Title of article :
Correspondence between EFL Teachers’ Cognitive and Behavioral Manifestations of Pedagogical Beliefs: The Moderating Role of Teacher Grit
Author/Authors :
Ashkani, Parisa English Department - Faculty of Humanities - Imam Khomeini International University - Qazvin, Iran , Shabani, Mohammad Bagher English Department - Faculty of Humanities - Imam Khomeini International University - Qazvin, Iran , Karimi, Mohammad Nabi Department of Foreign Languages - Faculty of Humanities - Kharazmi University - Tehran, Iran , Esfandiari, Rajab English Department - Faculty of Humanities - Imam Khomeini International University - Qazvin, Iran
Abstract :
Previous evidence suggests that teachers’ practices are invariably
inconsistent with their beliefs. Different factors have been cited as
responsible for such a lack of correspondence. To advance the
accumulated scholarship, the current study examined the
correspondence/non-correspondence between English as Foreign
Language (EFL) teachers’ cognitive and behavioral manifestations of
pedagogical beliefs and the extent that teacher grit, as a personal variable,
impacts the connection between these two manifestations. An initial group
of 70 EFL teachers responded to L2 Teacher Grit Scale and Pedagogical
Beliefs Questionnaire. Based on their performance on the Grit Scale, two sub-groups of fifteen teachers (with high and low levels of teacher grit)
were selected to examine the alignment/non-alignment of their pedagogical
beliefs and practices. Two instructional sessions per teacher were observed
by means of an observation checklist designed based on the Pedagogical
Beliefs Questionnaire. Comparisons across the teachers showed that
whereas the two groups valued pedagogical beliefs roughly equally, only
the teachers with high grit levels showed strong evidence of
correspondence between their beliefs and actual instructional practices.
Based on the findings, it can be implied that teacher grit can serve a
prominent role in the correlation between EFL teachers' self-reported
pedagogical beliefs and their actual practices.
Keywords :
Cognitive/Behavioral Manifestation , Pedagogical Belief , Teachers’ Cognitive/Behavioral Correspondence , Teacher Grit
Journal title :
Teaching English as a Second Language Quarterly