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“As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined”: Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers

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“As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined”: Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers. / Savasci, Merve; Rets, Irina.
In: The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning, Vol. 11, No. 2, 8, 30.06.2021, p. 114-137.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Savasci M, Rets I. “As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined”: Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers. The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning. 2021 Jun 30;11(2):114-137. 8.

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Savasci, Merve ; Rets, Irina. / “As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined” : Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers. In: The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning. 2021 ; Vol. 11, No. 2. pp. 114-137.

Bibtex

@article{837ee0645aae4787b9364a5a6b259273,
title = "“As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined”: Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers",
abstract = "Teacher research tends to have a low uptake among teachers, which might be due to the fact that they are not generally identified with the role of the teacher as a researcher in initial teacher education programs. Also, as there is little research on the effects of research introduction courses on pre-service teachers, this descriptive study explored pre-service English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers{\textquoteright} attitudes towards research engagement and the benefits and difficulties they experienced throughout this process. To this end, pre-service EFL teachers (N= 32) from a state university in Turkey, who took a course on research engagement, participated in this study. This study adopted a mixed-methods research design: We triangulated quantitative survey data with the qualitative data elicited through an open-ended survey and semi-structured focus-group interviews. The findings described pre-service teachers{\textquoteright} attitudes towards research from self-efficacious, behavioural, cognitive, and affective perspectives, as well as elicited the perceived benefits and challenges from participants{\textquoteright} responses. Overall, we found that participants developed positive views towards research as part of the course and they felt more self-efficacious and overcame their research anxiety. At the same time, our study also showed that while most participants found the research methodology course important, less than one third of them planned to conduct research when they become in-service teachers. The study concludes by discussing the implications for initial teacher education programs.",
author = "Merve Savasci and Irina Rets",
year = "2021",
month = jun,
day = "30",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "114--137",
journal = "The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “As the Twig is bent, so is the Tree Inclined”

T2 - Research engagement among pre-service EFL teachers

AU - Savasci, Merve

AU - Rets, Irina

PY - 2021/6/30

Y1 - 2021/6/30

N2 - Teacher research tends to have a low uptake among teachers, which might be due to the fact that they are not generally identified with the role of the teacher as a researcher in initial teacher education programs. Also, as there is little research on the effects of research introduction courses on pre-service teachers, this descriptive study explored pre-service English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers’ attitudes towards research engagement and the benefits and difficulties they experienced throughout this process. To this end, pre-service EFL teachers (N= 32) from a state university in Turkey, who took a course on research engagement, participated in this study. This study adopted a mixed-methods research design: We triangulated quantitative survey data with the qualitative data elicited through an open-ended survey and semi-structured focus-group interviews. The findings described pre-service teachers’ attitudes towards research from self-efficacious, behavioural, cognitive, and affective perspectives, as well as elicited the perceived benefits and challenges from participants’ responses. Overall, we found that participants developed positive views towards research as part of the course and they felt more self-efficacious and overcame their research anxiety. At the same time, our study also showed that while most participants found the research methodology course important, less than one third of them planned to conduct research when they become in-service teachers. The study concludes by discussing the implications for initial teacher education programs.

AB - Teacher research tends to have a low uptake among teachers, which might be due to the fact that they are not generally identified with the role of the teacher as a researcher in initial teacher education programs. Also, as there is little research on the effects of research introduction courses on pre-service teachers, this descriptive study explored pre-service English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teachers’ attitudes towards research engagement and the benefits and difficulties they experienced throughout this process. To this end, pre-service EFL teachers (N= 32) from a state university in Turkey, who took a course on research engagement, participated in this study. This study adopted a mixed-methods research design: We triangulated quantitative survey data with the qualitative data elicited through an open-ended survey and semi-structured focus-group interviews. The findings described pre-service teachers’ attitudes towards research from self-efficacious, behavioural, cognitive, and affective perspectives, as well as elicited the perceived benefits and challenges from participants’ responses. Overall, we found that participants developed positive views towards research as part of the course and they felt more self-efficacious and overcame their research anxiety. At the same time, our study also showed that while most participants found the research methodology course important, less than one third of them planned to conduct research when they become in-service teachers. The study concludes by discussing the implications for initial teacher education programs.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 114

EP - 137

JO - The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning

JF - The Journal of Language Teaching and Learning

IS - 2

M1 - 8

ER -