How can learning efficiency be improved in teaching economics in English as a foreign language?
by Nobuya Fukugawa
International Journal of Knowledge and Learning (IJKL), Vol. 10, No. 1, 2015

Abstract: This study examines which teaching methods facilitate students' comprehension in economics courses where both the teacher and students are non-native speakers of English. A theoretical model of learning efficiency in such courses was developed in light of the economics of innovation, which identifies three determinants of learning efficiency: absorptive capacity, spillover pool and pedagogy. On the basis of this model, a questionnaire was designed and administered at an Italian business school. The results show that when the effect of students' English proficiency is controlled, teachers' effort to relate lesson contents to the real world by examples significantly improves learning efficiency. Students' linguistic skills negate the significance of teachers' language-specific efforts, such as slowing the speech rate and providing written materials complementary to oral presentations. Therefore, an emphasis should be placed on general pedagogical efforts, such as the mitigation of abstractness, rather than devising teaching practices idiosyncratic to English as a foreign language.

Online publication date: Sun, 09-Aug-2015

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