Yanti Sri Rejeki

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Yanti Sri Rejeki, M.Ed, PhD (Master in work and learning study-Monash Universities; Doctor in Teaching curriculum and change-Rochester Uni. the US).

Though English wasn’t taught at the elementary school level in her native Indonesia, Yanti Sri Rezeki would learn what she could while watching westerns and other English-subtitled movies on television. She received two hours of formal English training per week in junior high, and by high school, wanting even more instruction but unable to afford private lessons, decided to develop her skills independently, and was soon representing her school in English speech contests.

That background eventually led to a lecturer position teaching English as a foreign language to future educators at Tanjungpura University, where she’d received her undergraduate degree. But after years of writing articles in academic journals, participating in international conferences and seminars, and leading teacher training workshops, she felt the need to do even more for her students.

“I was still concerned about their English skills, especially in writing,” says Rezeki, a Fulbright scholar and a doctoral student in the teaching and curriculum program. “Writing is a very complex skill. It requires us to understand grammar, development of ideas, organization, and many other aspects that reflect our ability as a whole to learn a language. And with publication getting more and more important, whether you’re in teaching or another profession, being able to write well is crucial.”

After discovering the Warner School and Associate Professor Mary Jane Curry’s publications online, Rezeki knew she’d found the right place to enhance her own aptitude and help design a project-based learning approach to teaching English writing skills to her students back home. In her first year at Warner, she is unsure of a specific dissertation topic, but knows that it will involve a well-developed and research-based model—whether in a syllabus or entire curriculum—for building mastery in critical thinking, independence, collaboration, and communication.

In addition to the courses she takes, the Warner School’s weekly Wednesday luncheons, Professor Mary Jane Curry’s monthly cohort group meetings with her doctoral students, and Writing Support Services workshops and consultants all help Rezeki improve her language and content knowledge, which she hopes will someday lead to a professorship. (She also has enjoyed taking advantage of the up-to-date library collections, small class sizes, and uninterrupted Internet connections that her university, in the Indonesian province of West Kalimantan, is unable to offer.)

“When I return to teaching,” she says, “I will bring these experiences with me and implement the appropriate ones to improve the education in my country, as I always wished and attempted to do.”

Yanti Sri Rejeki is a lecturer in the undergraduate and postgraduate study program of English language education. She teaches various subjects to the undergraduate students of Undergraduate Study Program of English Language Education. Recently she is also scheduled to teach English masters study programs.

She got her bachelor degree from Universitas Tanjungpura. She graduated her master in Twork and learning study-Monash Universities, AUS. She got her doctorate in Teaching curriculum and change-Rochester Uni. The US.

She also often presented her papers in local, national, and international seminars or conferences. She is also active in writing papers for local and national journals. There the lists of the publication of her article are:

  1. Collaborative written feedback experience: A case study of Indonesian EFL students in an essay writing class in 2017.
  2. Indonesian English-as-A-Foreign-Language (EFL) Learners’ Experiences in Collaborative Writing in 2016.
  3. DESIGNING “e-PoPROTEXT” TO TEACH STUDENTS OF MADRASAH TSANAWIYAH ON PROCEDURE TEXT
  4. Analysis Of Efl Students’ Citation Practices And Problems In Academic Writing.
  5. TEACHING PRONUNCIATION IN SPEAKING USING PROSODY PYRAMID.