Teachers’ Attitudes towards the Use of Graded Readers in Promoting English Reading Skills in Thai EFL Students A Case Study of Secondary School Teachers in Bangkok

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Korkaew Samitayothin
Pataraporn Tapinta

Abstract

This study aims to survey the use of Graded Readers in Thai secondary schools and to explore the attitudes of English language teachers towards the use of the materials in promoting reading skills in Thai secondary schools. The participants were 45 teachers of Foreign Languages Departments from 6 out of 66 secondary schools (9.09%) in Bangkok which used Graded Readers in English language teaching. The questionnaire and semi-structured interview were the major instruments. The descriptive and interpretive methods of content analysis (Coffey & Atkinson, 1996; Strauss & Corbin, 1998; Berg, 2004) were conducted for this study. The results revealed Graded Readers were commonly used as external reading (47%) to provide the students with an opportunity for extensive reading and promote their reading habits. However, these teachers seemed to lack awareness of the fact that Graded Readers could enhance the use of reading strategies. Yet, 53% of the teachers reported positive attitudes in the use of the materials in teaching strategies. Eight major reading strategies (e.g., building background knowledge, vocabulary building, skimming and identifying main ideas, generating questions, scanning and identifying supporting details, inferring meaning/interpreting, summarizing, and brainstorming) were reported to be substantially used among these teachers. Overall, the results of this study suggest that the schools should promote more effective reading instruction on the use of this material in improving reading skills in Thai students more effectively.

Article Details

Section
Research Articles

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