Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar

Children's active involvement in storytelling develops diverse lifelong skills for critical thinking, cognitive, social, and emotional skills. Central to the success of attracting the attention of students for storytelling are the social-emotional roles that teachers play in children's liv...

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Main Authors: Tin, H., Nonis, Karen, Lim, S., Honig, A.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19203
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author Tin, H.
Nonis, Karen
Lim, S.
Honig, A.
author_facet Tin, H.
Nonis, Karen
Lim, S.
Honig, A.
author_sort Tin, H.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Children's active involvement in storytelling develops diverse lifelong skills for critical thinking, cognitive, social, and emotional skills. Central to the success of attracting the attention of students for storytelling are the social-emotional roles that teachers play in children's lives. This study investigated 23 kindergarten teachers' views in Myanmar on the importance of stories, how they carry out storytelling as a part of curriculum, and how they view stories as a way to promote children's development, as well as how students respond to the stories. In general, teachers in Myanmar report feeling supportive of the importance of stories in children's lives. However, many teachers also reported lack of time, authentic materials, and teaching aids for conducting stories in classrooms in local schools. They noted that international schools do include stories and have a fixed and regular programme with fully equipped facilities.
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format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:29:19Z
publishDate 2013
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-192032017-09-13T13:43:08Z Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar Tin, H. Nonis, Karen Lim, S. Honig, A. Children's active involvement in storytelling develops diverse lifelong skills for critical thinking, cognitive, social, and emotional skills. Central to the success of attracting the attention of students for storytelling are the social-emotional roles that teachers play in children's lives. This study investigated 23 kindergarten teachers' views in Myanmar on the importance of stories, how they carry out storytelling as a part of curriculum, and how they view stories as a way to promote children's development, as well as how students respond to the stories. In general, teachers in Myanmar report feeling supportive of the importance of stories in children's lives. However, many teachers also reported lack of time, authentic materials, and teaching aids for conducting stories in classrooms in local schools. They noted that international schools do include stories and have a fixed and regular programme with fully equipped facilities. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19203 10.1080/03004430.2013.788818 restricted
spellingShingle Tin, H.
Nonis, Karen
Lim, S.
Honig, A.
Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title_full Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title_fullStr Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title_full_unstemmed Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title_short Teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in Myanmar
title_sort teachers' perceptions of the importance of stories in the lives of children in myanmar
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19203