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Loh, Chin Ee
Preferred name
Loh, Chin Ee
Email
chinee.loh@nie.edu.sg
Department
Office of Education Research (OER)
English Language & Literature (ELL)
ORCID
79 results
Now showing 1 - 10 of 79
- PublicationOpen Access“I'd still prefer to read the hard copy”: Adolescents’ print and digital reading habitsDoes print still matter in this digital age? What is the role of technology in reading? Do adolescents who enjoy reading view the reading of print and digital material differently from those who do not enjoy reading? Drawing on survey data from 6,005 students and focus group data with 96 students across six secondary schools, this mixed-methods study examines adolescents’ print and digital reading habits in Singapore. Findings show that adolescents prefer print but move towards more online reading as they get older. Adolescents’ online reading habits are reflective of their print preferences and behavior with physical books. The article explains how both print and technology matter to motivate adolescent reading.
WOS© Citations 38Scopus© Citations 58 387 1893 - PublicationMetadata only
24 - PublicationOpen AccessChange and continuity in the Singapore Literature-In-English curriculumThis paper examines contestations over the value of Literature in the secondary school curriculum in the former British colony of Singapore and the way the Literature curriculum has been framed to understand the various issues surrounding the role of Literature education. Using Raymond Williams’ framework of dominant, residual and emergent ideologies, I show how the dominant perception of Literature study in Singapore as a decontextualised humanistic and aesthetic subject is influenced by its residual British colonial legacy. Significant official changes, fundamentally conservative, have been driven by the governing ideology of instrumental pragmatism and are tied to twin aims of economic well-being and national belonging. The conservative view of Literature education prevents the adoption of emergent views of Literature education as hybrid, multimodal and critical. A pragmatic re-evaluation of the aims of Literature education in the twenty-first century is required to regain renewed significance for the subject.
WOS© Citations 2Scopus© Citations 3 152 554 - PublicationOpen Access
299 572 - PublicationOpen AccessReading the word and the world: Critically and culturally reflexive conversations in the LangLit classroom(2010-02)Reading does not merely consist of decoding the written word or language; rather, it is preceded and intertwined with knowledge of the world. Language and reality are dynamically interconnected. The understanding attained by a critical reading of a text implies perceiving the relationship between text and context. (Freire & Macedo, 1987, p. 29)
This chapter discusses how literature can be used in the langlit classroom towards learning about language and the world. Literary texts are rich sources for conversations about culturally relevant issues (Applebee, 1996), and if well-chosen, can become discursive spaces for thinking and talking about what is critical and meaningful in today’s world. I argue that literary texts are rich sources for learning how to read the word and the world (Freire, 1991; Freire & Macedo, 1987), and that it is important to teach students to read in what I term a critically and culturally reflexive manner. I then use Tan Hwee Hwee’s (2007) Mid-Autumn, a short story from Island Voices: A Collection of Short Stories from Singapore (Poon & Sim, 2007) to illustrate how awareness of language and worldviews can provide a framework for thinking about the use of literature in the language classroom.177 551 - PublicationOpen Access
88 279 - PublicationOpen AccessThe effect of the COVID-19 lockdown on bilingual Singaporean children's leisure readingLong-term school absences during pandemic lockdowns may result in learning gains and losses much like the summer reading loss, but little is known about the actual effects of such lockdowns. This mixed-methods study examined changes in reading enjoyment, amount and resources in three groups of bilingual children—English-Chinese, English-Malay, and English-Tamil speaking children—during the COVID-19 lockdown in Singapore. Results reveal a lockdown reading gap between children’s stronger language (English) and weaker language (Chinese/Malay/Tamil). Within each language, results show differential reading gains and losses for children who enjoyed and did not enjoy reading in print and digital formats. Children’s reading enjoyment before the lockdown, changes in reading enjoyment and print reading amount during the lockdown in English and Chinese/Malay were significantly correlated. Children preferred print reading over reading digitally both before and during the lockdown, and devices were underutilized for reading purposes.
WOS© Citations 6Scopus© Citations 10 342 211 - PublicationRestrictedPleasure reading habits and preferences of Singapore preadolescents aged 9 to 12 years old(2021)
;Arina Nadiah SaifudinStudies have shown that while Singapore students are highly literate, they may not necessarily enjoy reading. Reports of Singapore students ranking highly for reading achievement but not reading enjoyment, coupled with a recorded decline in pleasure reading underscores the need to inculcate positive reading habits- with an emphasis on pleasure reading. This study draws upon six case studies of primary school students to examine pleasure reading habits and preferences of preadolescents aged 9 to 12 years old. Data was collected by administering a Title Recognition Test, followed by semi-structured interviews.188 21 - PublicationOpen AccessMulticultural texts in contexts: Comparing the use of multicultural texts in the literature classroom in the United States and Singapore(2008-07)The need to bring culturally relevant material into English Literature classrooms has long been considered important from academic and intellectual as well as societal and personal perspectives. More recently, scholarship and educational policies are encouraging the use of "multicultural" texts that reflect the polyphony of voices in the world as being culturally relevant, and having the potential to engage students in fertile discussion about their identity and the world around them.
This paper takes a close look at scholarship, research, policy and practice in the U.S. and Singapore in the last 20 years, and gives insights into how practice is being contextualized in both countries. While certain terminology seem to be the same, close examination of the data show that there are notable differences in scholarship, policy, and practice in both countries. Particularly important to this discussion is the notion of what counts as "multicultural" and how that has impacted upon curriculum choice and instruction.163 425