"Don't wake me, my desk is far too comfortable": an autoethnography of a novice ESL teacher's first year of teaching in Japan

"This thesis explores and analyzes a first year ESL teacher's experience teaching at an all-girl's private school in Nishinomiya, Japan. Chapter 3 is divided into 15 sections that tell the teacher's story of living and teaching in Japan. This chapter includes description, dialogue, concurrent diary excerpts, photos, and theory. Chapter 4 analyzes these experiences and discusses the lessons the author learned while reflecting on her teaching in Japan. The main lesson learned was the importance of practicing cultural relativity--that is, opening one's mind and realizing that there is more than o... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Holland, Delaney
Dokumenttyp: Text
Erscheinungsdatum: 2015
Verlag/Hrsg.: EWU Digital Commons
Schlagwörter: Autobiographical essays / Holland / Delaney / Self-actualization (Psychology) / Diaries--Authorship / Ethnology--Biographical methods / English language--Study and teaching--Japanese speakers / English language--Study and teaching--Japan / Second language acquisition / Teachers--Japan--Biography / Teachers--Washington (State)--Biography / Education--Japan / Autobiography / Bilingual / Multilingual / and Multicultural Education / English Language and Literature
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29073775
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://dc.ewu.edu/theses/292

"This thesis explores and analyzes a first year ESL teacher's experience teaching at an all-girl's private school in Nishinomiya, Japan. Chapter 3 is divided into 15 sections that tell the teacher's story of living and teaching in Japan. This chapter includes description, dialogue, concurrent diary excerpts, photos, and theory. Chapter 4 analyzes these experiences and discusses the lessons the author learned while reflecting on her teaching in Japan. The main lesson learned was the importance of practicing cultural relativity--that is, opening one's mind and realizing that there is more than one way to live, teach, and see the world. Chapter 5 compiles all the theory the author studied while attending graduate school, concluding with what she will bring from both her experiences in Japan and in graduate school into her current ESL classrooms"--Leaf iv.