Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Investigating the Interactions between Teacher and Students in an EFL Classroom

View through CrossRef
The purpose of this study was to examine the patterns of teacher-student interaction in an EFL classroom. The researchers conducted this investigation using a quantitative manner. This research enrolled one experienced English teacher and 49 students. Classroom observation, video recording, and interview were employed to obtain data. Additionally, Flanders Interaction Analysis was utilized to identify and evaluate interactions between the teacher and students in the classroom. This study found two distinct types of Flanders interaction in teacher-student interactions, namely Teacher Talk and Student Talk. For the teacher, the categories of talk demonstrated that accepting feelings, praising or encouraging students, accepting or using students' ideas, asking questions, lecturing, giving directions, criticizing or justifying authority all assisted the teacher in eliciting positive responses from the students; and for the students, the categories of talk demonstrated that initiation and silence or confusion demonstrated that the students were not truly engaged in responding to their teacher. This resulted in the researcher concluding that teachers were more dominant in EFL classroom activities, as evidenced by the fact that the percentage of teacher talk was 68.94 percent higher than the percentage of student talk, which was 22.55 percent, and silence or confusion, which was 8.51 percent. The researchers proposed that teachers provide opportunities for students to be more involved in the classroom by asking some critical questions.
Title: Investigating the Interactions between Teacher and Students in an EFL Classroom
Description:
The purpose of this study was to examine the patterns of teacher-student interaction in an EFL classroom.
The researchers conducted this investigation using a quantitative manner.
This research enrolled one experienced English teacher and 49 students.
Classroom observation, video recording, and interview were employed to obtain data.
Additionally, Flanders Interaction Analysis was utilized to identify and evaluate interactions between the teacher and students in the classroom.
This study found two distinct types of Flanders interaction in teacher-student interactions, namely Teacher Talk and Student Talk.
For the teacher, the categories of talk demonstrated that accepting feelings, praising or encouraging students, accepting or using students' ideas, asking questions, lecturing, giving directions, criticizing or justifying authority all assisted the teacher in eliciting positive responses from the students; and for the students, the categories of talk demonstrated that initiation and silence or confusion demonstrated that the students were not truly engaged in responding to their teacher.
This resulted in the researcher concluding that teachers were more dominant in EFL classroom activities, as evidenced by the fact that the percentage of teacher talk was 68.
94 percent higher than the percentage of student talk, which was 22.
55 percent, and silence or confusion, which was 8.
51 percent.
The researchers proposed that teachers provide opportunities for students to be more involved in the classroom by asking some critical questions.

Related Results

Teaching and Engaging International Students
Teaching and Engaging International Students
International student mobility has been increasingly subject to turbulences in politics, culture, economics, natural disasters, and public health. The new decade has witnessed an u...
Teacher Talk in an EFL Classroom: A Pilot Study
Teacher Talk in an EFL Classroom: A Pilot Study
This study explored a non-native English teacher’s teacher talk in an EFL classroom through the qualitative research methodology. The study also aimed to find out the characteristi...
Teacher-Student Interaction in EFL Classroom in China: Communication Accommodation Theory Perspective
Teacher-Student Interaction in EFL Classroom in China: Communication Accommodation Theory Perspective
Foreign language teaching highlights the cultivation of the learners’ communicative competence, because the main purpose of learning a foreign language is to use the targ...
International Perspectives on Standards and Benchmarking in Teacher Education
International Perspectives on Standards and Benchmarking in Teacher Education
Ensuring quality teachers and quality teacher education programmes have been fundamental global concerns over the decades. High quality teachers are critical to the future developm...
Exploring the Relationship between Classroom English Proficiency and Teacher Self-Efficacy Among Polytechnic EFL Teachers
Exploring the Relationship between Classroom English Proficiency and Teacher Self-Efficacy Among Polytechnic EFL Teachers
This study aimed to examine the relationship between classroom English proficiency and teacher self-efficacy among English as a Foreign Language teachers in Chinese polytechnics. S...
Code Mixing in EFL Classroom: Views from English Teachers Side
Code Mixing in EFL Classroom: Views from English Teachers Side
The objectives of this research were to find out the category of code mixing used by the English teacher and the code mixing category dominantly used by the English teacher in teac...
Schule und Spiel – mehr als reine Wissensvermittlung
Schule und Spiel – mehr als reine Wissensvermittlung
Die öffentliche Schule Quest to learn in New York City ist eine Modell-Schule, die in ihren Lehrmethoden auf spielbasiertes Lernen, Game Design und den Game Design Prozess setzt. I...

Back to Top