Melbourne Graduate School of Education - Theses

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    Clash of cultures: mainstream teachers' working knowledge and English as a Second Language (ESL) pedagogy
    Arkoudis, Sophia ( 1995)
    Within the international and Australian ESL field there has been a growing emphasis placed on mainstream teachers catering more effectively for the ESL students in their classes. This thesis is an ethnographic case study of the development of two mainstream teachers' working knowledge in ESL. It explores the strategies and skills that the two mainstream teachers adapt into their teaching after attending a ten week professional development course titled 'ESL in the Mainstream'. This was done through classroom observations, interviews and critiques of the teachers' planning, implementation and reflection of lessons observed. The study revealed that the practice of tapping students' already existing knowledge and language bases is not commonly utilised with students traditionally perceived as deficient. This research further suggests that mainstream teachers of working-class and LOTE background students may view them as lacking the necessary cultural capital, and therefore impose content and behavioural standards with little consideration and respect for student input. ESL teachers responsible for professional development need to understand the encultured pedagogical beliefs of mainstream teachers in order to assist them to reconsider what are complex personal and professional issues in the foundation of their own teaching.