Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD

Indigenous students enrol in vocational education and training (VET) programs because they provide a viable pathway into the workplace or further education. However, most high school VET programs use mainstream teaching methodologies which already assume that students speak the StandardAustralian En...

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Main Authors: Oliver, Rhonda, Grote, Ellen, Rochecouste, Judith, Exell, Michael
Format: Journal Article
Published: Australian Council of TESOL Associations 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19517
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author Oliver, Rhonda
Grote, Ellen
Rochecouste, Judith
Exell, Michael
author_facet Oliver, Rhonda
Grote, Ellen
Rochecouste, Judith
Exell, Michael
author_sort Oliver, Rhonda
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Indigenous students enrol in vocational education and training (VET) programs because they provide a viable pathway into the workplace or further education. However, most high school VET programs use mainstream teaching methodologies which already assume that students speak the StandardAustralian English required for the workplace. This approach can disadvantage Indigenous students, particularly those from remote communities who speak a traditional Aboriginal language as a home language. This paper describes a case study of a second language Task-Based Needs Analysis(TBNA) undertaken at a residential high school specialising in VET for Indigenous students, most of whom come from Western Australia's remote communities and speak English as an Additional Language (EAL). The study used naturalistic data collection methods (non-participant observation, unstructured interviews and document collection) to identify the actual language and literacy tasks that students are likely to encounter in various workplace settings. The main findings are presented in relation to work-oriented tasks, work-life tasks and cross-cultural interactions. The research described here provides a potential guide for undertaking a TBNA as the starting point for designing and implementing task-based language teaching programs, especially for Indigenous VET students (and others from non-Western cultures) who speak EAL.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-195172017-01-30T12:14:14Z Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD Oliver, Rhonda Grote, Ellen Rochecouste, Judith Exell, Michael Indigenous task-based needs analysis VET Indigenous students enrol in vocational education and training (VET) programs because they provide a viable pathway into the workplace or further education. However, most high school VET programs use mainstream teaching methodologies which already assume that students speak the StandardAustralian English required for the workplace. This approach can disadvantage Indigenous students, particularly those from remote communities who speak a traditional Aboriginal language as a home language. This paper describes a case study of a second language Task-Based Needs Analysis(TBNA) undertaken at a residential high school specialising in VET for Indigenous students, most of whom come from Western Australia's remote communities and speak English as an Additional Language (EAL). The study used naturalistic data collection methods (non-participant observation, unstructured interviews and document collection) to identify the actual language and literacy tasks that students are likely to encounter in various workplace settings. The main findings are presented in relation to work-oriented tasks, work-life tasks and cross-cultural interactions. The research described here provides a potential guide for undertaking a TBNA as the starting point for designing and implementing task-based language teaching programs, especially for Indigenous VET students (and others from non-Western cultures) who speak EAL. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19517 Australian Council of TESOL Associations fulltext
spellingShingle Indigenous
task-based
needs analysis
VET
Oliver, Rhonda
Grote, Ellen
Rochecouste, Judith
Exell, Michael
Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title_full Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title_fullStr Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title_full_unstemmed Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title_short Needs analysis for task-based language teaching: A case study of Indigenous vocational education and training students who speak EAL/EAD
title_sort needs analysis for task-based language teaching: a case study of indigenous vocational education and training students who speak eal/ead
topic Indigenous
task-based
needs analysis
VET
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/19517