Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic

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date 2018-01-04 15:21:47
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originalfilename 1204-01-FH03-FBK-18-12107.pdf
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spelling 6348 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/view.php?ref=6348 https://intelek.unisza.edu.my/intelek/pages/search.php?search=!collection407072 Restricted Document Conference Conference Paper application/pdf 8 Adobe Acrobat Pro DC 20 Paper Capture Plug-in 1.7 PDFium 2018-01-04 15:21:47 1204-01-FH03-FBK-18-12107.pdf UniSZA Private Access Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic This paper is written to investigate the beliefs of student teachers majoring in English about learning Arabic as a foreign language. This paper presents the results from a larger study of four languages, one of which is Arabic. The respondents of this study were students in diploma in TESL programme at a higher education institution in Malaysia who were enrolled in Arabic as foreign language to meet the graduation requirement. Data for the study were collected using BALLI, an instrument to measure students’ beliefs about language learning. As this is a descriptive study, the data gathered were analysed using percentage. In general, respondents held positive beliefs in learning Arabic. The findings have a number of contributions. One important pedagogical implication the study contributes is with regards to the needs to inculcate realistic beliefs among students in learning Arabic as a foreign language. Seminar kebangsaan Bahasa dan kesusasteraan Arab 2017 UniSZA
spellingShingle Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
summary This paper is written to investigate the beliefs of student teachers majoring in English about learning Arabic as a foreign language. This paper presents the results from a larger study of four languages, one of which is Arabic. The respondents of this study were students in diploma in TESL programme at a higher education institution in Malaysia who were enrolled in Arabic as foreign language to meet the graduation requirement. Data for the study were collected using BALLI, an instrument to measure students’ beliefs about language learning. As this is a descriptive study, the data gathered were analysed using percentage. In general, respondents held positive beliefs in learning Arabic. The findings have a number of contributions. One important pedagogical implication the study contributes is with regards to the needs to inculcate realistic beliefs among students in learning Arabic as a foreign language.
title Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
title_full Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
title_fullStr Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
title_full_unstemmed Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
title_short Preservice Esl Teachers’ Beliefs About Learning Arabic
title_sort preservice esl teachers’ beliefs about learning arabic