Questionnaire Interview Research Instruments

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B. Research Participants

The participants of this research were 20 young learner’s teachers who graduated from the English Language Education Study Program. The participants are also teachers who have at least six-month experiences in teaching young learners. The researcher believed that by having more experiences, the participants would give depth information about their perception on the use of pictures in teaching English to young learners. In order to obtain representative sample of population, the researcher used purposive sampling technique. As Guba and Lincoln 1981 states that sampling is almost never representative or random but purposive, intended to exploit competing views and fresh perspectives as fully as possible. Consequently, the researcher chose the 20 teachers purposively around Yogyakarta and Klaten as the subjects of this research.

C. Research Instruments

In this study, the researcher utilized two instruments, namely, questionnaire and interview guide. The researcher employed quantitative and qualitative data. The quantitative data were taken from the close-ended questions whereas the qualitative data were taken from open-ended question and interview result.

1. Questionnaire

According to Ary, et al. 1990, questionnaire as a data gathering device is not expensive and time-consuming. It is possible to comprise large number of the subjects and can guarantee confidentiality, which may elicit more truthful responses. 28 By making use of a questionnaire, the researcher intended to assess data about the teachers consisting of their thought and perception in accordance with the implementation of pictures in teaching English to young learners. In this questionnaire, the researcher provided two types of questions. They are open-ended question and close-ended question. For the close-ended question, the researcher provided 20 statements related to the teachers’ thought, feeling and view on the use of pictures in teaching English to young learners while for the open ended questions, the researcher only provided 1 question related to the suggestions of the young learners’ teachers on the use of pictures in teaching and learning process. In this study, the researcher used Likert scale, a scale with a number of points that provides ordinal scale measurement Wiersma, 1995. The score of each column is from 1 to 4. The high score represent positive answer in responding the questionnaire while the low score represent the negative answer. To make the explanation of the score clearer, the researcher provided the score of each column concerned the following agreements,  1 was for totally disagree  2 was for disagree  3 was for agree  4 was for totally agree 29

2. Interview

In order to verify the result of main instrument, the researcher used interview as the second devices to collect the data. Fatterman in Fraenkel and Wallen 1993: 385 stated that interview is the most important data gathering technique a qualitative research possesses. The interview was set to make certain of the data and also to recheck the teachers’ answer in the questionnaire. According to Cohen et al 2000, “the use of interview in research marks a move away from seeing human subjects as simply manipulable and data somehow external to individuals and toward regarding knowledge as generated between human, often through conversation”. To make the interview effective, the researcher chose three participants as the representative of all participants. They are teacher who has the highest score on the questionnaire, teacher who has the lowest score on the questionnaire and teacher who has the most interesting answer on the questionnaire. In the interview, the researcher provided some questions to investigate the teachers’ perception on the use of pictures. The questions were about the teachers’ thought and feeling when they used pictures, the reasons in choosing pictures in teaching process, the advantages and disadvantages of using pictures, and the suggestions on the use of pictures in teaching process.

D. Data Gathering Technique