Teacher’s Role in Students-Centered English Intensive Reading Class in China

Huijie DING

Abstract


Inspired by the theory of Constructivism, the notions of learner diversity and learner choice get a lot of awareness and recognition of many educators, therefore more and more emphasis has been placed on the position of students in the classroom. As a consequence, the traditional teacher-centered foreign language teaching pattern has been supplanted by a new students-centered pattern by which students are the main body of the class and the owner of their learning. However, teachers’ role in students-centered foreign language teaching class should not be neglected. In intensive reading class, which is a course to cultivate the students’ comprehensive abilities of language, the roles of the teacher, instead of as a controller and a dominant, should be played fully as a manager and an organizer of the language teaching class, a designer of the teaching process, a source of teaching material, an investigator and a counselor of students’ learning and a promoter of deepening and confirming the accepted knowledge.

Key words: Teacher’s role; Students-centered; Foreign language teaching; Intensive reading


Keywords


Teacher’s role; Students-centered; Foreign language teaching; Intensive reading

References


Chinese Ministry of Education (2007). College English Curriculum Requirements. Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.
Cortazze, M., & Jin, L.X. (1996). English Teaching and Learning in China. Language Teaching, 29(2), 61-80.
Glaserfeld, E.V. (1989). Constructivism in Education. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
Harmer, J. (1991). The Practice of English Language Teaching. London: Longman.
McCombs, B., & Whisler, J. (1997). The Learner-Centered Classroom and School: Strategies for Increasing Student Motivation and Achievement. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Moffett, J., & Wagner, B.J. (1983). Student-Centered Language Arts and Reading: A Handbook for Teachers (5th ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: Houghton Mifflin.
Richards, J.C., & Rodgers, T.S. (1986). Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Widdowson, H. (1987). The Roles of Teacher and Learner. ELT Journal, 41(2), 83-88.
Wikipedia. (n.d.) Constructivism (Learning Theory). Retrieved From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constructivism_(learning_theory)
Woolfolk, A.E. (2001). Educational Psychology Interactive. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/j.css.1923669720120804.1157

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