English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students

Purpose: This article examines how individual, school, and social factors shape the perceptions of students in Senior Secondary Three (SS3; in some schools called Form Six [F6]) toward English private tutoring in Macao. Design/Approach/Methods: This is a comparative study of two F6 classes of an Eng...

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Main Author: Vivien Nga Man Chan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-03-01
Series:ECNU Review of Education
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2096531119840864
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spelling doaj-016a40da942d4007ba2170b943ce38de2020-11-25T03:43:16ZengSAGE PublishingECNU Review of Education2096-53112632-17422019-03-01210.1177/2096531119840864English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three StudentsVivien Nga Man ChanPurpose: This article examines how individual, school, and social factors shape the perceptions of students in Senior Secondary Three (SS3; in some schools called Form Six [F6]) toward English private tutoring in Macao. Design/Approach/Methods: This is a comparative study of two F6 classes of an English-medium secondary school and four SS3 classes of a Chinese-medium secondary school in Macao, with a total number of 145 students. Mixed-methods approach (questionnaires and interviews) is employed in the study. Findings: The respondents’ participation in English tutoring is not very intensive. They prefer to receive government-subsidized after-school tutoring taught by their schoolteachers more than fee-paying English tutoring taught by tutors outside. Low level of social competition and high tertiary enrollment rates contribute to this phenomenon. Students’ needs and beliefs in English learning play key roles in determining their receipt of English tutoring. Originality/Value: Teachers may need better understanding of their students’ needs so as to design suitable pedagogies. Schools can consider more fully the types of tutoring that they provide for different kinds of pupils. The government-subsidized after-school tutoring could be a plausible way to reduce educational inequality.https://doi.org/10.1177/2096531119840864
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vivien Nga Man Chan
spellingShingle Vivien Nga Man Chan
English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
ECNU Review of Education
author_facet Vivien Nga Man Chan
author_sort Vivien Nga Man Chan
title English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
title_short English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
title_full English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
title_fullStr English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
title_full_unstemmed English Private Tutoring in Macao: Perceptions of Senior Secondary Three Students
title_sort english private tutoring in macao: perceptions of senior secondary three students
publisher SAGE Publishing
series ECNU Review of Education
issn 2096-5311
2632-1742
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Purpose: This article examines how individual, school, and social factors shape the perceptions of students in Senior Secondary Three (SS3; in some schools called Form Six [F6]) toward English private tutoring in Macao. Design/Approach/Methods: This is a comparative study of two F6 classes of an English-medium secondary school and four SS3 classes of a Chinese-medium secondary school in Macao, with a total number of 145 students. Mixed-methods approach (questionnaires and interviews) is employed in the study. Findings: The respondents’ participation in English tutoring is not very intensive. They prefer to receive government-subsidized after-school tutoring taught by their schoolteachers more than fee-paying English tutoring taught by tutors outside. Low level of social competition and high tertiary enrollment rates contribute to this phenomenon. Students’ needs and beliefs in English learning play key roles in determining their receipt of English tutoring. Originality/Value: Teachers may need better understanding of their students’ needs so as to design suitable pedagogies. Schools can consider more fully the types of tutoring that they provide for different kinds of pupils. The government-subsidized after-school tutoring could be a plausible way to reduce educational inequality.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2096531119840864
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