Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature
Vol 6, No 1: July 2006, Nationally Accredited

NATIVE OR NON-NATIVE TEACHERS: A STUDY ON TERTIARY TEACHERS BELIEFS IN INDONESIA

Nugrahenny T Zacharias (Nugrahenny T. Zacharias, M.A-ELT. is a lecturer of the Faculty of Language and Literature, Satya Wacana Christian University, Salatiga.)



Article Info

Publish Date
20 Feb 2015

Abstract

ELT professionals and scholars have voiced differing opinions on issues related to nativeness. Given the lack of empirical studies on this topic, the present study aims to document perceptions of non-native teachers on the issues of nativeness. The participants of the study were drawn from one hundred English teachers taught at tertiary level in Indonesia. The study found that the teachers beliefs about the issue of nativeness varied considerably depending on the language skill concerned. However, most respondents agreed that nativeness should not be the determining factor of what constitute a good teacher of English, as educational background and teaching skills should be taken into account. This study learns that the role of non-native English-speaking teachers needs to be further explored and socialized particularly in Indonesia where such issues are rarely addressed.

Copyrights © 2006






Journal Info

Abbrev

celt

Publisher

Subject

Arts Humanities Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media

Description

Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature is a double-blind peer-reviewed journal, published biannually in the months of July and December with p-ISSN (printed): 1412-3320 & e-ISSN (electronic/online): 2502-4914 It presents articles around the area of culture, English ...