Home Linguistics & Semiotics Chapter 12. Arabic language teacher education
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Chapter 12. Arabic language teacher education

  • Hanada Taha
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Abstract

Quality teacher preparation programs have been shown to greatly impact student learning outcomes as studies often refer to the importance of quality teacher education as a key factor in learning. Linguistic realities in the Arab world reflect a bleak situation where Arabic language teachers remain largely poorly prepared and deprived of sustained and meaningful professional development. This situation is manifested in students’ results on international standardized Arabic language proficiency tests. This chapter describes current practices in teacher Arabic language teacher education and cites student Arabic language learning outcomes as demonstrated on the 2011 PIRLS test. The chapter covers research investigating the importance of effective teacher education including quality of preservice admissions, and field experiences associated with those programs.

Abstract

Quality teacher preparation programs have been shown to greatly impact student learning outcomes as studies often refer to the importance of quality teacher education as a key factor in learning. Linguistic realities in the Arab world reflect a bleak situation where Arabic language teachers remain largely poorly prepared and deprived of sustained and meaningful professional development. This situation is manifested in students’ results on international standardized Arabic language proficiency tests. This chapter describes current practices in teacher Arabic language teacher education and cites student Arabic language learning outcomes as demonstrated on the 2011 PIRLS test. The chapter covers research investigating the importance of effective teacher education including quality of preservice admissions, and field experiences associated with those programs.

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents vii
  3. Acknowledgments ix
  4. Chapter 1. Applied linguistics research in the Middle East and North Africa 1
  5. Section I. Language in society
  6. Chapter 2. When the president loses his voice, the people capture speech 11
  7. Chapter 3. Religion and identity in modern Egyptian public discourse 37
  8. Chapter 4. English between Egyptians 61
  9. Chapter 5. The age of global English 89
  10. Chapter 6. The linguistic landscape of Cairo from the Rosetta Stone to the Ring Road billboards: Signs of their times 115
  11. Chapter 7. The ongoing rivalry between English and French in Lebanon 161
  12. Section II. Language in education
  13. Chapter 8. A Qatari case for authenticity in the investigation of reading abilities and strategies 185
  14. Chapter 9. The development and validation of an Arabic language test in Saudi Arabia 203
  15. Chapter 10. A survey of English language proficiency requirements for admission to English-medium universities in Arabic-speaking countries 227
  16. Chapter 11. Student teachers’ computer-mediated narratives-in-interaction 249
  17. Chapter 12. Arabic language teacher education 269
  18. Chapter 13. Corpora and the study of Arabic vocabulary 289
  19. Section III. Future directions of applied linguistics in the MENA countries
  20. Chapter 14. Whither Arabic? 307
  21. Chapter 15. A forward-looking conceptual framework for Arabic curriculum design and instructional methodology 343
  22. Chapter 16. Applied linguistics in the MENA countries 363
  23. Biographies 377
  24. Author index 383
  25. Subject index 387
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