Research achievements (PUBLICATIONS)

Basic information

Name McBRIDE Paul

Name of dissertation

Explicit Teaching in Japanese High Schools: What does SLA research indicate and what might a native teacher perceive?

Name of author

Paul McBride

Name of publication

Tamagawa Upper Secondary Division (High School) Educational Research Journal

Publisher

 

Volume (No.)

 

Issue (No.)

 

Start page

160-167

 

 

End page

 

Publication date

2007-10

Presence/absence of peer review

batu

Presence/absence of invitation

 

Language of publication used

 

Posting category

 

Type of publication

Research Paper (University and Research Institutions Bulletin)

Type of authorship

Individual works

ISSN

 

DOI

 

NAID (CiNii ID)

 

PMID

 

Permalink

URL

Summary

 

Remarks

Most second language acquisition (SLA) researchers agree that becoming competent in a second language (L2) is primarily due to having implicit knowledge. Yet, most Japanese teachers predominantly choose explicit teaching techniques. Further, there is a body of SLA research which suggests that explicit and implicit knowledge are completely separate so that explicit knowledge cannot be converted into implicit knowledge. A native teacher of English (NTE) in Japan whose views about teaching and learning have been shaped by this body of research may find the situation paradoxical. Both the SLA research and their experiences in education prior to coming to Japan may cause them to question the efficacy of explicit teaching. 

In spite of this, SLA research does support explicit teaching techniques. There is an emerging view among SLA researchers that explicit knowledge can convert into implicit knowledge if the learner is ready to acquire the targeted feature.