Abstract

Code switching is really needed in instruction and should be implemented to ensure students’ understanding towards various things (e.g. translating of difficult vocabulary, lessons to be acquired and even in giving instructions), especially for teaching students in lower levels. It can also help in teaching students with multiple intelligences, and in general, makes the pre-service teachers’ life easy inside the room in terms of clarifying things due to any confusion that may arise in the duration of the discussion. This survey interview research explored the Pre-Service Teachers of Ramon Magsaysay Technological University lived experiences in using code switching in instruction. The study found out that the Pre-Service teachers prefer to use code switching in instruction. The Pre-Service teachers believe that using code-switching in class can help them gain students’ interest, manage the class, and make their students understand a particular lesson. Aside from Mattson and Burenholt’s three functions of code-switching, pre-service teachers use code-switching in class so that they can express themselves more during class discussions. The Pre-Service Teachers believe that although code-switching might be useful in class, too much use of it can lead to students being used in speaking their native tongue, thus, weakening the chances to improve their skills in using the English language. The Pre-Service Teachers agreed that there is a higher success in students’ academic achievement when code switching is being applied in instruction. The study recommends that the Department of Education must set clear guidelines regarding the use of code-switching inside an English class. Schools, in all levels, must strengthen their curriculum so that students’ communicative competence will further be developed.

Highlights

  • Today, educators are faced with the challenge of addressing the needs of the growing number of students whose primary language is not English (Gibbons in Magbanua, 2016)

  • The Pre-Service teachers believe that using code-switching in class can help them gain students’ interest, manage the class, and make their students understand a particular lesson

  • Aside from Mattson and Burenholt’s three functions of code-switching, pre-service teachers use codeswitching in class so that they can express themselves more during class discussions

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Summary

Introduction

Educators are faced with the challenge of addressing the needs of the growing number of students whose primary language is not English (Gibbons in Magbanua, 2016). Allan B.I. Bernardo of De La Salle University and Dr Isabel Pefianco Martin of Ateneo de Manila University, is the use of code-switching in the classrooms. Oxford dictionaries define code-switching as “the practice of alternating between two or more languages or varieties of language in conversation”. These days, this practice is being used by teachers in ESL / EFL classrooms throughout the world (Abdolaziz & Shahla, 2015; Dar et al, 2014) and there are multiple reasons behind it

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