The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English

This study explored the mismatch between the transition from mother tongue to English medium of instruction and teachers’ and students’ use of English. The study adopted a mixed method design. A questionnaire was administered to language as well as non-language teachers. Classroom observations were...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Solomon Areaya Kassa, Daniel Tefera Abebe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of education, Bahir Dar University 2023-01-01
Series:Bahir Dar Journal of Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239890
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823864675862839296
author Solomon Areaya Kassa
Daniel Tefera Abebe
author_facet Solomon Areaya Kassa
Daniel Tefera Abebe
author_sort Solomon Areaya Kassa
collection DOAJ
description This study explored the mismatch between the transition from mother tongue to English medium of instruction and teachers’ and students’ use of English. The study adopted a mixed method design. A questionnaire was administered to language as well as non-language teachers. Classroom observations were also conducted with non-language teachers who were supposed to use English as a medium of instruction. A group of students participated in focus group discussion, and another group participated in orally administered questions. Furthermore, grade 10 national exanimation results were analyzed. The findings revealed incongruity between the widely held perceptions about the English medium of instruction (teachers and students consider English as the language of science and technology, a language that facilitates future career development, and a language of success) and teachers' and students' use of English as a medium of instruction. The performance of students who made the transition in grade nine is significantly lower than those of others in almost all examination periods. There is an apparent difference in the performance of students who transitioned from a mother-tongue language to English as the medium of instruction at different levels. Generally, students who made the transition in grade seven were found to be superior in terms of achievement on grade ten national examinations to those who transitioned either in grade five or nine. The study uncovered teachers’ limited use of English as the medium of instruction and a lack of readiness among students to learn in English.
format Article
id doaj-art-47e6f314446d480fbf924dd044547184
institution Kabale University
issn 1816-336X
2415-0452
language English
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher College of education, Bahir Dar University
record_format Article
series Bahir Dar Journal of Education
spelling doaj-art-47e6f314446d480fbf924dd0445471842025-02-08T19:50:59ZengCollege of education, Bahir Dar UniversityBahir Dar Journal of Education1816-336X2415-04522023-01-01221The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in EnglishSolomon Areaya KassaDaniel Tefera Abebe This study explored the mismatch between the transition from mother tongue to English medium of instruction and teachers’ and students’ use of English. The study adopted a mixed method design. A questionnaire was administered to language as well as non-language teachers. Classroom observations were also conducted with non-language teachers who were supposed to use English as a medium of instruction. A group of students participated in focus group discussion, and another group participated in orally administered questions. Furthermore, grade 10 national exanimation results were analyzed. The findings revealed incongruity between the widely held perceptions about the English medium of instruction (teachers and students consider English as the language of science and technology, a language that facilitates future career development, and a language of success) and teachers' and students' use of English as a medium of instruction. The performance of students who made the transition in grade nine is significantly lower than those of others in almost all examination periods. There is an apparent difference in the performance of students who transitioned from a mother-tongue language to English as the medium of instruction at different levels. Generally, students who made the transition in grade seven were found to be superior in terms of achievement on grade ten national examinations to those who transitioned either in grade five or nine. The study uncovered teachers’ limited use of English as the medium of instruction and a lack of readiness among students to learn in English. https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239890English as a medium of instruction; mother tongue; transition from mother tongue to English
spellingShingle Solomon Areaya Kassa
Daniel Tefera Abebe
The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
Bahir Dar Journal of Education
English as a medium of instruction; mother tongue; transition from mother tongue to English
title The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
title_full The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
title_fullStr The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
title_full_unstemmed The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
title_short The use of English as medium of instruction and students’ readiness to learn in English
title_sort use of english as medium of instruction and students readiness to learn in english
topic English as a medium of instruction; mother tongue; transition from mother tongue to English
url https://www.Ajol.Info/index.php/bdje/article/view/239890
work_keys_str_mv AT solomonareayakassa theuseofenglishasmediumofinstructionandstudentsreadinesstolearninenglish
AT danielteferaabebe theuseofenglishasmediumofinstructionandstudentsreadinesstolearninenglish
AT solomonareayakassa useofenglishasmediumofinstructionandstudentsreadinesstolearninenglish
AT danielteferaabebe useofenglishasmediumofinstructionandstudentsreadinesstolearninenglish