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Teaching Materials and Authentic Language: A Report of an Action Research Study

conference contribution
posted on 2023-05-23, 04:58 authored by Ma, Chunmei, YanJun WangYanJun Wang
Chinese has by now been considered an increasingly important global language, and in addition, Chinese online users are rapidly multiplying. It is clear that Putonghua will become more and more essential for online communication and e-commerce. China’s growing importance in the increasingly global community gives many foreigners an impetus to learn Chinese. In Australia, Chinese is recognized as one of the fastest growing languages and has one of the largest groups of non-English background speakers. How are we to make full use of this opportunity brought about by the confluence of positive international situations? The tonal language with its characters bearing no resemblance to European scripts makes it one of the most complicated languages in the world to learn. In this context, more efficient and effective ways of learning the language are of vital importance. The goal for teaching Chinese is to train students’ ability to apply speaking, listening, reading and writing skills in this language. The development of multiple language skills is needed to teach students Chinese as well as its associated culture. In the field of second language acquisition, the main focus is to cultivate students’ communicative competence in real-life situations. A case study was conducted to examine the significance of teaching authentic materials in a language classroom. Participants from a local college and a university were invited to participate in workshops to experience this flexible and less stressful approach of learning a second language. This paper will discuss the results of the workshops which were twofold, first, to determine whether or not students like this approach; second, if there are differences among the participants as they relate to this pedagogical approach. Finally we draw the conclusion that the implementation of this methodological approach is practical, feasible and enjoyable for the participants. There were differences between these two groups in performance; however, both groups showed that this methodology was helpful in Chinese language learning.

History

Publication title

AARE 2009 Conference Proceedings

Editors

Peter L. Jeffery

Pagination

WAN091143 1-10

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Australian Association for Research in Education

Place of publication

Melbourne, Victoria

Event title

AARE

Event Venue

Canberra, ACT

Date of Event (Start Date)

2009-11-29

Date of Event (End Date)

2009-12-03

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Languages and linguistics

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