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All Journal English Review: Journal of English Education IDEAS: Journal on English Language Teaching and Learning, Linguistics and Literature LET: Linguistics, Literature and English Teaching Journal Journal of Teaching and Learning in Elementary Education Dinamisia: Jurnal Pengabdian Kepada Masyarakat Wiralodra English Journal (WEJ) Kurios JURNAL EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT Journal on Education JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND SOCIAL RESEARCH Jurnal Ilmiah Aquinas International Journal of Demos Community Development Journal: Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat Pedagogy : Journal of English Language Teaching Budapest International Research and Critics in Linguistics and Education Journal (Birle Journal) SALEE: Study of Applied Linguistics and English Education Lombok Journal of Science Journal of English Language and Education International Journal of English and Applied Linguistics (IJEAL) Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat (ABDIRA) LETS: Journal of Linguistics and English Teaching Studies Journal Of Human And Education (JAHE) Tarbiyah Wa Ta'lim: Jurnal Penelitian Pendidikan dan Pembelajaran Jurnal Pengabdian Teratai Academic Journal Perspective : Education, Language, and Literature JEELS (Journal of English Education and Linguistics Studies) Jurnal Pemberdayaan Sosial dan Teknologi Masyarakat Journal Liaison Academia and Society IPTEK: Jurnal Hasil Pengabdian kepada Masyarakat UPMI Proceeding Series Journal International Journal of Language and Ubiquitous Learning Jurnal Sipakatau English Education: English Journal for Teaching and Learning Bhakti: Jurnal Pengabdian dan Pemberdayaan Masyarakat
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Journal : Journal of English Language and Education

English Teachers’ Beliefs in Teaching English Grammar to Improve Students’ Speaking Skill Karisma Erikson Tarigan; Margaret Stevani
Journal of English Language and Education Vol 7, No 1 (2022)
Publisher : Universitas Pahlawan Tuanku Tambusai

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31004/jele.v7i1.236

Abstract

English teachers’ beliefs had an important role in their decision-making about how grammar should be taught. Approaches to foreign grammar pedagogy were informed not only by the point of view of grammar, but also by beliefs about the importance of grammar, how it could be learned, and how it could be taught. The aims of teaching English grammar in this research were to know the factors that could influence English foreign language teachers’ beliefs in English grammar teaching and their roles in the practice of teaching English grammar. A mixed-method that involved qualitative and quantitative methods in this research was used to describe any insight of English teachers in teaching English grammar. The data were collected based on a close-ended interview and a questionnaire administered to 27 English teachers in 3 junior high schools and 3 senior high schools in North Sumatra, Indonesia. The results showed that: (1) the reasons for the importance of grammar teaching in speaking skills, (2) the way how grammar should be taught in speaking skills, (3) the techniques to teach English grammar, (4) the challenges of teaching grammar in speaking skills, and (5) the procedures to teach English grammar. This research recommended English teachers reflect on the professional and pedagogical contexts of English grammar teaching to improve the quality of English teachers’ teaching behaviors.
Misconstructing Pseudo-Complement Clauses and Extraposition in English Writing by Elementary Students: A Cognitive Syntax Lens Stevani, Margaret; Wijayati, Wahyu; Taufik, Taufik; Saragi, Alexander Adrian
Journal of English Language and Education Vol 10, No 4 (2025)
Publisher : Universitas Pahlawan Tuanku Tambusai

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31004/jele.v10i4.1067

Abstract

This research examined systematic errors in pseudo-complement clauses and extraposition. The errors included subject-raising issues, verb-complement mismapping, nominalization drift, and filler-gap confusion. These were found in the English writing of Indonesian elementary school students in Medan, North Sumatra and Manado, North Sulawesi. The research used a cognitive syntax framework and applied a qualitative multiple-case study design. Data were collected through free-writing prompts. The findings revealed frequent clause misformations. Common patterns included overuse of “It is + Verb + That/To” constructions, blending of that/to clauses, mislearned subject raising, and poor control of nonfinite clauses. These errors reflected deeper cognitive struggles. Students had difficulty managing clause control, syntactic focus, and verb-complement alignment. The issues were partly influenced by L1 transfer and rote use of lexical chunks. Many students tried to express abstract ideas without sufficient syntactic mastery. These were not isolated mistakes, but signs of developing syntactic representation. The research emphasized the need for clause-based instruction. Such instruction can support both conceptual understanding and grammatical development. The implications for early writing pedagogy and future developmental studies in bilingual contexts were also discussed
Redefining Challenges in English Listening Comprehension through Ellipsis Repair, Boundary Overrun, and Disfluent Clause Markers Stevani, Margaret; Wijayati, Wahyu; Tarigan, Jenheri Rejeki; Saragi, Alexander Adrian
Journal of English Language and Education Vol 10, No 5 (2025)
Publisher : Universitas Pahlawan Tuanku Tambusai

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31004/jele.v10i5.1214

Abstract

This study redefined English listening comprehension in the Indonesian EFL context by analyzing the interpretive challenges posed by ellipsis repair, boundary overrun, and disfluent clause markers features that were often overlooked in pedagogical models. Ellipsis repair referred to a listener’s attempt to reconstruct omitted elements in spontaneous speech, often caused by speakers backtracking or self-correcting mid-utterance. Boundary overrun described a speaker’s tendency to extend or blur syntactic units across intonation or clause boundaries, which made real-time parsing difficult. Disfluent clause markers included fillers, false starts, and hesitations that interrupted clause structure and challenged linear meaning construction. Conducted at three private universities in Indonesia located on Medan (North Sumatra), Manado (North Sulawesi), and Makassar (South Sulawesi), the research involved pre-intermediate-level students who engaged with authentic spoken English data. Using a qualitative discourse-based approach, the study examined comprehension breakdowns through think-aloud protocols and clause-level analysis. Findings revealed that listener difficulties were not incidental but structurally rooted in disrupted syntax and prosody. These disruptions challenged students’ ability to construct coherent meaning in real time. The study highlighted the need for instructional models that developed interpretive resilience, not just lexical decoding. It called for a shift toward listening pedagogies attuned to spontaneous speech, structural ambiguity, and repair negotiation. The findings offered implications for EFL curriculum design, assessment development, and real-world communication training across Indonesian educational contexts.
Transformative Experiences in English Microteaching: Educational Inquiry into Pedagogical Adjustment, Reflection, and Skill Refinement Stevani, Margaret; Martiningsih, Evi; Panduwinata, Tiara; Rais, Rinovian; Wardani, Happy Kusuma; Saragi, Alexander Adrian; Nurmayana, Nurmayana; Dalimunte, Nurul
Journal of English Language and Education Vol 11, No 1 (2026)
Publisher : Universitas Pahlawan Tuanku Tambusai

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.31004/jele.v11i1.2046

Abstract

This qualitative study investigated the transformative experiences of pre-service English teachers during microteaching at two private universities in North Sumatra, Indonesia. Involving a purposive sample of 14 Indonesian pre-service teachers, data were collected through teaching journals, classroom observations, audio-visual recordings, and stimulated recall interviews. Thematic analysis was used, guided by Vygotsky’s ZPD, Schon’s reflective practice, and Wenger’s comunicative practices theory. Findings revealed shifts from routine teaching to adaptive, student-centered strategies characterized by pedagogical adjustment, reflective awareness, and instructional skill refinement. Participants showed increased sensitivity to timing, language accuracy, emotional climate, and sociocultural engagement. The study highlighted microteaching as a dynamic platform for identity formation and pedagogical growth. The research offered critical insights into teacher development and suggested future studies with broader contexts to capture sustained transformation in English education.