Authors
Roger Barnard, Davin Scampton
Publication date
2008/1/1
Journal
New Zealand studies in Applied linguistics
Volume
14
Issue
2
Pages
59-82
Publisher
Applied Linguistics Association of New Zealand
Description
This paper reports on a survey of New Zealand teachers' attitudes towards grammar and grammar teaching in their own particular teaching contexts. It uses a questionnaire adapted from that used in a survey of teachers of English for Academic Purposes (EAP) in British universities (Burgess and Etherington, 2002), followed by a series of email interviews with volunteer respondents. The findings of the present study indicate that, like the teachers reported in the 2002 study, EAP teachers in New Zealand appreciate the centrality of grammar in their language teaching and have a critical awareness of many of the problems and issues involved. There is also evidence to suggest that the teachers favour the treatment of grammar through its emergence in whole texts, rather than its presentation in decontextualised sentences and structures. In this regard, there is support for an approach tending towards Focus on Form …
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Scholar articles
R Barnard, D Scampton - New Zealand studies in Applied linguistics, 2008