ISSN: 2636-5995
Model: Open Access/Peer Reviewed
DOI: 10.31248/IJET
Start Year: 2016
Email: ijet@integrityresjournals.org
https://doi.org/10.31248/IJET2020.075 | Article Number: BB00DF0B2 | Vol.4 (2) - June 2020
Received Date: 17 March 2020 | Accepted Date: 12 June 2020 | Published Date: 30 June 2020
Authors: Adjei-Yeboah Kofi , Kuranchie Alfred* and Ackah James Y.
Keywords: higher education, Ghana, English language, Francophone students, language skills
The phenomenon of students studying in countries whose lingua franca is different from theirs is normal and a century old practice. However, studying in an academic institution with different lingua franca has its difficulties. This study therefore sought to unravel the challenges that students from Francophone countries in a university in Ghana encounter specifically on four language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing). The study also inquires about the participants’ coping mechanisms and the institution’s strategies to help such students have smooth university education. The phenomenological approach adopted to study the issues afforded the participants the opportunity to vent the challenges that the Francophone students had. The accounts provided by both students and lecturers, who constituted the study population and the evidence from documentary sources evince that the Francophone students encounter challenges in all four language skills. It also emanated from the interviews that the students employ various strategies to cope with the challenges. The study proffers some mechanisms which could help improve the students’ capacity to thrive in such academic environments to inure to the benefits of both learners and the institution.
Abdirahman, H., Fleming, L. C., & Jacobsen, K. H. (2013). Parental involvement and bullying among middle school students in North Africa. EMHJ-Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 19(3), 227-233. Crossref |
||||
Ackah, J. Y., & Kuranchie, A. (2015). Foreign students' adjustment in early days of their university education: The stress and strains. Academic Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 4(2), 399-405. Crossref |
||||
Al-Badawi, K. (2012). An analysis of phonetic, morphological and syntactic errors in English: A case study of Saudi BA students at King Khalid University. International Journal of Social Science and Humanity, 2(6), 536-538. Crossref |
||||
Briguglio, C., & Watson, S. (2014). Embedding English language across the curriculum in higher education: A continuum of development support. Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 31(1), 67-74. | ||||
Burke, E., & Wyatt-Smith, C., S. (1996). Academic and non-academic difficulties: Perceptions of graduate non-English speaking background students. Teaching English as a Second or Language. 2(1), 23-29. | ||||
Dayang, E. (2005). Problems of preposition usage by Francophone learners in English as a foreign language: The case of Terninde students in LBA. Unpublished Dissertation, University of Youande. | ||||
Hoff, E. (2005). Language development (3rd edition). Wadsworth, UK: Thomson Learning. | ||||
Institute of International Education (2014). International students: Enrollment trends. In Open doors data. | ||||
Khuwaileh, A. A., & Al Shoumali, A. (2000). Writing errors: A study of the writing ability of Arab learners of academic English and Arabic at University. Language, Culture and Curriculum, 13(2), 174-183. Crossref |
||||
Koul, L. (2011). Methodology of educational research. (5th edition). New Delhi: UBS Publishers. | ||||
Kuo, B. C. H. (2011). Culture's consequences on coping: Theories, evidences, and dimensionalities. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 42(6), 1084-1100. Crossref |
||||
Kuranchie, A. (2016). Research made easy (2nd edition). Kumasi: Bookworm Publication. | ||||
Luzio-Locket, A. (1998). The squeezing effect: The cross-cultural experience of international students. British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 26(2), 209-223. Crossref |
||||
Mulligan, D., & Kirkpatrick, A. (2000). How much do they understand? Lectures, students and comprehension. Higher Education Research and Development,19(3), 311-335. Crossref |
||||
Okoh, A. S., & Ebi, B. O. (2013). Infrastructure investment, institutional quality, and economic growth in Nigeria: An interactive approach. European Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, 26(1), 1343- 1358. | ||||
Pilote, L., Tu, J. V., Humphries, K., Behouli, H., Belisle, P., Austin, P. C., & Joseph, L. (2007). Socio-economic status, access to health care, and outcomes after acute myocardial infarction in Canada's universal health care system. Medical Care, 45(7), 638-646. Crossref |
||||
Pinetheh, E. A. (2014). Using virtual interactions to enhance teaching of communication skills to information technology students. British Journal of Educational Technology, 3(1),1-18. | ||||
Roberson, D., Pak, H., & Hanley, J. R. (2008). Categorical perception of colour in the left and right visual field is verbally mediated: Evidence from Korean. Cognition, 107(2), 752-762. Crossref |
||||
Sarfraz, K. & Hafeez, R. (2012). Revisiting migration issues in Pakistan. LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing GmbH & Co. KG. | ||||
Sekyi-Baidoo, Y. (2003). Learning and communicating (2nd edition). Accra: Infinity Graphic. | ||||
Selvadurai, R. (1991). Problems faced by international students in American colleges and universities. Community Review, 12(1-2), 27-32. | ||||
Sokeng, S. (2014). Grammatical Errors of Bilingual 1 Francophone Learners of English in the University of Yaounde I. Theory and Practice in Language Studies, 4(9), 1778-1785. Crossref |
||||
Tabiri, M. O., & Budu, G. (2017). Difficulties francophone learners go through in Ghana: The case of Ghana Technology University College. International Research in Education, 5(1), 72-85. Crossref |
||||
Tabiri, O. M. (2016). Teaching reported speech through communicative language teaching and applied eclecticism approaches: The case of Ghana Technology University College. International Research in Education, 5(1), 72-85. Crossref |
||||
Trice, A. G. (2003). Faculty perceptions of graduate international students: The benefits and challenges. Journal of Studies in International Education, 7(4), 379-403. Crossref |
||||
Tshfish, B., Mumbembe, C., & Cekiso, M. (2015). Language challenges facing students from the Democratic Republic of Congo in a university in South Africa. International Journal of Education Sciences, 8(3), 597-604. Crossref |
||||
Walliman, N. (2006). Social science methods. London: Sage Publications. Crossref |
||||
Xu, H. W., He, J., & She, Y. J. (2008). Method for extraction of digital drainage network in the Qinhuai River basin based on DEM and remote sensing [J]. Journal of Hohai University (Natural Sciences), 4. | ||||
Yan, K., & Berliner, D. C. (2013). Chinese international students' personal and socio-cultural stressors in the United States. Journal of College Student Development, 54(1), 62-84. Crossref |
||||
Zhang, Z., & Zhou, G. (2010). Understanding Chinese international students at a Canadian university: Perspectives, expectations, and experiences. Comparative and International Education, 39(3), 43-58. Crossref |