Teaching Core French Through the Arts.

This study is concerned with Grade nine applied level students’ attitudes toward learning French. The following paper provides an in-depth case study of one group of 18 students from a Core French class in a South-Western Ontario inner city high school. Specifically students’ attitudes toward lear...

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Main Author: Anne Catherine Rovers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2013-04-01
Series:Journal of Teaching and Learning
Online Access:https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/3601
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spelling doaj-1d76ccc488aa463b859361f63a8bab412020-11-25T02:28:43ZengUniversity of WindsorJournal of Teaching and Learning1911-82792013-04-019110.22329/jtl.v9i1.3601Teaching Core French Through the Arts.Anne Catherine Rovers0Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) University of TorontoThis study is concerned with Grade nine applied level students’ attitudes toward learning French. The following paper provides an in-depth case study of one group of 18 students from a Core French class in a South-Western Ontario inner city high school. Specifically students’ attitudes toward learning French through the Arts were examined. Guided by the tenets of Constructivism and Arts-based research, with the collaboration of the classroom teacher, French/Arts lesson plans were prepared through which I examined students’ motivation, attitudes, and enthusiasm to speak French whilst in the process of creating art. Students’ comments of learning French through Art were compared with their stories of past experiences within Core French programme. Grounded theory, an emerging theme design using qualitative methods of data collection and analysis was used to address the research concerns of this study. Observational data, questionnaires, and focus group interviews were conducted in order to triangulate the data collection for analysis. Students’ attitudes toward learning French via Arts-based activities found that students learned French in meaningful ways in the Arts (visual art, music, movement, and drama) and their enjoyment, motivation to learn, and spoken French in the classroom increased.https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/3601
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne Catherine Rovers
spellingShingle Anne Catherine Rovers
Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
Journal of Teaching and Learning
author_facet Anne Catherine Rovers
author_sort Anne Catherine Rovers
title Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
title_short Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
title_full Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
title_fullStr Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Core French Through the Arts.
title_sort teaching core french through the arts.
publisher University of Windsor
series Journal of Teaching and Learning
issn 1911-8279
publishDate 2013-04-01
description This study is concerned with Grade nine applied level students’ attitudes toward learning French. The following paper provides an in-depth case study of one group of 18 students from a Core French class in a South-Western Ontario inner city high school. Specifically students’ attitudes toward learning French through the Arts were examined. Guided by the tenets of Constructivism and Arts-based research, with the collaboration of the classroom teacher, French/Arts lesson plans were prepared through which I examined students’ motivation, attitudes, and enthusiasm to speak French whilst in the process of creating art. Students’ comments of learning French through Art were compared with their stories of past experiences within Core French programme. Grounded theory, an emerging theme design using qualitative methods of data collection and analysis was used to address the research concerns of this study. Observational data, questionnaires, and focus group interviews were conducted in order to triangulate the data collection for analysis. Students’ attitudes toward learning French via Arts-based activities found that students learned French in meaningful ways in the Arts (visual art, music, movement, and drama) and their enjoyment, motivation to learn, and spoken French in the classroom increased.
url https://jtl.uwindsor.ca/index.php/jtl/article/view/3601
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