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Becoming a different kind of learner: a case study of a Japanese EAP learner

Etherington, S

Authors

S Etherington



Abstract

This paper reports a longitudinal case study of a Japanese learner (Ken) at a UK university as he progresses from pre-sessional EAP class to Masters programme and into PhD study. The case study is built from a series of interviews which took place over this four year period and a smaller collection of Ken’s diary entries. The paper focuses on the changes in Ken’s perceptions and beliefs about language and language learning throughout this time, tracing his transition from a learner to user of English; from ideas about learning through repetition and hard work to ‘learning by doing’ and his ‘negotiation of identity’ (Block, 2003) in his new language contexts. The destabilisation of Ken’s previous beliefs about himself as a learner and about the nature of language are seen to trigger some of these changes. The paper concludes with discussion of the generalisability of the findings to learners from Confucian Heritage Cultures and the implications for pre-sessional teaching/syllabus design.

Citation

Etherington, S. (2006). Becoming a different kind of learner: a case study of a Japanese EAP learner. Geosphere, 2(2), 1-10

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date May 1, 2006
Deposit Date Jan 20, 2009
Journal The East Asian Learner: an Academic Journal for Teachers and Researchers
Publisher Geological Society of America
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2
Issue 2
Pages 1-10
Publisher URL http://www.brookes.ac.uk/schools/education/eal/eal-2-2/vol2-no2-winchester-abstracts.html#etherington