Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers

This study analyzed the reading and writing preferences of 150 male and female preservice language teachers in seven (7) higher education institutions. A descriptivequantitative-correlational design was utilized to determine these preferences, identify the relationship between these preferences, and...

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Main Authors: Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo, Teves, Nicole Joyce, Tanpoco, Manuel R., Estigoy, Edison
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Published: Animo Repository 2020
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/10906
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Institution: De La Salle University
id oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-11279
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-112792023-10-02T07:13:12Z Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo Teves, Nicole Joyce Tanpoco, Manuel R. Estigoy, Edison This study analyzed the reading and writing preferences of 150 male and female preservice language teachers in seven (7) higher education institutions. A descriptivequantitative-correlational design was utilized to determine these preferences, identify the relationship between these preferences, and whether there is significant difference between genders in terms of these preferences. The results and findings of the study showed the majority of the pre-service teachers still prefer to read printed materials and write manually over their digital counterparts. When it comes to gender, both male and female pre-service teachers gave the same responses by favoring writing by hand and reading through print. These results illustrate a backward viewpoint in terms of reading and writing preferences on the part of the pre-service teachers. This “backward” preferences, which in turn become actual practices can be attributed to the “anxiety” toward digitalization and sometimes the “inaccessibility” of these technologies to the preservice language teachers. These findings, however, provide an important evidence to introduce the concept of biliteracy for further teacher training on the foundational skills of reading and writing in the digital world. 2020-12-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/10906 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Student teachers Reading (Higher education) Rhetoric—Study and teaching Education Reading and Language
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Student teachers
Reading (Higher education)
Rhetoric—Study and teaching
Education
Reading and Language
spellingShingle Student teachers
Reading (Higher education)
Rhetoric—Study and teaching
Education
Reading and Language
Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo
Teves, Nicole Joyce
Tanpoco, Manuel R.
Estigoy, Edison
Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
description This study analyzed the reading and writing preferences of 150 male and female preservice language teachers in seven (7) higher education institutions. A descriptivequantitative-correlational design was utilized to determine these preferences, identify the relationship between these preferences, and whether there is significant difference between genders in terms of these preferences. The results and findings of the study showed the majority of the pre-service teachers still prefer to read printed materials and write manually over their digital counterparts. When it comes to gender, both male and female pre-service teachers gave the same responses by favoring writing by hand and reading through print. These results illustrate a backward viewpoint in terms of reading and writing preferences on the part of the pre-service teachers. This “backward” preferences, which in turn become actual practices can be attributed to the “anxiety” toward digitalization and sometimes the “inaccessibility” of these technologies to the preservice language teachers. These findings, however, provide an important evidence to introduce the concept of biliteracy for further teacher training on the foundational skills of reading and writing in the digital world.
format text
author Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo
Teves, Nicole Joyce
Tanpoco, Manuel R.
Estigoy, Edison
author_facet Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo
Teves, Nicole Joyce
Tanpoco, Manuel R.
Estigoy, Edison
author_sort Dealagdon, Tricia Barcelo
title Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
title_short Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
title_full Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
title_fullStr Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
title_full_unstemmed Reading and writing in the 21st century: An analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
title_sort reading and writing in the 21st century: an analysis of preferences among pre-service language teachers
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2020
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/10906
_version_ 1779260504837980160