2025 : 9 : 29
Mohammad Aliakbari

Mohammad Aliakbari

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
HIndex:
Faculty: Literature and Humanities
Address:
Phone:

Research

Title
ESP Instructors' Viewpoints towards Learners' Needs: The Case of Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Thematic Analysis ,Course Evaluation, Learners' Needs,؛ Instructors' Perspectives, English for Specific Purposes
Year
2024
Journal Applied Linguistics Inquiry
DOI
Researchers Golchin Amani ، Mohammad Aliakbari ، Yadolah Zarezadeh ، Reza Khany

Abstract

The present study aimed at addressing ESP instructors' perspectives towards ESP learners' needs at Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences (KUMS). That is, we sought to investigate whether or not the learners’ needs in ESP classes are met satisfactorily. Using census rather than sampling, a total number of 10 ESP instructors were selected as the participants. Face-to-face semi-structured interviews were conducted with each participant individually. The results obtained from the interviews yielded 13 dominant themes. It was revealed that instructor-oriented themes were mainly concerned with perceived/felt needs, subject specialists/language instructors, a-priori/negotiated syllabus, team teaching/solitary teaching, instructors as suppressors of needs, receptive/productive skills, transmissive/transformative instructors, and positive/negative reinforcement. However, students' unheard voices in material selection, sense of belonging to the class, students' ratings of instruction and heterogenous/homogenous class groupings were mainly associated with student-oriented themes. Finally, content gradation was found to be associated with coursebook/material-oriented theme. Each of the recognized themes played either a facilitating or hindering role in making learners' needs met. Henceforth, delving into the role of such themes in ESP classes would open new insights into the instructors' viewpoints towards their leaners' needs. The frequency of the retrieved themes was a sign of commonality and generalizability among the majority of instructors; however, the indirect and unidimensional analysis of learners' needs could be remedied by inspecting the learners' actual needs through their own perspectives in future studies