Journal of English as a Foreign Language Teaching and Research (JEFLTR)
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2021): March Volume

Perception and Practices of Teaching Grammar in Higher Secondary Schools in Bhutan.

Nima Wangchuk (Gedu College of Business Studies, Royal University of Bhutan.)
Chencho Wangchuk (Gedu College of Business Studies, Royal University of Bhutan)
Dhanapati Sharma (Gedu College of Business Studies, Royal University of Bhutan)
Phub Dorji (Gedu College of Business Studies, Royal University of Bhutan)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Mar 2021

Abstract

This paper reports a survey of Bhutanese teachers’ Perception and Practices of Teaching Grammar in Higher Secondary Schools in Bhutan. The teaching of grammar in Bhutanese school is predominately guided by curriculum, whereby context-based teaching is mostly encouraged. The descriptive analysis based on quantitative findings of the study indicated that Bhutanese teachers generally believed that the formal study of grammar is essential to the eventual mastery of a foreign or second language.  The study also showed that grammar is generally believed to be best taught explicitly, inductively or deductively, but not implicitly. Moreover, the teachers' remark on the importance of systematic practice of grammatical features and detailed error correction suggests that there is a preference for more extensive treatment of grammatical issues.  The findings of the present study also indicate that, like the teachers reported in the 2002 and 2008 studies, teachers in Bhutan appreciate the centrality of grammar in their language teaching. This descriptive analysis based on quantitative findings would be beneficial to the curriculum developers, teachers, and lecturers in developing students’ grammar skills and providing professional development to teachers for effective delivery of grammar lessons

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Journal Info

Abbrev

jefltr

Publisher

Subject

Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Other

Description

The scope mainly focuses on but not limited to: English language, theoretical, descriptive and applied English linguistics, language learning and teaching, structure and development of English across the globe, comparative linguistics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, anthropological ...