Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis

Teachers often code-switch in the EFL classroom, but the question of whether or not they are aware of their code-switching has not been satisfactorily answered. This article presents the study on teachers’ understandings and beliefs about their code-switching practices in EFL classrooms as well as e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yetti Zainil, Safnil Arsyad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-05-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211013802
id doaj-e0bf97873d744820af23de1484ec0e9a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e0bf97873d744820af23de1484ec0e9a2021-05-10T00:33:29ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402021-05-011110.1177/21582440211013802Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation AnalysisYetti Zainil0Safnil Arsyad1Universitas Negeri Padang, IndonesiaUniversity of Bengkulu, IndonesiaTeachers often code-switch in the EFL classroom, but the question of whether or not they are aware of their code-switching has not been satisfactorily answered. This article presents the study on teachers’ understandings and beliefs about their code-switching practices in EFL classrooms as well as effective language teaching and learning. The participants of this study came from four junior high schools in Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia: five teachers with their respective classes. This research used the conversation analysis and stimulated recall interviews to analyze the data which came from the video recording of classroom observations and the audio recording of stimulated recall interviews with teachers. The results revealed the pedagogical functions and affective functions of teacher’s code-switching. The data also showed that the use of stimulated recall interviews helped teachers to be consciously aware of their code-switching as well as of their other pedagogical practices in the language classroom. Therefore, stimulated recall interviews can be a useful tool for teacher self-reflection that they were not aware of their code switch. This awareness could be incorporated into language teacher professional development and in-service teacher professional learning.https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211013802
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yetti Zainil
Safnil Arsyad
spellingShingle Yetti Zainil
Safnil Arsyad
Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
SAGE Open
author_facet Yetti Zainil
Safnil Arsyad
author_sort Yetti Zainil
title Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
title_short Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
title_full Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
title_fullStr Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Teachers’ Perception of Their Code-Switching Practices in English as a Foreign Language Classes: The Results of Stimulated Recall Interview and Conversation Analysis
title_sort teachers’ perception of their code-switching practices in english as a foreign language classes: the results of stimulated recall interview and conversation analysis
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Teachers often code-switch in the EFL classroom, but the question of whether or not they are aware of their code-switching has not been satisfactorily answered. This article presents the study on teachers’ understandings and beliefs about their code-switching practices in EFL classrooms as well as effective language teaching and learning. The participants of this study came from four junior high schools in Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia: five teachers with their respective classes. This research used the conversation analysis and stimulated recall interviews to analyze the data which came from the video recording of classroom observations and the audio recording of stimulated recall interviews with teachers. The results revealed the pedagogical functions and affective functions of teacher’s code-switching. The data also showed that the use of stimulated recall interviews helped teachers to be consciously aware of their code-switching as well as of their other pedagogical practices in the language classroom. Therefore, stimulated recall interviews can be a useful tool for teacher self-reflection that they were not aware of their code switch. This awareness could be incorporated into language teacher professional development and in-service teacher professional learning.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211013802
work_keys_str_mv AT yettizainil teachersperceptionoftheircodeswitchingpracticesinenglishasaforeignlanguageclassestheresultsofstimulatedrecallinterviewandconversationanalysis
AT safnilarsyad teachersperceptionoftheircodeswitchingpracticesinenglishasaforeignlanguageclassestheresultsofstimulatedrecallinterviewandconversationanalysis
_version_ 1721453768294268928