E Von Wong

Soka University

E Von Wong is an assistant lecturer at Soka University. Her research areas of interest include public speaking, oral presentation, and drama in ELT. Coming from an ESL background, public speaking activities in English played an indispensable role in increasing her confidence and motivation towards English speaking.


Sessions

Performance in Education (PIE) SIG Forum

The Performance in Education (PIE) SIG Forum will be of short presentation/Pecha-Kucha format on the various facets of Performance in Education. The presenters will cover topics surrounding the planning of Performance Assisted Learning (PAL) activities such as the procedure in planning, examples of successful planning, challenges, classroom executions, tips for beginners, and their reflections and thoughts on planning and executions. The forum will feature PIE practitioners who specialize in various genres of PIE activities such as roleplay, improvisation, public speaking, discussion, process drama, readers theatre, music, and many more.

A Duo-ethnographic Analysis of Public Speaking

Duo-ethnography is a research methodology that can be effectively used for reflective practice as it involves two or more researchers juxtaposing their lived experiences and life histories to analyze and understand a phenomenon (Norris & Sawyer, 2016). In this presentation, two English language instructors teaching at a private university in Japan analyze the use of public speaking in English language learning. According to Girard, Pinrar, and Trapp (2011), public speaking can assist ESL classrooms by increasing students’ learning motivation and prompting participation and interaction. The presentation begins with an overview of the existing literature on public speaking in the English classroom. This is followed by an introduction to duo-ethnography and an outline of the methodology used for this research. The results and findings have been categorized into three areas: the role of public speaking in the language learning journey of the researchers, the impact of their past experiences on their current teaching beliefs regarding public speaking, and classroom practices that reflect how the researchers actually focus on developing the public speaking skills of their students.