Rita Divéki

Developing Global Competence in the Hungarian EFL Classroom


Appendix Q Emerging Themes from the Focus Group Interview with Teacher Trainers

Themes
Sub-themes
Optimal classroom atmosphere
Comfort (F, I, U)
Safety (F, I, U)
Importance of the physical environment (I, F, U)
A group where people like being together (F, I, U, M)
Democratic atmosphere (I, U)
No pressure (U, M)
How to have fruitful discussions
Rarely prepares for CI discussions (U, F)
Interaction guidelines (I, M) beforehand
Reflecting on the interaction afterwards (U, I)
What to do when conflict arises
No need for smooth and peaceful discussions (M, I)
Handling the conflict as a group (F, U)
Different ways of handling conflict
Dealing with the problem outside of class (U, F, M)
Making them feel that it’s a safe space (U, M) and they can choose their next step
Trusting one’s intuition (U) and addressing the issue in class (I)
Racist/sexist comments
Addressing the issue indirectly (short discussion) (M, U, I)
Cancel culture? (U + F agrees)
YES (I, U, M)
Revealing one’s opinion
When is the question (everyone)
Views and values should be distinguished (F, M)
When not to reveal their opinion
Sg they don’t know much about (M, U)
Party politics (M)
Activities used for GCD
Debates (I, F, M)
Experiential (U, I)
Student attitudes
You need to generate an emotional response
Transition
Some students are not interested
Empathy
One activity
Professional presentations (F)
Ranking sources of stress (M)
Letter writing activity (M)
Opinion-line activity (I)
Trading with values (I)
Online web-collab project (I)
 
 

Developing Global Competence in the Hungarian EFL Classroom

Tartalomjegyzék


Kiadó: Akadémiai Kiadó

Online megjelenés éve: 2024

ISBN: 978 963 664 013 2

In today’s world, there are increasing demands for education systems for empowering students to become active and responsible global citizens who are prepared to address the challenges of the 21st century and who are equipped with global competence. This book examines global competence development (GCD) in English language teaching in Hungary from the perspective of university English as a foreign language (EFL) teacher trainers and secondary school EFL teachers. Based on the findings, it details the characteristics of globally competent teachers, offers a wide array of activities that can be used for nurturing global citizens, and outlines recommendations for the successful implementation of GCD in both secondary and tertiary education.

Hivatkozás: https://mersz.hu/diveki-developing-global-competence-in-the-hungarian-efl-classroom//

BibTeXEndNoteMendeleyZotero

Kivonat
fullscreenclose
printsave