Publication:
Teachers speak out on the use of the English curriculum in southwestern Puerto Rico
Teachers speak out on the use of the English curriculum in southwestern Puerto Rico
Authors
Carroll, Kevin S.
Embargoed Until
Advisor
Pratt, Ellen
College
College of Arts and Sciences - Arts
Department
Department of English
Degree Level
M.A.E.E.
Publisher
Date
2005
Abstract
Teaching English as a Second Language in Puerto Rico has been a topic of debate
since the occupation of the United States. Due to constant political change, the English
curriculum for secondary schools in Puerto Rico has undergone many modifications.
This three-part study analyzes the new Curricular Framework to determine its
effectiveness for teachers in southwestern Puerto Rico. The first part of the study, to
analyze the curriculum, used George Posner’s Analyzing the Curriculum. The findings
from the analysis were then compared with 30 teacher questionnaires as well as in-depth
interviews with five high school English teachers from southwestern Puerto Rico. There
were three major findings: problems with teacher training/supervision; problems with
textbooks / materials; and teacher burnout. The thesis concludes in an argument for a
local curriculum that would provide stability for teachers and meet the local needs of high
school students in southwestern Puerto Rico.
Keywords
Education-secondary-curricula-Puerto Rico-Southwest,
Curriculum planning-Puerto Rico-Southwest,
Teaching English as a second language,
Curriculum evaluation-Puerto Rico-Southwest
Curriculum planning-Puerto Rico-Southwest,
Teaching English as a second language,
Curriculum evaluation-Puerto Rico-Southwest
Usage Rights
Persistent URL
Cite
Carroll, K. S. (2005). Teachers speak out on the use of the English curriculum in southwestern Puerto Rico [Thesis]. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11801/190