Teaching Strategies for Korean Language Classes with Highly Mixed
Ability Students
Didi Sukyadi, Didin Samsudin, Risa Triarisanti and Velayeti Nurfitriana Ansas
Fakultas Pendidikan Bahasa dan Sastra, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia
Jalan Dr. Setiabudi No.229 Bandung-Indonesia
didinsamsudin@upi.edu
Keyword: mixed ability class, teaching strategy.
Abstract: Recruitment system and selection of the first batch of 2015 Korean Education Study Program’s students were
only through Saringan Masuk (SM UPI); therefore, every student has different teaching ability, age,
motivation, and characteristic. In brief in each class, there are medium achiever students, high achiever
students, and low achiever students. Based on the background, the research questions of the present study are
how the students’ variety and background in the first batch of 2015 Korean Education Study Program are and
also how the lecturers’ strategies to deal with the students’ highly mixed abilities are. The aim of the present
study is to investigate the varied condition of the first batch of 2015 Korean students’ ability and to learn
appropriate teaching strategies to serve the students with mixed ability. The present study use a qualitative
approach with case study method in the Korean Education Study Program. The findings of the present study
suggest that the use of various teaching strategies is an appropriate effort taken by the lecturers in dealing
with the mixed ability students in order to achieve competitive teaching outcome which is in line with the
intended teaching target. The findings also suggest that appropriate efforts to improve the students’ ability
and to cope with the issues occurred in class with mixed ability are by giving extra class to the low achiever
students and by providing fun extracurricular activities outside the formal class hours, for example, the
extracurricular of Korean song choir.
1 INTRODUCTION
Human communicates through sounds which are
known with the term ‘words’. Words are part of
language. In Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI);
The Official Dictionary of Indonesian, language is
defined as an arbitrary sounds symbol system, which
is used by members of a society to cooperate, interact,
and identification themselves (KBBI offline 1.5,
2009). Meanwhile Stevenson (2015) in Oxford
Dictionary of English language is defined as “the
system of communication in speech and writing that
is used by people of a particular country.” According
to the aforementioned definitions of language, we can
infer that it is language that is used by humans as a
tool to express ideas, thoughts, feelings, as a tool to
improve themselves and to get information.
Language understanding is an important skill to
be mastered by humans. There are about 7000
languages in the world used by humans as a tool of
communication. The more someone understands
various languages, the easier s/he improves
her/himself in facing international competition.
In facing Masyarakat Ekonomi Asean (MEA);
Asean Economic Community (AEC), Indonesia
should be able to create internationally competitive
human resources. One of their competences is able to
master various languages in the world. UPI
(Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia); Indonesia
University of Education, as a university which has a
vision to be the leading and outstanding university
has 5 foreign language education departments i.e.
English Department, German Department, French
Department, Japanese Department, and Arabic
Department. To respond the development of science,
technology, arts, demand of society and global
changing, UPI has added a new foreign language
education department that is Korean Education
Program.
The rapid and well development of Korea in the
world including in Indonesia, has driven UPI to
facilitate Indonesians who want to learn Korean and
the culture of Korea by establishing the Korean
Sukyadi, D., Samsudin, D., Triarisanti, R. and Ansas, V.
Teaching Strategies for Korean Language Classes with Highly Mixed Ability Students.
DOI: 10.5220/0007170405330537
In Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference
on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education (CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017) - Literacy, Culture, and Technology in Language Pedagogy and Use, pages 533-537
ISBN: 978-989-758-332-2
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
533
Education Program. UPI becomes the only university
which opens Korean program in the realm of
education and it is expected to be able to produce
competence Korean teachers.
Korean Education Study Program is the youngest
program in FPBS UPI. The first lecturing activity of
semester 1 (odd semester) was started on September
1, 2016 with 53 students divided into two classes. At
first, the recruitment system and selection of new
students were through Saringan Masuk (SM UPI); the
entrance test of UPI, in 2015. The recruitment system
and the new students selection in 2016 will follow the
procedure regulated by the Direktorat Jenderal
Pendidikan Tinggi (Dikti); Directorate General of
Higher Education, and UPI through some ways
online as follows: 1) SNMPTN, 2) SBMPTN, 3) SM
UPI, 4) Dual Mode, and 5) International channel. The
Student’s educational background in his/her first
language. Students arrive in an Korean Education
Study Program with varied educational background.
Some student have had little or no education about
Korean Language.
Observing the result of monitoring and evaluation
during the odd semester lecturing and the study result
of the odd semester (September 1, 2015 early
January 2016) from the result of recruitment system
and the new students selection through SM UPI, some
phenomena are found: every student has different
teaching ability, age, motivation, and character, there
are some students who are really able to follow the
lecturing, there are students who have ever learnt
Korean before and there are students who have just
known Korean for the very first time. In brief in every
class, there are medium achiever students, high
achiever students, and low achiever students.
Due to the phenomenon, we conducted a study
entitled Teaching Strategies for Language Classes
with Highly Mixed Ability Students” (A Case Study
of the First Batch of 2015 Korean Education Study
Program Students FPBS UPI) in Bandung.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
According to Vygotsky (1986) language, especially
meaning, is at the center of the dynamics of
consciousness that composed in humans (in
Cammarata, 2016), therefore learning a new language
not merely understands the meaning to communicate,
but, learning a new language means having the ability
to gain new possibilities of perception. As expressed
by Byram and Esarte-Sarries (1991) that:
“Language is not simply a reflector of an
objective cultural reality. It is an integral part of
that reality through which other parts are shaped
and interpreted. It is both a symbol of the whole
and a part of the whole which shapes and is in turn
shaped by sociocultural actions, beliefs and
values. In engaging in language, speakers are
enacting sociocultural phenomena; in acquiring
language, children acquire culture.”
Studying a new language for students is closely
related to the process of teaching the new language by
teachers / lecturers. Teaching according to Hasibuan
and Moedjiono (2012) is the creation of an enabling
environment for the learning process. This
environmental system consists of components that
affect each other, the instructional objectives to be
achieved, the material taught, teachers and students
who must ensure the role and exist in certain social
relationships, types of activities undertaken, as well
as teaching- available.
Learning a language other than mother tongue
means that we seek to understand others, as
expressed by Reagan, Timothy and Osborn (2002)
that:
“In studying languages other than our own, we
are seeking to understand (and, indeed, in at least
a weak sense, to become) the Other we are, in
short, attempting to enter into realities that have,
to some degree, been constructed by others and
which many of the fundamental assumptions
about the nature of knowledge and society may be
different from our own. We are, in fact creating
new selves in an important sense.”
With regard to language learning, Kumaradevelu
(2006) explains that there are classroom procedures
that teachers need to apply, modifying the material
and facilitating student interaction activities.
Modifying this material relates to how the teacher
presents the material so that it can be accepted well
by the students, while facilitating student interaction
activities related to the activities of teachers in
assigning tasks to students so that interaction runs
smoothly between students in the classroom. The
success of these activities will be greatly influenced
by what strategies that teachers use in the learning
process.
Every student has his/her own learning style,
linguistic knowledge background, and individual
pace in teaching and improving. Therefore, most
foreign language classes involve students with mixed
abilities (Richard, 1998).
Mixed abilities or ‘heterogeneous’ class is a term
used to describe a class which consists of students
with various proficiency levels. All classes consist of
students who are different in so many ways. They
have different strength and weaknesses in
CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017 - Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology
Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education
534
approaching teaching. They also respond various
leaning methods and classroom situation differently
(Ur, 1991).
Ma (2016) explains the factors determining
students’ ability in teaching language as follows: age
of maturnity; Intelligence and multiple intelligences;
Teaching style; Language aptitude; Language levels;
Mother tongue; Learner autonomy; Motivation or
attitude towards the subject; Cultural background.
Classroom condition with mixed ability requires
appropriate teaching strategy. Some strategies that
can be used in mixed ability classroom are as follows:
Supportive teaching environment; Classroom
management; Teaching to learn; Variety; Grouping;
Pace; Interest; Collaboration; Individualization;
Personalisation; Blooms taxonomy; Open-endedness;
Open-endedness; Compulsory plus optional tasks;
Adapting materials; Adapting materials (Bremner,
2008).
Teaching activity in mixed ability class is
certainly not easy, there are many difficulties and
obstacles faced both by the lecturers and the students.
Therefore, Tomlinson (2005) also suggests teaching
strategies to mixed ability class which can solve the
difficulties, they are: Have a strong rationale for
differentiating instruction based on students
readiness, interest, and teaching profile; Begin
differentiating at a pace that is comfortable for you;
Time differentiated activities to support student
success; Use an “anchor activity’ to free you up to
focus your attention on your students; Create and
deliver instruction carefully; Assign students into
groups or seating areas smoothly; Have a “home
base” for students; Be sure students have a plan for
getting help when you’re busy with another;
Minimize noise; Make a plan for students to turn in
work; Teach students to rearrange the furniture;
Minimize “stay” movement; Promote on-task
behaviour; Have a plan for “quick finishers”; Make a
plan for “calling a halt”; Give your students as much
responsibility for their teaching as possible; Engage
your students in talking about classroom procedures
and group processes.
Several studies on mixed ability classes have been
conducted including: Challenges Facing EFL
teachers in Mixed Ability Classes and Strategies Used
to Overcome Them by Al-Shammakhi and Al-
Humaidi (2015) with the results of their research
showing that there are various levels of difficulty
experienced by the teacher and the use of varied
strategies, further research results show that there are
similar difficulties experienced by both male and
female teachers in varied teaching skills and there is
no significant difference in the use of learning
strategies between the two. In another study
conducted by Morris (2008) with the title of A
Qualitative Investigation of Interdisciplinary Mixed
Ability Cooperative Classes in Inner Ring Suburban
High School”, stated that to face problems in the
classroom with varying abilities required special
training for teachers to be able to use various
strategies and to do the various learning activities.
3 METHODOLOGY
The present study was conducted for 8 months from
March to November 2016 in Korean Education Study
Program, Fakultas Pendidikan Bahasa dan Sastra,
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia; Faculty of
Language and Literature Education, Universitas
Pendidikan Indonesia. Subjects of the study are: (1)
fifty three first batch Korean Education Study
Program’s students with varied educational
background and competence at whom some of them
come from Senior High/Vocational schools of
various region in Indonesia, (2) five expatriate
teachers from Korea who have more than five years’
experience in teaching Korean and now are staffs of
Korean expatriate teachers in Korean Education
Program, Faculty of Language and Literature
Education, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, (3)
three full time teachers of Korean Education Study
Program FPBS UPI. The instruments of the data
collection comprise the teaching result of the Korean
Education Study Program’s students in the first
semester of 2015/2016, students’ questionnaire and
interview, and Korean expatriate teachers’
questionnaire and interview.
4 FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION
4.1 Profile Description of Korean
Education Students’ Ability
The focus of the present study is students with mixed
ability in language classes. The term mixed ability
refers to all students with mixed abilities (Cambridge
Dictionary). Classes with mixed ability level describe
classes which consist of learners with different level
of language ability. The different level of language
ability can be seen from their first and second
semesters’ GPA as shown in table 1.
Teaching Strategies for Korean Language Classes with Highly Mixed Ability Students
535
Table 1: Table of GPA in semester 1 and 2.
Category
Highest
Score
Lowest
Score
Average
GPA in
Semester 1
3,82
1,27
3,27
GPA in
Semester 2
3,93
2,00
3,21
Source: Batch 2015 Students’ Achievement Document.
According to table 1, there is a relatively great gap
between the highest and the lowest GPAs in a
semester. In the first semester, the highest GPA is
3.84. It suggests that the student’s ability is very high.
Meanwhile, the lowest GPA is 1.27. It suggests that
the student’s ability is very low. Similarly in the
second semester, there is a significant difference
between the highest and the lowest GPA scores. It
suggests that the Korean Education classes consist of
students with various ability which are also known as
‘mixed ability classes’.
Moreover, students’ mixed ability can be
influenced by many factors. The factors determining
students’ ability in learning language are influenced
by several aspects as follows: age or maturity,
intelligence and multiple intelligences, teaching style,
language aptitude, language levels, mother tongue,
learner autonomy, motivation or attitude towards the
subject, and cultural background (Ma, 2016).
In this Korean Education classes, in average,
students are in the transitional stage of late teenager
to young adult between 18-21 years old. According to
the result of the survey conducted, 64% students have
Indonesian as their mother tongue. In addition, 65%
students also master other language i.e. English
before they know Korean. According to the
questionnaire given to 51 students, 40% students
choose Korean Education program because they do
like the language and its culture. Besides the interest
to the language learnt, other thing influencing
someone’s teaching ability is his/her motivation in
teaching. In this Korean Education Program, 51%
students are motivated to learn Korean because they
want to be a Korean teacher one day. It can be a
beneficial information for the lecturers to determine
the teaching technique to be used. Motivation and
interest differences will certainly cause a certain
problem for the lecturers in providing materials and
teaching activities that can fulfill all students’
motivation and interest (Ma, 2016).
4.2 Description of Teaching Strategies
of Korean Education Students
Table 2: Teaching strategies (classroom management,
teaching material, teaching process, and motivation and
interest).
Category
Mean
Classroom management
3,01
Teaching material
2,79
Teaching process
2,84
Motivation and Interest
2,88
Respond to teaching
4,49
Source: Data Processing Result 2016.
Table 2 shows the strategies often used by the
lecturers to teach the class with mixed ability
students. In the table, it is observed that the lecturers
tend to use all strategies simultaneously even though
the strategies are not always be used. All teaching
strategy categories have the same average score that
are: 3.01, 2.79, 2.84, 2.88, it suggests that the
lecturers rarely use the strategies in the classroom.
Degeng (1997) in his book “Strategi Pembelajaran:
Mengorganisasi Isi dengan Model Elaborasi” states
that teaching method refers to the way taken in a
certain condition to achieve the teaching goals
intended; meanwhile, teaching strategy refers to the
process of choosing, implementing, and developing
the teaching strategies to obtain a procedural step that
can be used to achieve the intended goals.
According to the theory, we understand that
lecturers have an important role in determining the
steps of teaching strategies that are about to be
conducted in every teaching activity to achieve the
intended goals. Based on the result that has been
previously explained, additional lecturers training in
how to implement appropriate teaching strategies in
class with mixed ability students is needed so that
lecturers can fulfill the students’ need optimally.
4.3 Description of Students’ Respond
According table 3, students strongly agree to the
strategies the lecturers used to cope with the difficulty
and to improve the language ability in class with
highly mixed ability students such as by giving extra
class to the low achiever students, by providing
interesting materials, etc. Higher students’ respond is
derived in the extracurricular activity that the
lecturers often give outside formal class hours.
Students feel that the strategy suits them and that they
CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017 - Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology
Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education
536
feel helped by the activity. It is in line with the
statement given by the lecturers and the students
during the interview session conducted by the
researchers.
Table 3: Student’s respond.
Extracurricular
of Korean Song
Choir
Extra
Time for
the Low
Achiever
Students
Interesting
Teaching
Material
Teaching Material Helping
to Improve the Language
Competence
N
Valid
51
51
51
51
Missing
0
0
0
0
Mean
4,3725
4,6471
4,5882
4,5098
Mode
4,00
5,00
5,00
5,00
Source: Data Processing Result 2016.
As stated by Šimanová (2010), and Bremner
(2008) that classroom conditions with varying
abilities require appropriate instructional strategies.
Some of the strategies that can be used in classes with
such diverse capability conditions are as follows:
Supportive learning environment; Classroom
management; Learning to learn; Variety; Grouping;
Pace; Interest; Collaboration; Individualization;
Personalisation; Blooms taxonomy; Open-endedness;
Compulsory plus optional tasks; Adapting materials;
Homework.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Mixed ability in each Korean Education Program
student especially batch 2015 could be influenced by
many factors. Based on the findings, factors mostly
influencing the difference in the students’
achievement are maturity, mother tongue, interest and
motivation. Mixed ability class certainly requires
appropriate teaching strategies in order to achieve a
competitive teaching result which is in line with the
intended teaching targets. Findings of the present
study suggest that the combination use of teaching
strategies is an appropriate step taken by the lecturers
in mixed ability class; furthermore, lecturers have
done many efforts to improve the students’
achievement, for example, by providing extra class
for low achiever students and by conducting fun
extracurricular activities outside the formal class hour
like the extracurricular of Korean song choir.
REFERENCES
Al-Shammakhi, F., and Al-Humaidi, S., 2015. Challenges
facing EFL teachers in mixed ability classes and
strategies used to overcome them. World Journal of
English Language, 5(3), pp.33-45.
Bremner, S., 2008. Some thoughts on teaching a mixed
ability class. Scottish Languages Review, 18, pp.1-10.
Byram, M. and Esarte-Sarries, V., 1991. Investigating
cultural Studies in Foreign Language Teaching.
California: Multilingual Matters
Cammarata, L., 2016. Content-based Foreign Language
Teaching. New York: Routledge.
Degeng, I.N.S., 1997. Strategi Pembelajaran:
Mengorganisasi Isi dengan Model Elaborasi. Malang:
IKIP Malang.
Hasibuan, J. J., and Moedjiono, 2012. Proses Belajar
Mengajar. Bandung: PT. Remaja Rosdakarya.
Kumaradivelu, B., 2006. Understanding Language
Teaching. New Jersey: Lawrence Elbaum Associates.
Ma, G., 2016. Teaching Tips - Mixed Ability Classes.
[Online]. Retrieved from
http://www.witslanguageschool.com/NewsRoom/Artic
leView/tabid/180/ArticleId/58/Teaching-Tips-Mixed-
Ability-Classes.aspx
Morris, 2008. A Qualitative Investigation of
Interdisciplinary Mixed Ability Co-operative Classes in
an Inner-ring Suburban High School. Cleveland:
Cleveland State University.
Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa, 2009. Kamus
Besar Bahasa Indonesia. Jakarta: Departemen
Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan
Reagan, T.G. and Osborn, T.A., 2002. The Foreign
Language Educator in Society; Toward Critical
Pedagogy. London: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
Publishers.
Richard, S., 1998. ELT Spectrum. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Šimanová, A., 2010. Dealing with Mixed Ability Classes
(Thesis). Masaryk University, Brno.
Stevenson, A., 2015. Oxford Dictionary of English. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Tomlinson, C. A., 2005. How to Differentiate Instruction in
Mixed-Ability Classroom. New Jersey: Pearson Merril
Prentice Hall.
Ur, P., 1991. A Course in Language Teaching. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Teaching Strategies for Korean Language Classes with Highly Mixed Ability Students
537