Differences in Demotivation Between Chinese and Korean English Teachers: A Mixed-Methods Study

被引:0
|
作者
Tae-Young Kim
Yoon-Kyoung Kim
Qian-Mei Zhang
机构
[1] Chung-Ang University,Department of English Education, College of Education
来源
关键词
Demotivation; English teacher; Number of students per classroom; Administrative tasks; School parents; China; Korea;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This mixed-methods study investigates the differences in demotivation between Chinese and Korean English teachers. A questionnaire on demotivation was conducted on 58 Chinese and 94 Korean in-service teachers to find out the dominant factors in teacher demotivation. Follow-up interviews with teachers were conducted to explore the reasons as to why teachers found the salient factors to be demotivating. The results indicated that the number of students per English classroom was the detrimental factor for both Chinese and Korean teachers. Moreover, the only factor that Chinese teachers perceived to be more demotivating than Korean teachers was the excessive interference or expectations of school parents. For Korean teachers, large amounts of administrative tasks and students’ lack of interest in English were found to be the most detrimental factors. From the findings of this study, practical implications as well as research suggestions are provided.
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 310
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A Mixed-Methods Study Supporting a Model of Chinese Parental HIV Disclosure
    Joyce P. Yang
    Tianyi Xie
    Jane M. Simoni
    Cheng-Shi Shiu
    Wei-ti Chen
    Hongxin Zhao
    Hongzhou Lu
    AIDS and Behavior, 2016, 20 : 165 - 173
  • [42] A Mixed-Methods Study Supporting a Model of Chinese Parental HIV Disclosure
    Yang, Joyce P.
    Xie, Tianyi
    Simoni, Jane M.
    Shiu, Cheng-Shi
    Chen, Wei-ti
    Zhao, Hongxin
    Lu, Hongzhou
    AIDS AND BEHAVIOR, 2016, 20 (01) : 165 - 173
  • [43] Chinese primary school teachers' working time allocation after the enactment of the "Double Reduction" policy: A mixed-methods study
    Teng, Jun
    Yang, Ziting
    Yu, Min
    Crowley, Christopher B.
    Jing, Xiaoli
    TEACHING AND TEACHER EDUCATION, 2024, 137
  • [44] Thinking style preferences of Chinese and Western physicians: A mixed-methods study
    Zhu, Wenhui
    Shi, Kangle
    Hu, Ying
    Wang, Ruikun
    Wang, Xiaocong
    Wang, Shiyao
    Yu, Xinping
    Yang, Fangyan
    Wang, Zhijun
    Wang, Juan
    Lei, Cong
    Yu, Yuefan
    Liu, Xiaoyu
    Liu, Qian
    Meng, Qinggang
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE, 2024, 69
  • [45] A mixed-methods approach on Returnee Teachers’ professional identity and its influencing factors in chinese universities
    Yang YU
    Na YU
    Education and Information Technologies, 2023, 28 : 4287 - 4307
  • [46] What Drives Teachers to Change Their Instruction? A Mixed-Methods Study from Zambia
    de Barros, Andreas
    Henry, Junita
    Mathenge, Jacqueline W.
    COMPARATIVE EDUCATION REVIEW, 2024, 68 (04) : 562 - 585
  • [47] Primary School Teachers? Perceptions of Physical Literacy Assessment: A Mixed-Methods Study
    Essiet, Inimfon A.
    Warner, Elyse
    Lander, Natalie J.
    Salmon, Jo
    Duncan, Michael J.
    Eyre, Emma L. J.
    Barnett, Lisa M.
    JOURNAL OF TEACHING IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION, 2023, 42 (04) : 609 - 620
  • [48] Teachers' professional learning through mentor education: a longitudinal mixed-methods study
    Arnsby, Elise Sivertsen
    Aspfors, Jessica
    Jacobsson, Katharina
    EDUCATION INQUIRY, 2023,
  • [49] Differences and their contexts between teaching and nonteaching hospitals in Iran with other countries: A concurrent mixed-methods study
    Sadeghi, Niusha Shahidi
    Maleki, Mohammadreza
    Gorji, Hassan Abolghasem
    Vatankhah, Soudabeh
    Mohaghegh, Bahram
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATION AND HEALTH PROMOTION, 2022, 11 (01) : 32
  • [50] Teachers' Beliefs and Technology Practices: A Mixed-methods Approach
    Palak, Deniz
    Walls, Richard T.
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON TECHNOLOGY IN EDUCATION, 2009, 41 (04) : 417 - 441