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The University Library’s Role in Recreational Reading. Karen Bordonaro James A. Gibson Library Brock University TESL Ontario October 30, 2010. Research Questions. Do international students who are non-native speakers of English use university library material for recreational reading?
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The University Library’s Role in Recreational Reading Karen Bordonaro James A. Gibson Library Brock University TESL Ontario October 30, 2010
Research Questions • Do international students who are non-native speakers of English use university library material for recreational reading? • Do they think that it improves their English language skills?
Recreational Reading • Extensive reading • Pleasure reading • Reading for one’s own enjoyment • Not assigned reading for a course
Recreational reading in L2 • Supplements intensive reading taught in classrooms • Often serves as the basis for book reports • Generally not graded • DEAR programs (“drop everything and read”) • Sometimes from classroom libraries • Chosen by students
Recreational reading in libraries • Usually in public libraries • Often fiction • Often in paperback format • Not always fully catalogued like other library material • Meant for browsing • Usually defined as popular material only, not academic material
Brock University • St. Catharines, Ontario • 17,000 undergraduate and graduate students • 954 international students at time of study: • 70% from Asia • 10% from Europe • 5% from Africa • 5% from North America • 7% from Central and South America • 2% from Oceania • 1% not listed
This study • Considered recreational reading material to be any university library material, not just the small popular browsing collection • Targeted international students in degree programs but not in the pre-academic intensive language program
Participants • 26 male, 33 female • Native languages: Chinese, English (international students from the U.S., U.K.), Bengali, German, Arabic, French, Russian, Danish, Dutch, Punjabi, Turkish, Swedish, Vietnamese • Years of English study (if non-native speaker): 2-16 years
Participants • Programs of Study – Business, Education, Biology, Computer Science, Political Science, Geography, Applied Linguistics, Psychology, Health Sciences, Chemistry • Degrees working on – B.A., B.S., M.A., M.S., M.B.A., Ph.D. • Length of time at university – 3 months to 7 years
Survey questions • Do you read for pleasure? • If no, why not? • no time • no interest • lack of material • other • If yes, why? • to relax • to learn new information • to fill up free time • other
Survey questions • In what languages do you read for pleasure? • English • my native language • neither • other
Survey questions • What types of materials do you read for pleasure? • books • magazines or journal articles • newspapers • web pages, blogs, other online information • other
Survey questions • How often do you read for pleasure? • daily • weekly • monthly • other
Survey questions • Do you think that pleasure reading improves your language skills? • yes • no • not sure
Survey questions • Where do you find your pleasure reading material? • I borrow material from other people. • I use library material. • I buy material. • I do my pleasure reading online. • other
Survey questions • If you use the university library to find reading material, how would you rate this material? • poor, inadequate • fair, sufficient • good, more than sufficient • I don’t use library material
Findings • 80% of the respondents said they do engage in recreational reading • For those who did not, lack of time was cited as the major reason. • Most respondents engaged in recreational reading to relax (64%), followed by 25% who did so to learn new information. • About half of the participants said they read daily for pleasure.
Language findings • A majority of the participants read for pleasure in English (54%), followed by those who read for pleasure in their native languages (27%). • A vast majority of participants thought that reading for pleasure in English improved their language skills (91%), followed by 9% who were not sure.
Library findings • A majority of participants (54%) read books for pleasure, followed by online sites (41%), and magazines or newspapers (5%). • The places where participants found their reading material were online (55%), from a bookstore (20%) and from a university library (20%). • Library material for recreational reading was rated fair (35%), good (17%) and poor (11%).
Comments • “I use these materials to access a variety of information that we cannot learn from our major, and because life is not only to be satisfied with a job.” • “I read for pleasure to increase my knowledge base and to improve my skills.” • “Pleasure reading helps me with learning English.”
What does it mean? • International students, busy with degree work, do seem to engage in recreational reading. • They think recreational reading improves their language skills. • They do use university library materials for recreational reading (not just designated popular collections). • The university library can support and foster out-of-classroom language learning.
Implications • University library material bought to support the curriculum needs of particular programs also helps support second language learning needs. • Librarians and ESL instructors should be made more aware of this use of library materials. • ESL instructors should encourage students to engage in recreational reading through general library materials beyond easy readers or popular browsing collections.
University libraries and L2 learning • University libraries are settings for authentic language learning to take place. • Out-of-classroom learning can take place in university libraries. • Opportunities for more collaboration between librarians and ESL instructors should be encouraged.
Your experiences • Have your students used university libraries for recreational reading? • Do you see it as a pedagogical activity in terms of language learning?