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El. knyga: Teaching English at Japanese Universities: A New Handbook

Edited by (International Christian University, Japan), Edited by (Akita International University, Japan)
  • Formatas: 250 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Oct-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351377287
  • Formatas: 250 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 26-Oct-2018
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351377287

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Written by leading English language educators in Japan, this Handbook provides an in-depth guide for the new generation of teachers at Japanese universities. In clear accessible prose, it offers practical and detailed advice on effective classroom pedagogy, student motivation, learning styles, classroom culture, national language policy, career opportunities, departmental politics, administrative mindset, and institutional identity. Its four sections — The Setting, The Courses, The Classroom, and The Workplace — examine issues faced by university language teachers as well as challenges confronted by the increasing number of scholars teaching English as a Medium of instruction (EMI) and Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) courses. Firmly grounded in contemporary teaching method and theory, the Handbook’s 23 chapters also acknowledge the influence of diverse movements such as World Englishes, global issues, gender, and positive psychology. Its three appendices contain information on organizations, books, journals, and websites particularly useful for Japanese university educators; explanation of types and rankings of schools; ways to learn more about individual institutions for job-hunting; and detailed information on the structure (and Japanese titles) of faculty and non-teaching staff at the typical university. This Handbook is an invaluable resource to anyone teaching, or aspiring to teach, at a Japanese university.

Recenzijos

'For those new to Japan, the first experiences of teaching English in Japanese higher education are often fraught with cultural pitfalls and moments of consternation. Wadden and Hale have edited an indispensable guide for both surviving and thriving as an English teacher in Japanese colleges and universities. The chapters of this book have been written by seasoned veterans who on average have taught in Japan for more than twenty years, and cover topics ranging from how to get a job in a Japanese university, to how to better appreciate the dynamics of the classroom and workplace. Readers will gain a deeper understanding of how to approach their classes, their students, as well as how to get along with their Japanese colleagues and administrative staff. This book should be required reading for anyone wanting to teach English in Japanese higher education.' Gregory Hadley, Professor of Cultural Studies and Applied Linguistics, Niigata University, Japan and Visiting Fellow, University of Oxford, UK

'If the first edition of this book has been the Bible for those teaching in Japanese universities over the past 25 years, then this new edition will quickly come to be seen as the New Testament. Full of academically informed insights gleaned from personal (and sometimes painful) experience, it also provides a fascinating record of what has and has not changed in Japanese higher education since the early 1990s.' Roger Goodman, Nissan Professor of Japanese Studies, University of Oxford, UK

'As a caucasian native-speaker of English and trainer/supervisor of English instructors, of all the interesting and cogent chapters presented in this Handbook I was most struck by Tiina Matikainens supportive article for non-native speakers (NNS). What I was struck by was the awareness that my younger self was also affected by her "Native Speaker myth" and the "Caucasian halo effect". I have since learned to appreciate the value of NNS, some of whom are among the best instructors I have ever encountered. She makes her case well, and her survey of the "most important characteristics for a good language teacher" is compelling.' Thomas Pendergast, Professor Emeritus, International Buddhist University (Osaka), Japan 'For those new to Japan, the first experiences of teaching English in Japanese higher education are often fraught with cultural pitfalls and moments of consternation. Wadden and Hale have edited an indispensable guide for both surviving and thriving as an English teacher in Japanese colleges and universities. The chapters of this book have been written by seasoned veterans who on average have taught in Japan for more than twenty years, and cover topics ranging from how to get a job in a Japanese university, to how to better appreciate the dynamics of the classroom and workplace. Readers will gain a deeper understanding of how to approach their classes, their students, as well as how to get along with their Japanese colleagues and administrative staff. This book should be required reading for anyone wanting to teach English in Japanese higher education.' Gregory Hadley, Professor of Cultural Studies and Applied Linguistics, Niigata University, Japan and Visiting Fellow, University of Oxford, UK

'If the first edition of this book has been the Bible for those teaching in Japanese universities over the past 25 years, then this new edition will quickly come to be seen as the New Testament. Full of academically-informed insights gleaned from personal (and sometimes painful) experience, it also provides a fascinating record of what has and has not changed in Japanese higher education since the early 1990s.' Roger Goodman, Nissan Professor of Japanese Studies, University of Oxford, UK

'As a caucasian native-speaker of English and trainer/supervisor of English instructors, of all the interesting and cogent chapters presented in this Handbook I was most struck by Tiina Matikainens supportive article for non-native speakers (NNS). What I was struck by was the awareness that my younger self was also affected by her "Native Speaker myth" and the "Caucasian halo effect". I have since learned to appreciate the value of NNS, some of whom are among the best instructors I have ever encountered. She makes her case well, and her survey of the "most important characteristics for a good language teacher" is compelling.' Thomas Pendergast, Professor Emeritus, International Buddhist University (Osaka), Japan

List of figures
viii
List of contributors
ix
Advice to foreign teachers at Japanese universities xvii
Foreword xviii
John F. Fanselow
Acknowledgements xxiii
PART 1 The setting
1(40)
1 The landscape of Japanese higher education: an introduction
3(8)
Chris Carl Hale
Paul Wadden
2 Making a career of university teaching in Japan: getting (and keeping) a full-time job
11(14)
Jenifer Larson-Hall
Jeffrey Stewart
3 The ronin teacher: making a living as a full-time part-timer at Japanese universities
25(7)
Chrystabel Butler
4 The chrysanthemum maze: understanding your colleagues in the Japanese university
32(9)
Curtis Kelly
Nobuhiro Adachi
PART 2 The courses
41(82)
5 Tearing down the wall of silence: constructing the English conversation class at a Japanese university
43(11)
John Wiltshier
Marc Helgesen
6 The blind spots of reading: switching on lights in the Japanese university classroom
54(10)
Gordon Myskow
Paul R. Underwood
Rob Waring
7 Mandatory `sentencing': breaking loose in the Japanese university writing classroom
64(11)
Gordon Myskow
8 Real world listening in the Japanese university classroom
75(9)
Chris Carl Hale
9 Teaching and learning vocabulary in the Japanese university
84(13)
Paul Wadden
Charles Browne
Paul Nation
10 Teaching presentation in the Japanese university
97(6)
Curtis Kelly
11 Teaching subject content through English: CLIL and EMI courses in the Japanese university
103(6)
Howard Brown
Annette Bradford
12 Using technology in the Japanese university classroom (and beyond)
109(6)
Dan Ferreira
Joachim Castellano
13 Homework in the Japanese university classroom: getting students to do it (and then evaluating their performance)
115(8)
Thomas N. Robb
PART 3 The classroom
123(34)
14 Nails that still don't stick up: revisiting the enigma of the Japanese college classroom
125(12)
Fred E. Anderson
15 Creating engagement and motivation in the Japanese university language classroom
137(7)
Bill Snyder
16 The Japanese student and the university English teacher
144(6)
Donna T. Fujimoto
17 English language policy in Japan and the Ministry of Education (MEXT): emphasis, trends, and changes that affect higher education
150(7)
Paul R. Underwood
Gregory Paul Glasgow
PART 4 The workplace
157(45)
18 "He said, she said": female and male dynamics in Japanese universities
159(6)
Diane Hawley Nagatomo
Melodie Cook
19 The Japanese university teacher of English
165(9)
Asako Takaesu
Mikiko Sudo
20 Beyond the native speaker fallacy: internationalizing English-language teaching at Japanese universities
174(6)
Tuna Matikainen
21 Walk a mile in the shoes of the non-Japanese administrator
180(7)
Stephen M. Ryan
Peter McCagg
22 Conflicts, contracts, rights, and solidarity: the Japanese university workplace from a labor perspective
187(9)
Gerome Rothman
23 Navigating the chrysanthemum maze: off-hand advice on how to tiptoe through the minefield of the Japanese university
196(6)
Curtis Kelly
Charles Browne
Appendix 1 Resources for university educators in Japan 202(9)
Glen Hill
Appendix 2 Types of universities in Japan 211(5)
Chris Carl Hale
Paul Wadden
Appendix 3 Academic admin hierarchy chart 216(2)
Index 218
Paul Wadden, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in the English for Liberal Arts Program of International Christian University, Tokyo. The editor of the original A Handbook for Teaching English at Japanese Colleges and Universities (Oxford University Press, 1993), he is the author of articles on language teaching and academic writing appearing in TESOL Quarterly, ELT Journal, RELC Journal, College Literature, Composition Studies and many other journals; articles on culture, politics, and education in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Japan Times; and more than 50 textbooks. He has taught in Japanese universities for the past 30 years.

Chris Carl Hale, EdD, is Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Global Communication and Language at Akita International University, Japan and formerly the Academic Director of the Tokyo Center of the New York University (NYU) School of Professional Studies (SPS). He has taught undergraduate and graduate courses related to language acquisition and teacher training in the United States and in Japan for over 20 years at universities such as City University of New York (CUNY), Queens College, Teachers College Columbia University, and International Christian University, Tokyo. His articles have appeared in Language Testing in Asia, TESOL International, and Teachers College Columbia University Journal of TESOL and Applied Linguistics. He is also an avid DJ and techno music producer.