《教育實踐與研究》Journal
Search English | 正體
回首頁
Apycom jQuery Menus
 


 
List
Volume 29Number 1 publication date:Jun. 2016
Factors Influencing Junior High School Students’ English Language Achievement in Taiwan:A Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological System Approach
    Author:Hsin-Yi Kung & Ching-Yi Lee
Research Article

Download

This study aimed to construct a social profile of Taiwanese students’ English language achievement by employing Bronfenbrenner’s perspectives. Data were collected on a sample of 709 ninth graders in central Taiwan via survey questionnaires and were analyzed using structural equation modeling. The results indicated that, first, a Taiwanese Students´ English Language Achievement model was constructed by parental involvement, teachers’ beliefs/attitudes, parent–teacher interaction, and mass media/the Internet. Second, mass media/the Internet significantly predicted parental involvement and teachers’ beliefs/attitudes; parental involvement and teachers’ beliefs/attitudes significantly predicted students’ English language achievement; the correlation between parental involvement and teachers’ beliefs/attitudes was significant. Third, the completely mediating effects of parental involvement and teachers’ beliefs/attitudes in predicting students’ English language achievement from mass media/the Internet were supported, and the effect of teachers’ beliefs/attitudes tended to be stronger than parental involvement. These findings were in line with Bronfenbrenner’s theory and demonstrate that the influence of the mass media/the Internet (exosystem) in students’ English language achievement conveyed the degree of parental involvement (microsystem), teachers’ beliefs/attitudes (microsystem), and the interaction between parents and teachers (mesosystem), especially within the context of the socio-cultural atmosphere in Taiwan (macrosystem). Implications and suggestions were discussed and provided to enhance students’ English language learning.



Keywords: Bronfenbrenner’s ecological systems approach, English language achievement, mass media/the Internet, parental involvement, teachers’ beliefs/attitudes


Vocational School Students’ Vocational Identity and Their Views on the Functions of School
 

 

Copyright © 2024 Journal of Educational Practice and Research
All rights reserved. Email: milk1015@tea.ntue.edu.tw;aquafish3333@tea.ntue.edu.tw;sianya@tea.ntue.edu.tw
Address: No.134, Sec. 2, Heping E. Rd., Da-an District, Taipei City 10671, Taiwan (R.O.C.)
Tel: +886-2-2732-1104 ext.82232/82014, Fax: +886-2-2732-2423

姓名標示─非商業性─禁止改作
本授權條款允許使用者重製、散布、傳輸著作,但不得為商業目的之使用,
亦不得修改該著作。使用時必須按照著作人指定的方式表彰其姓名。