The authors explored the role of silence and deciphered its meaning and usefulness as a teaching and learning strategy for Japanese students through a survey of Japanese university students in their home country. This study has revealed that participant responses were evenly divided among comfortable with silence, uncomfortable with silence, and dependent on familiarity with the person. The use of silence by Japanese students varies on a highly individualized basis, not only by culture. The interlocutor is the significant factor, not the topic of conversation, for their comfort with silence. This study also suggests that silence can be used in addition to verbal participation as a form of engaged learning and active participation
Asians are said to use silence in academic situation more than other learners from Europe and Americ...
As part of a larger study exploring academic discourse socialization of a group of students from div...
In Western societies, school pedagogies tend to be biased in favour of talk and emphasise the links ...
The authors explored the role of silence and deciphered its meaning and usefulness as a teaching and...
This paper addresses the issue of Japanese EFL learners' classroom silence in cross-cultural setting...
This mixed-methods investigation reports on the under-researched issue of silence within Japanese un...
This paper is a study of the use of silence by Japanese learners of English in cross-cultural commu...
The paper offers an examination of the dynamics between silence, agency and power for students and i...
Silence has been identified as a defining characteristic of Asian students in second language contex...
Recent research has reported a common tendency for international students to be silent in the classr...
Purpose: This study aimed to explore the underlying reasons for student silence in EMI classrooms an...
Classroom silence, particularly of Asian EFL learners, is a perennial concern. Based on the results ...
In recent years scholars have shown that silence is not just a gap between speeches but a communicat...
For many language teachers, a significant amount of classroom time is dedicated to helping students ...
Silence is a key pedagogical issue in language education. Seen by some as a space for thinking and r...
Asians are said to use silence in academic situation more than other learners from Europe and Americ...
As part of a larger study exploring academic discourse socialization of a group of students from div...
In Western societies, school pedagogies tend to be biased in favour of talk and emphasise the links ...
The authors explored the role of silence and deciphered its meaning and usefulness as a teaching and...
This paper addresses the issue of Japanese EFL learners' classroom silence in cross-cultural setting...
This mixed-methods investigation reports on the under-researched issue of silence within Japanese un...
This paper is a study of the use of silence by Japanese learners of English in cross-cultural commu...
The paper offers an examination of the dynamics between silence, agency and power for students and i...
Silence has been identified as a defining characteristic of Asian students in second language contex...
Recent research has reported a common tendency for international students to be silent in the classr...
Purpose: This study aimed to explore the underlying reasons for student silence in EMI classrooms an...
Classroom silence, particularly of Asian EFL learners, is a perennial concern. Based on the results ...
In recent years scholars have shown that silence is not just a gap between speeches but a communicat...
For many language teachers, a significant amount of classroom time is dedicated to helping students ...
Silence is a key pedagogical issue in language education. Seen by some as a space for thinking and r...
Asians are said to use silence in academic situation more than other learners from Europe and Americ...
As part of a larger study exploring academic discourse socialization of a group of students from div...
In Western societies, school pedagogies tend to be biased in favour of talk and emphasise the links ...