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<title>THE 63RD TEFLIN International Conference 2016</title>
<link>http://repository.unigal.ac.id:8080/handle/123456789/2708</link>
<description/>
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<dc:date>2026-04-25T11:25:47Z</dc:date>
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<title>Male and Female EFL Student Teachers’ Aesthetic Experiences of Reading and Responding to Literary Works</title>
<link>http://repository.unigal.ac.id:8080/handle/123456789/2709</link>
<description>Male and Female EFL Student Teachers’ Aesthetic Experiences of Reading and Responding to Literary Works
Youlia Friatin, Lilies; Said, Iskhak; Rachmawati, Etika
The present study investigates the effects of reader-response-based literature instruction on male&#13;
and female EFL student teachers’ aesthetic experiences in reading and giving responses to&#13;
literary works assigned. The study is underpinned by Rosenblatt’s (2005) reader response theory&#13;
by which transactional process between readers and text evoke personal reflections such as&#13;
feelings and critical thoughts individually represented in enjoying and engaging the text. The&#13;
negotiated response-based classroom practices to foster readers’ needs, wants, and interests,&#13;
included group and classroom discussions, peer-feedbacks, and writing journals. Two intact&#13;
groups of the third grade of EFL teacher training of a private college in Ciamis, West Java,&#13;
Indonesia, participated in the study, all of whom took literary criticism subject, and were&#13;
assigned to critically enjoy fictions. The first intact group (N= 21) included 5 male and 16&#13;
female students and the second one (N= 18) comprised 5 male and 13 female, respectively. A&#13;
case study through program evaluation (Cohen et al., 2007) was aimed at uncovering how male&#13;
and female pre-service teacher trainees reflected their process of aesthetically reading and&#13;
responding to the text assigned. The data collection included classroom observation,&#13;
documenting written journals, and administering questionnaires. The patterned ‘themes’ of&#13;
reading process and response strategies as reflected in the illuminating data, support the&#13;
findings. The findings suggest that female subjects of the two groups used more expressive&#13;
strategies than male did. The study recommends that further studies focus on typical expressions&#13;
in response strategies of both male and female.
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<dc:date>2016-09-10T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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