDLE in the Classroom: Learner-Driven Strategies for English Language Learning
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Dressman, Mark and Lee, Ju Seong
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Informal Digital Learning of English (IDLE) is a global phenomenon that represents one of the greatest advances for autonomous language learning outside the classroom in the past few decades. The power of IDLE lies in its capacity to compensate for inherent problems in language learning in classrooms, due to the "authenticity" of input via social media; nurturance of "learner autonomy"; 24/7, "open availability" of resources to learners; and the "wide variety" of materials available to learners, offering relevant and engaging content to every student. Most important, we note the extent to which students in our research said that IDLE did not replace but rather "complemented and extended" their classroom experiences of learning. We discuss some possible challenges of adapting IDLE for classrooms and suggest three proven uses of media within classroom curriculum: (1) vlogging and podcasting; (2) uses of YouTube; and (3) becoming an ethnographer of IDLE with students. In conclusion, we note that IDLE has become a principal approach to the development of vocabulary and fluency in English by young learners across the globe, apart from formal education policy and practice, and that ignoring its potential within the classroom risks the vital role that classrooms play in developing English language competence.
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- 2021
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31. Autonomy-Supportive Teaching: Its Malleability, Benefits, and Potential to Improve Educational Practice
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Reeve, Johnmarshall and Cheon, Sung Hyeon
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Autonomy-supportive teaching is the adoption of a student-focused attitude and an understanding interpersonal tone that enables the skillful enactment of seven autonomy-satisfying instructional behaviors to serve two purposes--support intrinsic motivation and support internalization. Using self-determination theory principles and empirical findings, researchers have developed and implemented numerous teacher-focused and methodologically-rigorous interventions to provide teachers with the professional developmental experience they need to learn how to become more autonomy supportive. The findings from 51 autonomy-supportive teaching interventions (including 38 randomized control trials) collectively show that: (1) teachers can learn how to become more autonomy supportive during instruction (autonomy-supportive teaching is malleable); and, once learned (2) this greater autonomy-supportive teaching produces a wide range of educationally important student, teacher, and classroom climate benefits (autonomy-supportive teaching is beneficial). Recognizing this, the article shows how the recent surge in autonomy-supportive intervention research has advanced the conceptual understanding of the nature of autonomy-supportive teaching and clarified its potential to improve educational practice.
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- 2021
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32. Understanding the Interplay between Context and Agency in a South Korean High School English Classroom
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Williams, Dylan Glyn
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This paper aims to understand the relationship between context and agency in the context of a South Korean high school teacher's English classroom pedagogy. This was explored through two semi-structured interviews with the teacher, which was transcribed and analyzed using the principles of grounded theory in order to obtain a bottom-up, empirically grounded understanding of the relationship. This approach identified a strong contextual influence in the form of Korea's national university entrance examination, which is a constraint on both the teacher and students, resulting in a high focus on receptive skills, and thus shaping both agents' own respective choices in English language teaching and learning with the end-goal of students' success on the exam. 'Passive agency' emerged as a theory to describe this insight. The paper concludes with a discussion about the implications of 'passive agency' for the possible future trajectories of students.
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- 2016
33. Filial Piety and Academic Motivation: High-Achieving Students in an International School in South Korea
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Tam, Jonathan
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This study uses self-determination theory to explore the mechanisms of filial piety in the academic motivation of eight high-achieving secondary school seniors at an international school in South Korea, resulting in several findings. First, the students attributed their parents' values and expectations as a major source of the students' understanding of filial piety responsibilities in their academic pursuit. Second, the participants found ways to justify the authoritative parenting they received through a reciprocal relationship, especially when their parents were autonomy-supportive. Third, the definitions of filial piety responsibilities varied, depending on the students' personal and familial idiosyncrasies.
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- 2016
34. Predictors of Runaway Behavior among At-Risk Youth
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Moon, So-Hyun, Kim, Hyung-Ran, and Kim, Miok
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This study examines the factors influencing runaway experiences among at-risk youth. Using the data of 1,743 at-risk youth from the 2016 survey of Korean adolescents' contact with media usage and harmful environment, a logistic regression analysis was conducted. This study shows that factors associated with the adolescents' experiences of family relationships, violence victimization, and harmful environment influence the occurrence of runaway behavior in at-risk adolescents. A significant outcome of this study is the identification of a harmful environment as a factor affecting runaway behavior. The factors identified need to be considered in the development of prevention programs targeting runway behavior among at-risk youth. School nurses are uniquely positioned to review and revise educational strategies to raise adolescents' awareness regarding the effects of harmful environments and to promote violence prevention. This framework provides school nurses with systematic methods for early identification and management of risk factors among at-risk youth runway behavior.
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- 2020
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35. An Autonomy-Supportive Intervention to Develop Students' Resilience by Boosting Agentic Engagement
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Reeve, Johnmarshall, Cheon, Sung Hyeon, and Yu, Tae Ho
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In the face of everyday classroom challenges, students display resilience by responding with increased agentic engagement. We hypothesized that this tendency toward greater initiative and lesser passivity was both an outcome of autonomy need satisfaction and autonomy-supportive teaching and a predictor of students' future capacity to experience autonomy satisfaction and to recruit autonomy support. Twenty-two physical education (PE) teachers and their 1,422 Korean students (648 females, 773 males; 929 middle schoolers, 493 high schoolers) were randomly assigned to participate in an autonomy-supportive intervention program (ASIP), and we assessed their students' autonomy satisfaction, autonomy dissatisfaction, agentic engagement, and agentic disengagement at the beginning, middle, and end of an academic year. By midyear, a multilevel structural equation modeling analysis showed that students of teachers who participated in the ASIP reported greater autonomy satisfaction and agentic engagement and lesser autonomy dissatisfaction and agentic disengagement and also that these gains in agentic engagement and declines in agentic disengagement then predicted those students who were able at year-end to self-generate autonomy need satisfaction and recruit teacher-provided autonomy support.
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- 2020
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36. Developing Trainers for a Changing Business Environment: The Role of Informal Learning in Career Development
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Kwon, Kibum and Cho, Daeyeon
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The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship among skill variety, autonomy, and job involvement with the mediating effect of informal learning in the South Korean business context. This study adopts a cross-sectional survey-based research design, drawing on the responses of 226 South Korean trainers to a survey regarding their facilitation experiences. Structural equation modeling is used in order to examine the influential relationship among the research variables. The results suggest that trainers exhibit higher levels of job involvement when they possess significant skill variety and high levels of autonomy and informal learning. Moreover, informal learning is shown to mediate the relationship between the job characteristics and job involvement. Recent changes in the knowledge economy have required professional trainers to expand their capabilities to lead organizations in the execution of business strategies. This study highlights the importance of informal learning to the trainers' professional and career advancement.
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- 2020
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37. Psychosocial Experiences of the Ageing of Middle-Aged People with Intellectual Disabilities in South Korea
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Mee Kim, Kyung, Shin, Yu-Ri, and Hwang, Sekwang
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This study aims to explore the psychosocial experiences of the ageing of middle-aged people with intellectual disabilities in Korea. Data were collected through 28 face-to-face interviews with Korean individuals with intellectual disabilities, aged between 40 and 50. This study identified several key factors faced by middle-aged people with intellectual disabilities. First, they experience financial constraints due to a lack of economic self-determination. Second, they have a very narrow range of social connections. Typically, they have small and weak networks consisting of only a few social workers, personal assistants, or group home workers, or their peers at group home or workshops. This is often due to a lack of information, money, and age-appropriate services. Third, those who have jobs in middle age have positive opportunities acquired through work. Fourth, study participants experienced considerable unspecified anxiety about ageing, as well as fear of death and uncertainty regarding the future. Recommendations are made to improve active ageing in an appropriate setting for middle-aged people with intellectual disabilities. Improved training and education about economic self-determination are needed for these individuals and their families, as well as improved information about community services. Moreover, enhanced community services for them must be developed. These individuals would benefit from improved employment opportunities as well. Workshops regarding active ageing and death should be developed. Finally, future plans for living placement must be in place.
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- 2020
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38. Social Topography of Children's Play: Focusing on the Middle-Class Parenting Practices in South Korea
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Chung, Nary
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This study aims to understand the ways in which children's play is situated in and shaped by middle-class parenting practices in South Korea. Drawing on a set of data collected through semi-structured interviews with 16 parents having children aged 6-11 years, I observe that despite the widespread rhetoric of the significance of play, parents' scheduling of their children's daily routine centres around 'study', while play, especially free play, is left for in between times and limited spaces. Play is prominently associated with and instrumental in developing children's social skills and ensuring their emotional state. In line with the trend in the Global North where a broader concept of play is being institutionalised and incorporated into organised enrichment activities, play spaces are increasingly becoming a site of strategic family consumption. The changing geographies of play strongly reflect the neoliberal climate which generates anxiety and exhaustion related to parenting practices.
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- 2020
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39. A Multilevel Analysis of Change in Hatred of Academic Work during High School: Focusing on the Sociocultural Background of Korea
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Lee, Minyoung, Cho, Soohyun, and Lee, Sang Min
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Development of academic hatred was examined at four time points across 7 months among 1,015 South Korean high school students. A multilevel growth model showed that the baseline of, and change in, academic hatred varied across individuals and classrooms. At the individual level, gender, parents' academic pressure, depression, and test anxiety were related to the initial level of academic hatred; gender and test anxiety were associated with a decrease in academic hatred over time. At the class level, lower socio-economic status and higher teachers' autonomy support were associated with a lower baseline of academic hatred, and higher teachers' autonomy support decreased academic hatred. Influence mechanisms of protective and risk factors on students' academic hatred can be considered for strategic and policy interventions.
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- 2019
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40. Expanding Autonomy Psychological Need States from Two (Satisfaction, Frustration) to Three (Dissatisfaction): A Classroom-Based Intervention Study
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Cheon, Sung Hyeon, Reeve, Johnmarshall, Lee, Youngsun, Ntoumanis, Nikos, Gillet, Nicolas, Kim, Bo Ram, and Song, Yong-Gwan
- Abstract
We propose that students experience "autonomy dissatisfaction" when the learning environment is indifferent to their psychological need for autonomy. We hypothesized that (a) students could distinguish this newly proposed need state from both autonomy satisfaction and autonomy frustration, (b) autonomy dissatisfaction would explain unique and rather substantial variance in students' classroom disengagement, and (c) a full understanding of the psychological need for autonomy necessitates expanding the current emphasis from two need states (satisfaction, frustration) to three (dissatisfaction). In the experimental condition, 20 secondary-school physical education (PE) teachers learned how to teach in an autonomy-supportive way; in the control condition, 17 PE teachers taught using "practice as usual." Their 2,669 students (1,180 females, 1,489 males) self-reported their autonomy satisfaction, autonomy dissatisfaction, autonomy frustration, engagement, and disengagement throughout a semester. Objective raters scored the manipulation check (teachers' autonomy-supportive instructional behaviors) and the engagement-disengagement outcome measure. Autonomy dissatisfaction longitudinally increased in the control group and longitudinally decreased in the experimental group. Most importantly, intervention-enabled decreases in autonomy dissatisfaction decreased students' end-of-semester disengagement, even after controlling for midsemester changes in autonomy satisfaction and autonomy frustration. We discuss the theoretical and practical benefits of adding autonomy dissatisfaction to the self-determination theory explanatory framework.
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- 2019
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41. Competency-Based Curriculum for the Expansion of University Students' Career Spectrums in the Dance Department
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Shin, Min-Hye and Cho, Nam Ki
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The purpose of this study was to explore the competency-based curriculum to expand Korean university students' career spectrums in dance departments. A literature review and a two-time Delphi analysis with seven experts was carried out at the beginning of the study to discover necessary competencies. Thereafter, an Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) with another 23 experts was performed to explore the hierarchy of these competencies. Another group of three experts reviewed the dance curricula of six different universities and classified each course in a competency table to understand which competencies were more pursued than others in dance departments. The literature review and Delphi analysis resulted in 10 competencies with 43 subcomponents, with a Content Validity Ratio (CVR) of 0.99. Among the competencies, 'Dance performance' was ranked highest with a weight of 0.187, while 'Multiculturalism' was ranked lowest at 0.030 in the AHP (0.1> consistency index and consistency ratio). In the last phase of the study involving three experts, the competencies pursued in each course were examined, and it was revealed that the number of courses pursuing the competency of 'Liberal Arts & General Studies' were overwhelming in the dance curriculum.
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- 2019
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42. The Meaning of Teacher Education in an Exam-Oriented Education System: Lessons from Novice Secondary Teachers in Korea
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Ro, Jina
- Abstract
This study investigated four novice secondary teachers' experience and perceptions of teacher education in relation to their current work experience in a high-stakes testing context. The novice teachers commonly indicated that their preparation, which had focused on content expertise, turned out to have little significance in schools, as they mainly executed teaching to the test. Instead, their role as homeroom teachers, which was concerned with caring and supporting students, was found to have much more significance. Accordingly, they indicated that teacher education must more strongly emphasise preparing teachers for that role, which requires them to become mature, considerate, and autonomous educators. Based on this finding, this study suggests the need for a clearer conception of and emphasis on the subjectification function of teacher education that is grounded in the consideration of the fundamental vision, purpose, and meaning of teacher education in a society.
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- 2019
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43. Proceedings of the International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS) International Conference on Cognition and Exploratory Learning in Digital Age (CELDA) (Madrid, Spain, October 19-21, 2012)
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International Association for Development of the Information Society (IADIS)
- Abstract
The IADIS CELDA 2012 Conference intention was to address the main issues concerned with evolving learning processes and supporting pedagogies and applications in the digital age. There had been advances in both cognitive psychology and computing that have affected the educational arena. The convergence of these two disciplines is increasing at a fast pace and affecting academia and professional practice in many ways. Paradigms such as just-in-time learning, constructivism, student-centered learning and collaborative approaches have emerged and are being supported by technological advancements such as simulations, virtual reality and multi-agents systems. These developments have created both opportunities and areas of serious concerns. This conference aimed to cover both technological as well as pedagogical issues related to these developments. The IADIS CELDA 2012 Conference received 98 submissions from more than 24 countries. Out of the papers submitted, 29 were accepted as full papers. In addition to the presentation of full papers, short papers and reflection papers, the conference also includes a keynote presentation from internationally distinguished researchers. Individual papers contain figures, tables, and references.
- Published
- 2012
44. Authentic Learning: The Gift Project
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Bohemia, Erik and Davison, Gillian
- Abstract
Higher Education is experiencing an increasingly diverse student population. Students bring a range of skills and experiences to their courses; they have different backgrounds and different needs. This fluidity requires an approach to teaching that encompasses the social aspects of learning. It has been suggested that authentic approaches to teaching and learning can assist in offering a perspective on learning which views learning as "enabling participation in knowing". We propose that the authentic learning practices developed in The Gift design project, discussed in this paper, constituted approaches which acknowledged that students' interests and experience are intrinsically bound up with motivation and engagement and, as such, have a major influence on the ways in which learning is constituted and developed. The Gift project has developed a range of innovative formative strategies which have provided both students and tutors with opportunities to become involved in peer assessment and review, peer feedback and reflection on learning outcomes. This re-conceptualisation of the assessment process has provided valuable insights into the development of learning skills such as problem solving, critical analysis, and the development of creativity and learner autonomy.
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- 2012
45. Tandem Translation Classroom: A Case Study
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Kim, Dohun and Koh, Taejin
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The transition to student-centred learning, advances in teleconferencing tools, and active international student exchange programmes have stimulated tandem learning in many parts of the world. This pedagogical model is based on a mutual language exchange between tandem partners, where each student is a native speaker in the language the counterpart wants to learn. Based on autonomy and reciprocity, tandem learning facilitates the acquisition of authentic language and intercultural competences through paired works and peer tutoring. Its application to translation learning has the potential of fostering tandem co-translation, where the co-translators are the native speakers of the source and target languages, which often enhances the quality of translation. In preparation for a full-fledged tandem translation programme, this research reports on a case study of an undergraduate tandem translation classroom. Specifically, it compares a traditional translation classroom with a tandem one to explore effective tandem strategies for translator training. The Community of Inquiry was employed as a framework to explore how students perceive their traditional and tandem learning experiences.
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- 2018
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46. Fostering Autonomy in EFL Cross-Cultural Distance Learning
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Lee, Hikyoung
- Abstract
The Korea Waseda Cross Cultural Distance Learning Project (KWCCDLP) is an endeavor to promote awareness of linguistic and cultural differences of speakers from different backgrounds through the medium of English. The project fully utilizes a student centered approach to learning where learners are the agents. This project aimed at university level students is unique in its promotion of autonomy both in and outside of the classroom. Here, a case study of a joint course between a Korean and Japanese university is presented as a model for autonomous long distance learning. The various activities that comprise the course are presented and how they instill responsibility in learners is discussed. Relevant examples show that activities catering to the learner's interests are effective in lowering anxiety and enabling learners to focus on meaningful interaction instead of grammatical accuracy. In addition, the activities show that autonomy is achieved through collaboration and scaffolding provided by peers. Once the course is over, students maintain and retain relationships with each other which results in continuous, meaningful interaction in naturalistic (as opposed to the formal learning context of the course) contexts. (Contains 2 footnotes.)
- Published
- 2008
47. Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Papers Presented at the National Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (30th, Anaheim, California, 2007). Volume 1
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Association for Educational Communications and Technology, Washington, DC. and Simonson, Michael
- Abstract
For the thirtieth year, the Research and Theory Division of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT) is sponsoring the publication of these Proceedings. Papers published in this volume were presented at the National AECT Convention in Anaheim, California. The Proceedings of AECT's Convention are published in two volumes. Volume 1 contains several dozen research and development papers dealing with instructional technology and instructional design. (Individual papers contain references, figures, and tables.) [For Volume 2, see ED499896.]
- Published
- 2007
48. Why Has the Critical Thinking Movement Not Come to Korea?
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McGuire, John Michael
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This article provides an explanation for why the Critical Thinking (CT) movement has failed to make significant inroads into the Korean education system, notwithstanding the fact that it addresses and seeks to rectify a widely acknowledged weakness of that system, namely, its over-reliance on teacher-centered instructional methodologies involving rote-memorization. The explanation provided in this article goes beyond standard accounts that focus primarily or exclusively on the role of the university entrance exam in the Korean education system. The explanation offered here identifies the core values implicit in CT pedagogy and shows how those values clash with important features of Korean culture. (Contains 1 note.)
- Published
- 2007
49. Life, Learning, and Standing Alone: The Adaptation Process of Wives of South Korean Students to New Circumstances.
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Jun, JuSung
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Adjustment experiences of South Korean graduate students' wives living in Georgia were examined from a feminist viewpoint. The adaptive process, its cultural meaning, and related social ramifications, was hypothesized to be an example of transformative learning. These two questions guided the study: (1) how did South Korean students' wives adapt to their new surroundings; and (2) what cultural meaning did they make of their experiences. Six college-educated women (who had resided in the United States for at least one year) who were full-time homemakers between the ages of 27 and 35 with at least one child were interviewed and observed. Their writing was analyzed and their husbands were interviewed (although the findings do not indicate the results of these interviews). The adaptation process was found to be three-staged: (1) identity crisis or culture shock; (2) overcoming through friendship formation and ESL classes; and (3) mental equilibrium through "thinking positively." The wives regarded their adaptive experiences as learning, something that went beyond the boundaries of formal education. Finally, the adaptation process changed the wives' world view by forcing them to become independent; they expressed this as "standing alone." Moving from such a passive stance to an active one conflicted with their upbringing in South Korea's patriarchal society; however, this was described as a welcome change. (The bibliography lists 11 references). (AJ)
- Published
- 2002
50. Education Fever: Korean Parents' Aspirations for Their Children's Schooling and Future Career
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Kim, Jin-Sook and Bang, Hyeyoung
- Abstract
Korean parents set high academic expectations for their children. Utilising Takeuchi's and Clark's theoretical framework and Q methodology, this study explores Korean parents' "education fever" as aspiration for their children's schooling, and how socio-economic status influences this phenomenon. Thirty-six parents in Busan, South Korea, participated in sorting 47 Q statements. The four resultant factors are interpreted as "Autonomy Supporters" (middle income), "Study Supremacists" (high income), and "Apologetic Supporters" and "Value Enthusiasts" (both low income). "Autonomy Supporters" support whatever their children want and focus on extra-curricular activities, while "Study Supremacists" believe that hard work guarantees quality education and employment. "Apologetic Supporters" feel guilt for being unable to support their children, and "Value Enthusiasts" believe that character and value education is most important. Each type represents a form of "overheated," "cooling down," and "cooling out" educational aspiration and educational stratification phenomenon.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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