Abstract

Generally, teaching English as a foreign language (EFL) at elementary, secondary, and university levels in Ecuador focuses primarily on applying teacher-centered approaches or on merely following up on the English textbooks’ scope and sequence. There is much emphasis on developing grammar skills, practicing isolated concepts, and studying different realities depicted in commercial textbooks while neglecting students’ real interests and needs. These traditional practices have created conscious and unconscious conditioning in students, and a significant number of instructors think that English learning is contingent upon grammar rules and the repetition of irrelevant and unnecessary notions, which results in low student academic performance. This descriptive study proposes the use of reading as an educational tool for improving the English teaching and learning process. The researchers applied five reading comprehension tests, three related to General English and two to Academic English, and a confidence level in reading comprehension questionnaire to 37 A1/A2 English third-level university students. Measures of central tendency and variability were used for data analysis. Results show significant improvements in understanding and analyzing texts, high confidence levels for reading in English, and better overall language learning. We suggest making replicas of these didactical practices in other courses offered at the university level.

Highlights

  • English teaching professionals worldwide wonder about what are the best teaching practices that should be used to teach English, and in general, how to introduce reading and writing to their daily work

  • The research data came from the assessment of five reading tests (Academic and General English) worth 10 points each, an online pre-and post-test on the Listening, Reading, and Grammar skills, and from an online questionnaire on confidence levels for reading in English

  • We contend that challenging university students as well as language instructors when dealing with teaching methodologies must be the core of any English Program offered at the university level

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Summary

Introduction

English teaching professionals worldwide wonder about what are the best teaching practices that should be used to teach English, and in general, how to introduce reading and writing to their daily work. Teachers of English as a second language (ESL) or as a foreign language (EFL) have taken the reading and writing separately from each other (Tsai, 2006). Most of them have concentrated on using English teaching methodologies that mainly emphasize the repetition of grammar structures, vocabulary, isolated, and artificial language contents. Those types of approaches have caused discouragement, boredom, frustration, and even aversion regarding learning English in elementary, high school, and university students. Bernal: Using reading to teach English as a foreign language dislike the English language. According to the Consejo de Educación Superior (2016), for students to complete undergraduate study programs, they must acquire at least a B1 level of the Common European Framework level of proficiency for Languages (CEFRL) (Trim, Coste, North, & Sheils, 2001)

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