Influence of Attitudes on the Autonomy of English as a Foreign Language Teachers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Teacher Professional Development Toward Teacher Autonomy
“One way of defining autonomy is in terms of control over one’s own life; in relation to teachers this might be glossed as ‘control over one’s own professional development’. … A second and equally common sense of autonomy is ‘freedom from control by others.”
2.2. Teacher Autonomy
- (1)
- What attitudes do EFL teachers hold toward their professional development?
- (2)
- How do such attitudes influence teacher autonomy?
3. Research Design
3.1. Research Methods
3.2. Participants
3.3. Data Collection
- (1)
- Do you have a plan for your professional development? Why yes/no?
- (2)
- If yes, what is your plan for your professional development?
- (3)
- What are the requirements on EFL teachers’ professional development set up by the school authority?
- (4)
- What is your opinion about these requirements?
3.4. Data Analysis
4. The Main Findings
4.1. The Participants’ Attitudes Toward Professional Development
4.1.1. The Participants’ Plan of Professional Development
“Of course, I know that I have to do something. Due to the heavy teaching load, I can only complete my teaching tasks in this semester. This is my short-term plan. For the long-term plan, I wish to improve my teaching and research ability by doing a visiting scholar program.”
4.1.2. The Participants’ Obstacles to Professional Development
“As a teacher, I often tell my students explicitly what they should do. However, nobody tells me what I should do and how I should plan my career as a teacher.”
“In fact, the school authority does provide us with some opportunities for professional development. Nevertheless, I have difficulty participating in the programs because I have to look after my young child.”
“I cannot do a visiting scholar program because my husband and my child are in China. Without their company, I cannot study abroad.”
“I am forty years old, and I have a child to support. Therefore, it will be impossible for me to receive any further education. Even if I have such a plan, it will be encumbered by the reality of my life.”
“I have many good plans for professional development, but my poor health prevents me from carrying them out.”
“I do like professional development programs, but I am afraid of the overseas education programs because I am airsick on long trips.”
4.1.3. The Participants’ Attitudes Toward In-Service Training Programs
“The school authority actually provides us with a variety of in-service training programs. Faculty members can participate in any of those programs if they feel it is necessary. I think that these programs are beneficial to our professional development.”
“I graduated from a normal university. However, it was required by the school authority that I should follow a course on Education Psychology and Teaching Methodology in an in-service training program and sit for the examinations of these two courses at the end of the training program. I cannot understand why I should do this as I have already taken these two courses during college. For me, this kind of training programs is just a waste of time.”
“Generally speaking, I don’t think there is a systematic and long-term plan for teacher professional development in our university.”
4.2. The Participants’ Practice of Autonomy
4.2.1. The Practice of Autonomy by the Positive Group
T: | Now we need more volunteers to read the following words. Who would like to have a try? (One boy and one girl raised their hands.) Ladies first, OK? |
S1 | Routine. (The girl read the word in a weak voice.) |
T: | Routine, pay attention to the stress, OK? Next one, please go on. |
S2: | Foundation. |
T: | Foundation, OK, good. Please also read the sentence behind it. |
S2: | Self-learning, to some extent, emancipate students from the hard work and arouse their creativity. It laid foundation for the sustainable development of the students. |
T: | Thank you! Please nominate one of your classmates to translate the sentence, OK? Anyone is OK, so you have equal opportunities. |
S2 | [S3] |
- R:
- There were a dozen new words in the exercise. Did you select the words all by yourself or the ones that were listed in the teachers’ reference book?
- T:
- I selected them all by myself. When I teach new words and expressions, I will refer to the teachers’ reference book. Following that, I will select 12 important ones based on my own understanding and then interpret their semantic meanings using example sentences. This enables my students to learn the semantics of the new words in concrete contexts. Why do I select 12 new words for one lecture? This is because I heard that students could only learn 8 new words in one lecture.
- R:
- Ah? Who told you this message?
- T:
- Actually, I do not remember who told me this, but I believe this is true. You know, if I only teach 8 new words in one lecture, I will not be able to enlarge my students’ vocabulary size. So, I decide to teach 12 ones, which is reasonable for one lecture.
4.2.2. The Practice of Autonomy by the Negative Group
T: | OK, ‘take it for granted’. [S1]: What’s the meaning? |
S1 | Take something for granted. (S1 provided the Chinese translation.) |
T: | OK, good! ‘Take… for granted’. [S2]: Please add a clause to it and make the sentence complete. |
S2: … (The student keeps silent; obviously he is unable to do the task.) | |
T: | ‘Issue’. [S3]: What’s the meaning? |
S3: | Issue. (S3 provided the Chinese translation.) |
T: | Issue, good! Do not use ‘problem’, it is too common, and it is not big enough here, right? We use ‘issue’, and it has the meanings of ‘very big’, ‘serious’, and ‘carefully-treated’… |
T: | Look at the screen. OK, how to translate this sentence? You know every word in this sentence, right? How to translate it? Come on, use your mind! [S1]. |
S1: | I don’t know. |
T: | En? You cannot say you don’t know. You have learned every word, so why don’t you know? |
S1: | A big what, cut… consumed what… a… |
T: | I mean the whole sentence. Sit down, please. Big what? Cut what? Consumed what? Who knows? All these are basic words, right? There is only one new word ‘fuel’, but the rest are words you learned. This is your problem, not me! [S1], you are not allowed to escape my class anymore! You have escaped my class many times…… [S2] |
T: | Ok, have you got any questions about paragraph one, class? |
S1: | I can’t understand a sentence. That is, I watch her back her new truck out of the driveway (this is a sentence from the passage). |
T: | ‘I watch her back her new truck out of the driveway’. You don’t know the word ‘back’, right? So, what’s the meaning of ‘back’? (The teacher writes the word on the blackboard.) Do you know ‘back’? (Actions of driving a car backwards.) I am backing my car, right? |
Ss: | Yes |
- R:
- You adopted a question–answer approach and you went through the whole text in such a way. Why did you adopt such an approach?
- T:
- Because I asked my students to learn the text all by themselves beforehand. (…) I asked them to note down the difficult points that appeared in the text and then bring them into class. When it comes to the class time, I would answer their questions. (…) I have already set up this rule in the first lecture, and it is basically the same for all my freshman classes. If I teach them in the next semester, I will not have to repeat the rule because they have already known my teaching style: I only answer questions in class!
- R:
- Yes.
- T:
- If you do not understand anything about the text, you could come and ask me, or we could discuss it together.
- R:
- Then, I cannot help asking whether you are influenced by the concept of flipped class?
- T:
- Yes, that’s possible, because I learned this teaching method when I was a visiting scholar of Sun Yat-Sen University in 2009, and I borrowed the pedagogical principles behind the flipped classroom. However, my teaching approach is slightly different from the flipped class. For instance, when my students don’t have any further questions, I would raise questions based on my own understanding of the textbook.
5. General Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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No. | Name (Pseudonym) | Gender | Age | Teaching Experience (Years) | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
T1 | Wong | M | 41–50 | 20 | AP |
T2 | Qin | F | 41–50 | 19 | AP |
T3 | Fang | F | 41–50 | 17 | L |
T4 | Hui | F | 31–40 | 16 | AP |
T5 | Lee | F | 31–40 | 16 | L |
T6 | Yuli | F | 31–40 | 15 | L |
T7 | Lin | F | 31–40 | 15 | L |
T8 | Lock | F | 31–40 | 13 | L |
T9 | Yann | F | 31–40 | 13 | L |
T10 | Tse | F | 31–40 | 11 | L |
T11 | Yvo | F | 31–40 | 10 | L |
T12 | York | M | 41–50 | 5 | L |
T13 | Ying | F | 21–30 | 3 | AL |
T14 | Suzy | F | 21–30 | 1 | AL |
T1 | T2 | T3 | T4 | T5 | T6 | T7 | T8 | T9 | T10 | T11 | T12 | T13 | T14 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
On PD | - | - | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | - | + | - | + | + |
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Qian, L.; Qin, X.; Wei, Z.; Huang, H. Influence of Attitudes on the Autonomy of English as a Foreign Language Teachers. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060777
Qian L, Qin X, Wei Z, Huang H. Influence of Attitudes on the Autonomy of English as a Foreign Language Teachers. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(6):777. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060777
Chicago/Turabian StyleQian, Lina, Xuewu Qin, Ziyu Wei, and Haiquan Huang. 2025. "Influence of Attitudes on the Autonomy of English as a Foreign Language Teachers" Education Sciences 15, no. 6: 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060777
APA StyleQian, L., Qin, X., Wei, Z., & Huang, H. (2025). Influence of Attitudes on the Autonomy of English as a Foreign Language Teachers. Education Sciences, 15(6), 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15060777