Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries

This research explores three informal methods of learning English: English Corner, English Room and Pondok English. The first is common in Mainland China where the label English Corner was coined. English Room is a variant of English Corner encountered in Japan. In the first phase, English Corner an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kellaway, David
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65694/
_version_ 1848800259996647424
author Kellaway, David
author_facet Kellaway, David
author_sort Kellaway, David
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This research explores three informal methods of learning English: English Corner, English Room and Pondok English. The first is common in Mainland China where the label English Corner was coined. English Room is a variant of English Corner encountered in Japan. In the first phase, English Corner and English Room were researched using ethnographic methods, principally participant observation, to investigate the motivations of, and perceived benefits for attendees of learning in these informal environments. The second phase of the study involves action research that built upon the findings of the first phase of the project. The research investigates whether the English Corner and English Room informal learning model could be adapted for use with an audience of parents and schoolchildren in Malaysian Sabah in a subsequent informal learning project that became known as Pondok English. The findings from the study suggest that the model of informal English learning that underpins English Corner, English Room and Pondok English can be adapted, if not directly exported to different contexts and environments. Both adults and children benefit from it: there is evidence of strong instrumental motivation among adults who perceive the link to education and career options available to English speakers. The motivation among children appears more intrinsic and includes the enjoyment of communal singing in English, of being read stories in English, and the opportunity to capture some of their parents’ time in informal and enjoyable short conversations in English that can be replicated at home. The research highlights the importance of literature, libraries, parks and communal mentoring which were essential to ensuring the project’s viability and long term sustainability. The research contributes to knowledge about the value of creating informal, culturally appropriate, cross-generational events and environments to promote the teaching and learning of English as an additional language.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:48:44Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-65694
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:48:44Z
publishDate 2021
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-656942024-02-07T13:53:40Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65694/ Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries Kellaway, David This research explores three informal methods of learning English: English Corner, English Room and Pondok English. The first is common in Mainland China where the label English Corner was coined. English Room is a variant of English Corner encountered in Japan. In the first phase, English Corner and English Room were researched using ethnographic methods, principally participant observation, to investigate the motivations of, and perceived benefits for attendees of learning in these informal environments. The second phase of the study involves action research that built upon the findings of the first phase of the project. The research investigates whether the English Corner and English Room informal learning model could be adapted for use with an audience of parents and schoolchildren in Malaysian Sabah in a subsequent informal learning project that became known as Pondok English. The findings from the study suggest that the model of informal English learning that underpins English Corner, English Room and Pondok English can be adapted, if not directly exported to different contexts and environments. Both adults and children benefit from it: there is evidence of strong instrumental motivation among adults who perceive the link to education and career options available to English speakers. The motivation among children appears more intrinsic and includes the enjoyment of communal singing in English, of being read stories in English, and the opportunity to capture some of their parents’ time in informal and enjoyable short conversations in English that can be replicated at home. The research highlights the importance of literature, libraries, parks and communal mentoring which were essential to ensuring the project’s viability and long term sustainability. The research contributes to knowledge about the value of creating informal, culturally appropriate, cross-generational events and environments to promote the teaching and learning of English as an additional language. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65694/1/Ed%20D%20Thesis%204150519%20D%20Kellaway.pdf Kellaway, David (2021) Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries. EdD thesis, University of Nottingham. informal learning motivation English ESL Malaysia China Japan English Corner parental involvement foregin speakers English language study and teaching
spellingShingle informal learning
motivation
English
ESL
Malaysia
China
Japan
English Corner
parental involvement
foregin speakers
English language study and teaching
Kellaway, David
Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title_full Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title_fullStr Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title_full_unstemmed Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title_short Corners, Rooms and Pondoks: a study of informal English learning in three Asian countries
title_sort corners, rooms and pondoks: a study of informal english learning in three asian countries
topic informal learning
motivation
English
ESL
Malaysia
China
Japan
English Corner
parental involvement
foregin speakers
English language study and teaching
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/65694/