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Over the last two decades, action research has become increasingly popular in foreign and second language teaching classes . Action research can be a very valuable way to extend teachers teaching skills and gain more understanding of themselves as teachers, their classrooms and their students. This paper focuses to provide a rationale on the use of action research in foreign and second language education. Then, the nature, scope and the framework of action research will be described. Finally, the current action research models that have become increasingly popular in foreign and second language teaching classes will be discussed. 2012 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
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Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 47 ( 2012 ) 1874 – 1879
1877-0428 © 2012 Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer review under responsibility of Prof. Dr. Hüseyin Uzunboylu
doi: 10.1016/j.sbspro.2012.06.916
CY-ICER 2012
Action research in language learning
Mohammad Ali Nasrollahi a
*
, Pramela Krish b, Noorizah Mohd Noor c
aNational Univercity of Mlaysia , Bangi and 43600, Malaysia
b National Univercity of Mlaysia, Bangi and 43600, Malaysia
c National Univercity of Mlaysia, Bangi and 43600, Malaysia
Abstract
Over the last two decades, action research has become increasingly popular in foreign and second language teaching classes.
Action research can be a very valuable way to extend teachers teaching skills and gain more understanding of themselves as
teachers, their classrooms and their students. This paper focuses to provide a rationale on the use of action research in foreign and
second language education. Then, the nature, scope and the framework of action research will be described. Finally, the current
action research models that have become increasingly popular in foreign and second language teaching classes will be discussed.
2012 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Keywords: Action Research, Foreign & Second Language Learning , Classroom Practices ,Action Reaserch Models
1. Introduction
Throughout action research development, different people have come to understand action research in different
ways. From its beginnings in the 1930s, it was seen as an applied social science. Kurt Lewin, one of its
greater involvement would probably improve their productivity.(McFarland & Stansell, 1993)
tion from the action
America, but later went into decline. In the 1970s it received a new impetus in the UK through the work of
researchers such as John Elliott, Jack Whitehead, Wilf Carr and Stephen Kemmis. Elliott developed action research
as a form of professional development for teachers. At the same time as Elliott was developing his work, Jack
Whitehead was also developing a new approach to action research. He took the view that teachers were perfectly
capable of generating their personal theories by systematically studying their practice. Their theories would contain
the descriptions and explanations they offered for their practices as they ask
(Whitehead, 1989). The work of Elliott and Whitehead has been profoundly influential over the years in
presenting action research as a legitimate educational research methodology. While the literature contains a
respectable amount of studies conducted in foreign and second language classrooms, clearly there is a need for
additional research. A few educators have discussed the possibilities of teacher research for foreign and second
*
Mohammad Ali Nasrollahi. Tel.: +60-17-281-3439
E-mail address: ma.nasrollahi@yahoo.com.
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com
© 2012 Published by Elsevier Ltd. Selection and/or peer review under responsibility of Prof. Dr. Hüseyin Uzunboylu
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language education (Johnson, 1992; Nunan, 1992; Nunan & Lamb, 1996,Wallace 1998) but very little has been
published in journals on teacher action research, i.e., teacher as researcher (Haley, 2005)
2. Rationale for the use of action research in foreign and second language Classroom
Increasingly language teachers are required not only to teach in the classroom but also to do research. While
teachers are knowledgeable about teaching, many of them may not be as knowledgeable about doing research.
Action research is becoming a tool for school reform; as its very individual focus allows for a new engagement in
educational change .Some of the most beneficial aspects about teacher action research are that it is small scale,
contextualized, localized, and aimed at discovering, developing, or monitoring changes to practice(Wallace, 2000).
Reflec
evaluate the results. (Chamot, et al., 1998).However, language teachers who engage in action research are
developing their professional judgment and autonomy and encourage new teaching strategies and implies a different
way of generating knowledge.
3. The nature of Action Research
Essentially, action research is grounded in a qualitative research paradigm it involves the collection and analysis
of data related to professional development. It focuses on individual and small group professional practice to gain
greater clarity and understanding of a question, problem, or issue. Library project, problem -solvin g in the sense of
trying to find out what is wrong, doing research on or about students and learning why teacher do certain things are
not action research but rather it is about acquiring knowledge how to improve teaching strategies, involves teachers
working to improve their skills. It is also about how teacher can do things better and how teacher can change their
initially to clarify the issue investigated and to reveal
the way participants describe their actual experience of that issue
(Stringer, 2007, p. 20).
4. The scope of action research
Action research as a method is impressive. It may be used in almost any setting where a problem involving
people, tasks and procedures cries out for solution, or where some change of feature results in a more desirable
outcome (Cohen, Manion, & Morrison, 2000). Action research can be used in a variety of areas, for example:
teaching methods replacing a traditional method by a discovery method; learning strategies adopting an
integrated approach to learning in preference to a single subject style of teaching and learning; attitudes and
values
of life; continuing professional development of teachers improving teaching skills, developing new methods of
learning, increasing powers of analysis, of heightening self-awareness (Holly & Whitehead, 1986, p. 243).
5. Definition of Action Research
Action researches are executed in the era of education, Hence pupils and teachers are formally the subject of
educational research .Therefore the most relevant action research definitions would be revealed by (Mills, 2003)
to gather information about the ways that their particular school operates, how they teach, and how well their
students learn. The information is gathered with the goals of gaining insight, developing reflective practice, effecting
positive changes in the school environment and on educational practices in general, and improving student
1876 Mohammad Ali Nasrollahi et al. / Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 47 ( 2012 ) 1874 – 1879
6. Framework for Action Research
Mills (2003) developed the following framework for action research: 1. Describe the problem and area of
focus; 2.Define the factors involved in your area of focus (e.g., the curriculum, school setting, student outcomes, and
instructional strategies); 3.Develop research questions; 4. Describe the intervention or innovation to be
implemented; 5.Develop a timeline for implementation; 6.Describe the membership of the action research group;
7.Develop a list of resources to implement the plan;8. Describe the data to be collected;9. Develop a data collection
and analysis plan; 10.Select appropriate tools of inquiry; 11. Carry out the plan (implementation, data collection,
data analysis); 12. Report the results. This deductive approach implements a planned intervention, monitors its
implementation, and evaluates the results.
A more inductive approach, formulated by Burns (1999), is to carry out action research to explore what
changes need to be made or what actions need to be taken in a specific instructional setting. Burns suggests the
following interrelated activities: Explore an issue in teaching or learning; Identify areas of concern; Observe how
those areas play out in the setting of the study; Discuss how the issue might be addressed; Collect data to determine
the action to be taken (e.g., student questionnaires, observation reports, journal entries);Plan strategic actions based
on the data to address the issue.
an action plan. (Kemmis, McTaggart, & Program, 1988) suggest that the fundamental components of action research
include the following: (1) developing a plan for improvement, (2) implementing the plan, (3) observing and
documenting the effects of the plan, and (4) reflecting on the effects of the plan for further planning and informed
action. A review of action research frameworks reveals several common features. An action research project seeks
to create knowledge, propose and implement change, and improve practice and performance (Stringer, 1999)
7. Action Research Models
-based action research purpose is to assist people in
extending their understanding of their situation and thus resolving problems that confront them. Community-based
action research is always enacted through an explicit set of social values. According to Stringer (2007) the basic
action research routines provides a simple yet powerful framework look, think, act that enables people to
commence their inquiries in a straightforward manner and build greater detail into procedures as the complexity of
issues increases. (Stringer, Christensen, & Baldwin, 2009) believes the cyclical Look Think Act steps of action
research thus are incorporated into each phase of instruction, providing carefully articulated processes that enhance
both teacher instruction and student learning (p.12).
Figure 1. Action Research Cycle (2009)
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7.2
(Mills, 2000, 2003)has presented a four-
spi This model was described by Mills as "research done by teachers and for teachers
and students, not research done on them, and as such is a dynamic and responsive model that can be adapted to
different contexts and purposes" (Mills ,2000,19). Clearly, this action research model share some common elements:
a sense of purpose based on a 'problem" or "area of focus" (identification of an area of focus), observation or
monitoring of practice (collection of data), synthesis of information gathered (analysis and interpretation of data),
and some form of "action" that invariably "spirals" the researcher back into the process repeatedly (development of
an action plan).
Figure 2: Dialectic Action Research Spiral. Mills (2003, pp.18-19)
7.3
Wallace
reflective development, with special reference to language teaching .This strategy was basically a way of reflecting
on whatever ELT teachers do in their teaching. It is done by systematically collecting data; every day practice and
analyzing it in order to arrive at some decisions about what teacher future practice should be.
Figure 3.The reflective cycle and professional development
Wallace (1991) proposed a model for teacher education at the core which was a process of reflection on
professional competence. It involves the collection and analysis of data related to some aspect of our professional
action. This is a loop process, in the sense that the process can be repeated (reframing the problem, collecting fresh
data, rethinking our analysis, etc.) until teachers have found (Wallace ,1993,p16).
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8. Conclusion
Presenting these three practical models of action research: Firstly, to provide an overview of action research to
help the reader gain an understanding of the whole process. Secondly, it is to demonstrate that despite the rapid
growth of action research models, they do, in fact, share more similarities than differences. There is a high degree of
consensus among those who write on the subject about overall method and purpose. this article was introducing
action research to give ELT teachers an introduction to the variety of methods available to them as a means of
extending their repertoire of professional practices and of encouraging flexibility in professional development.
These are methods and approaches that teachers can put into use that will empower them, and make them
increasingly competent and 'autonomous in professional judgment'. All the presented models have enjoyed varying
degree of popularity, depending on the context in which they have been applied but action research model for
language teachers that was specified by Wallace (1991-1993), however, was not to turn the ELT teacher into a
researcher, but to help him or her to continue to develop as a teacher, using action researcher as a tool in this
process. The important things is that the processes involved are helpful to the practicing reflection
irrespective of whether they can be verified by someone else .In Model Language teachers will be putting
planning theory into classroom practice and it constitutes a resolution to the teaching theory -practice issue.
References
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Burns, A. (2009). Doing Action Research in English Language Teaching: A Guide for Practitioners: Routledge.
Carr, W., & Kemmis, S. (1986). Becoming critical: Education, knowledge, and action research: Routledge.
Chamot, A. U., Barnhardt, S., & Dirstine, S. (1998). CONDUCTING ACTION RESEARCH IN THE FOREIGN LANGUAGE CLASSROOM.
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Education, 19(1), 41-52.
... This research was developed under the framework of classroom-based action research. This method is very powerful to extend teachers teaching skills or to improve the quality of pedagogical practices and, also, the conditions where teachers and students work (Sowa in Abdallah, 2017;Elliot in Hassen, 2016;McKay, 2006;Nasrollahi, Krish, & Noor, 2012;Sowa, 2009). ...
... To take this matter further, following are the discussion of some theories regarding to the concept of action research proposed by several scholars. Mills (in Nasrollahi, Krish, & Noor, 2012) provides a relevant action research definition saying: "Any systematic inquiry conducted by teacher researchers to gather information about the ways the particular school operates, how they teach, and how well the students learn." For Richard & Farrell (as cited in İlin, Kutlu, & Kutluay, 2013), action research can be a powerful way for language teachers to investigate their own practice. ...
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After an early career as primary teacher and school principal, Ernie was lecturer in teacher education at Curtin University of Technology in Western Australia. From the mid-1980s he worked collaboratively in Curtin's Centre for Aboriginal Studies to develop a wide variety of innovative and highly successful education- and community-development programs and consultative services. His activities in association with government departments, community-based agencies, business corporations, and local governments assisted people to work more effectively in Aboriginal contexts. In recent years, as visiting professor at colleges of education in New Mexico and Texas, he taught action research to graduate students and engaged in educational action-research projects with African American, Hispanic, and other community and neighborhood groups. As a United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) consultant from 2002–05 he engaged in a major project that assisted development of schools in East Timor. He is currently facilitating a school-renewal process in a remote aboriginal community in West Australia. He is author of the texts Action Research (Sage, 2007), Action Research in Education (Pearson, 2008), Action Research in Health (with B. Genat, Pearson, 2004), Action Research in Human Services (with R. Dwyer, Pearson, 2005), and Teaching, Learning and Action Research (with L Christensen and S. Baldwin, Sage, 2009). He is associate editor of the Action Research Journal and past president of the Action Learning, Action Research Association (ALARA).