Students' metaphoric perceptions regarding online education process including English language, English instructors and future life

The aim of the present study is to investigate the perceptions of prep-class students regarding online education along with English instructors, English language and their future life. Hermeneutic phenomenology method was employed and metaphors were used as a data collection tool to gather informati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kubra Aksak (Author), Feryal Cubukcu (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Literacy Trek, 2023-12-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:The aim of the present study is to investigate the perceptions of prep-class students regarding online education along with English instructors, English language and their future life. Hermeneutic phenomenology method was employed and metaphors were used as a data collection tool to gather information from 80 prep-class students selected through convenience sampling method. The findings indicated that more than half of the participants (52.5%) have a negative attitude towards online education. A considerable number of students (73.7%) have a quite positive perception of English instructors. "Universal language, new world, new people" are among the most preferred metaphors for the participants' perceptions of English language. Moreover, 66.3% of the students are pessimistic about their future life. Hence, students are not in favor of online education although it is flexible and comfortable, which implies that online education should be a secondary option only when face-to-face education is impossible to implement.
Item Description:https://doi.org/10.47216/literacytrek.1299075
2602-3768