Abstract

In many countries, English as a foreign/second language (L2) teaching has become compulsory in urban and rural public schools. In rural areas, the challenges for the implementation of this state-sanctioned policy have been explored among L2 teaching specialists. However, this mixed-methods study considered a different teacher group and examined the struggles and initiatives of generalist teachers who are obligated to teach English in rural schools. To this end, data were collected from 115 teachers in 17 rural secondary schools in the Southeast of Mexico. First, the participants completed a survey with closed-ended questions that elicited information about teacher education, teaching experience and knowledge of the rural school system. Then, a subsample of participants completed an individual thematized semi-structured interview. They were selected on the basis of L2 teacher education involvement. In the survey data, response patterns were identified using frequency analyses. The interview data were analyzed using categorical aggregation. The data revealed that the generalist teachers struggle with L2 professionalization, sociocultural and instructional challenges. Nonetheless, only few participants have been engaged in L2 teacher education which could help them overcome these challenges. Instead, they rely upon limited strategies to counteract the day-to-day challenges at the expense of effective L2 teaching practices.

Highlights

  • In many countries, English language learning in public education has become state-mandated despite a heated debate on the linguistic, economic, social and cultural benefits and drawbacks of this policy (Crystal, 2012; Roldán & Peláez, 2017)

  • As in other international contexts (Ramos Holguín & Aguirre Morales, 2016; Zein, 2017), they are aware of their need of L2 teacher education, but L2 teaching preparedness does not figure high among their initiatives

  • They prefer teacher education that provides them with general information about the secondary school curriculum, educational reforms and the pedagogy of the various subject-matter areas they teach in the learners’ first language

Read more

Summary

Introduction

English language learning in public education has become state-mandated despite a heated debate on the linguistic, economic, social and cultural benefits and drawbacks of this policy (Crystal, 2012; Roldán & Peláez, 2017). As for elementary and middle school education, many countries have sanctioned English as an L2 learning through various layers of public education and established specific language attainment goals, instructional guidelines and evaluation criteria under the Common European Framework (Kihlstedt, 2019). In this way, educational policy makers and stakeholders are enacting English as an L2 teaching across the levels of public education. As these teachers cover all areas of the curriculum with the same learners, they spend many hours with them throughout the day and the school year (Hernández & Izquierdo, 2020; Zein, 2017)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call