Researcher Information
Japanese
Researcher Information TOP
> Sean Mahoney
(Last updated : 2024-04-15 16:58:52)
Sean Mahoney
Department / Course
Fukushima University Faculty of Administration and Social Sciences Community and Cultural Studies Course
Job
Professor
Profile
Profile
User Research Outline
Self-PR
research
Present specialized field
Book and thesis
Academic conference presentation
Profile
Sean Mahoney taught at high school and university levels in Canada before coming to Japan in 1995 with an MA in English from the University of Victoria. He is Professor of English at Fukushima University, where he has enjoyed teaching for over 25 years. Along with two university textbooks, he has published articles in several countries on foreign language acquisition, including error gravity, mutual intelligibility, and team-teaching issues, speech rate, and Japan's English language education policy. He has recently completed a chapter in the book,
Team teachers in Japan: Beliefs, identities, and emotions
, which was published by Routledge in summer 2023.
User Research Outline
I have recently published on a 5-year, MEXT-sponsored inquiry into the teaching of English at Japan's primary schools, particularly the contributions from so-called non-native English speaking assistant teachers. I had conducted a nationwide survey of over 270 members of this increasingly important group of educators, both Japanese and non-Japanese, as the parameters on language use and ownership issues continue to expand.
For my next research project, in 2006-09 I focused on comparing the weight of different types of errors in English grammar. This time, however, I would like to focus on the ranking of specific phoneme-related errors. Since mutual intelligibility is paramount in English Lingua Franca communication, it is necessary to determine which consonant and vowel distinctions have the greatest impact on listeners' perceptions of accentuation and intelligibility. But because class time is limited for teachers to understand learners' output, it is necessary to prioritise which aspects of students' pronunciation require the most attention. I have taken copious notes on the concept of Functional Load over the last year, and would like to see how the notion may help English education in Japan.
Self-PR
Author of Chapter 14 in:
Hiratsuka, T. (Ed.). (2023). Team teachers in Japan: Beliefs, identities, and emotions. Routledge.
(https://www.routledge.com/Team-Teachers-in-Japan-Beliefs-Identities-and-Emotions/Hiratsuka/p/book/9781032265841)
Present specialized field
English Education, Second Language Acquisition keyword(English education, primary school, ALT, non-native speaker)
Book and thesis
Books
Hiratsuka, T. (Ed.). (2023). “Straight Talk about English from Primary School Homeroom Teachers” (Chapter 14) in Team teachers in Japan: Beliefs, identities, and emotions. Routledge. ISBN 9781032265841.,pp.175-185 (Co-authored) 2023/07/14
Books
New Essential Listening for the TOEIC Test (Co-authored) 2007/03
Books
Essential Listening for the TOEIC Test (Co-authored) 2005/01
Papers
A new era: Non-native English-speaking assistants JES Journal 20,pp.210-225 (Sole-authored) 2020/03
Papers
Primary School English Classes: Japan’s Non-native English-Speaking Assistants Korea TESOL Journal 15 (1),pp.227-233 (Sole-authored) 2019/12/30
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Academic conference presentation
2020/11/22
Locating the Non-native English-speaking Assistant (JALT 46th Annual International Conference on Language Teaching and Learning (Online Conference))
2019/11/03
Non-native English-speaking assistants at Shogakko (JALT 45th Annual International Conference on Language Teaching and Learning & Educational Materials Exhibition)
2019/07/20
Bilingual and multilingual ALTs: A new era (第19回小学校英語教育学会(JES))
2019/06/28
Help from experienced non-native English-speakers at primary schools in Japan (Asia TEFL 2019)
2018/10
Turning to non-native English-speaking assistants in primary schools (KOTESOL 2018)
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