ctrlnum article-4007
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><title lang="en-US">TEACHER ROLES AND STUDENTS RESPONSES IMPLEMENTED IN A SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL IN SURABAYA</title><creator>Devin, Elda; English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian University, Surabaya, Indonesia</creator><creator>Mardijono, Josefa J.; English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian University, Surabaya, Indonesia</creator><subject lang="en-US">Teacher roles, teacher talk, students responses, classroom interaction</subject><description lang="en-US">In this study, the writer would discuss some types of teacher roles which can be implemented in the classroom. The purpose of this study was to find out the types of teacher roles applied in the conversation class and the students responses. The subject of this study was a teacher who teaches a conversation class to senior high school students. The writer used the theories about types of teacher roles by Harmer (2001 and 2007) and Edge&amp;amp;Garton (2007) and students responses by Brown (2007). The writer used classroom observation and video recording to collect the data. In addition, the writer recorded two meeting. The findings revealed that there were six types of teacher roles and five types of students responses applied in this class. The teacher roles are controller, organizer, assessor, resource, observer, and motivator which played based on their functions. The five responses were specific, choral, open-ended, off task, and silence responses. From this study, it could be concluded that the teacher played the five types of teacher roles to engage the active participant from the students shown through the students responses.</description><publisher lang="en-US">K@ta Kita</publisher><contributor lang="en-US"/><date>2016-01-07</date><type>Journal:Article</type><type>Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion</type><type>Journal:Article</type><type>File:application/pdf</type><identifier>http://studentjournal.petra.ac.id/index.php/sastra-inggris/article/view/4007</identifier><source lang="en-US">K@ta Kita; Vol 3, No 4 (2015); 79-84</source><language>eng</language><relation>http://studentjournal.petra.ac.id/index.php/sastra-inggris/article/view/4007/3665</relation><recordID>article-4007</recordID></dc>
language eng
format Journal:Article
Journal
Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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File:application/pdf
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Journal:eJournal
author Devin, Elda; English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian University, Surabaya, Indonesia
Mardijono, Josefa J.; English Department, Faculty of Letters, Petra Christian University, Surabaya, Indonesia
title TEACHER ROLES AND STUDENTS RESPONSES IMPLEMENTED IN A SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL IN SURABAYA
publisher K@ta Kita
publishDate 2016
topic Teacher roles
teacher talk
students responses
classroom interaction
url http://studentjournal.petra.ac.id/index.php/sastra-inggris/article/view/4007
http://studentjournal.petra.ac.id/index.php/sastra-inggris/article/view/4007/3665
contents In this study, the writer would discuss some types of teacher roles which can be implemented in the classroom. The purpose of this study was to find out the types of teacher roles applied in the conversation class and the students responses. The subject of this study was a teacher who teaches a conversation class to senior high school students. The writer used the theories about types of teacher roles by Harmer (2001 and 2007) and Edge&amp;Garton (2007) and students responses by Brown (2007). The writer used classroom observation and video recording to collect the data. In addition, the writer recorded two meeting. The findings revealed that there were six types of teacher roles and five types of students responses applied in this class. The teacher roles are controller, organizer, assessor, resource, observer, and motivator which played based on their functions. The five responses were specific, choral, open-ended, off task, and silence responses. From this study, it could be concluded that the teacher played the five types of teacher roles to engage the active participant from the students shown through the students responses.
id IOS2103.article-4007
institution Universitas Kristen Petra Surabaya
institution_id 48
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library
library Perpustakaan Universitas Kristen Petra Surabaya
library_id 533
collection K@ta Kita
repository_id 2103
subject_area Komunikasi dan Media
city KOTA SURABAYA
province JAWA TIMUR
repoId IOS2103
first_indexed 2016-09-22T21:13:34Z
last_indexed 2017-08-19T21:47:01Z
recordtype dc
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