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  • About YUFL
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    • Campus Facilities
    • Faculty & Staff
    • Rector’s Message
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    • Oriental Language Departments
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      • Japanese Department
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      • English Department
      • French Department
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      • History Department
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      • Exam & Convocation
      • Library
      • Sports
    • Admin & Finance Departments
      • Admin Branch
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    • Audio & Visual Department
      • Audio & Visual Branch
      • ICT Branch
  • EventsOur Activities
    • Sports
    • Extracurricular Activities
    • Student Activities
    • Capacity Building Activities
    • IR Activities
  • ProgrammesCourses & Study
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    • Regular Programmes
    • HRD Courses
    • Short Training Courses
  • ResearchInnovations
    • Research Database
    • Published Research
    • Unpublished Research
      • PhD
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    • Outstanding Projects
    • Departmental Projects
    • Research Collaboration
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    • Student Data
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  • Biography

    Professor Dr. Ni Ni Aung started working as a tutor in January 1995 at Dagon University. She was promoted as an assistant lecturer in 2003, a lecturer in 2010, an associate professor in 2015 and a professor in 2016.

  • Education

    Ph.D. (English)
  • Education

    Applied Linguistics

Daw Hnin Aye Lwin

Tutor

M.A(Thai Language, YUFL)

Teaching, Reading, Culture and History

[email protected]

Daw Thinzar Win Hlaing

Assistant Lecturer

B.A (Thai ,YUFL)

Teaching & Learning, Linguistics, Pysychology, IT

[email protected]

Daw Khine Khine Htike

Assistant Lecturer

B.A (Thai, YUFL)

Teaching and Learning, Reading, Phonetics

[email protected]

Daw Wai Yee Khine

Lecturer

B.A (Thai, YUFL)

M.A (Folklore, Naresun University)

Folklore studies

[email protected]

Daw Aye Aye Kyin

Associate Professor

M.Sc (Botany)

M.A (Thai Language), Naresuan University

Diploma in English (YU)

Teaching, Reading, Research

[email protected]

Daw Phyo Kyi Pya

Lecturer

M.A

Culture , Linguistics, Lexicology

09789435335

[email protected]

Educational Background

–          M.A (Chinese), Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China 2019.

–          B.A (Chinese), Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Yangon, Myanmar 2010.

Work Experience

–          Lecturer ,Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2020 March – Today )

–          Assistant Lecturer ,Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2016 August – 2020 March)

–          Tutor , Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2012 September – 2016 August)

​
Daw Win Pyae Pyae Thwe

Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture

[email protected]

Educational Background

BA (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

MA (Beijing Language and Culture University)

Training

Certificate of Teaching Chinese Language Training Program (Yunan University)

Work Experience

Lecturer, Yangon University of Foreign Languages,(Dec,2019 – present)

Assistant Lecturer, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages,(2016-2019)

Tutor, Yangon University of Foreign Languages,(2009-2016)

​Daw Soe Soe Tint

Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture

+95448022592

[email protected]

Educational Background

_ MA (Chinese) YUFL, 2013

_ Chinese Training Program 2004(Kunming Yunnan Province)

_ Diploma in Chinese YUFL, 2000

_ B.Sc (Physics) Hons. 1994,Yangon University

Work Experience

_ Lecturer (2014,December)

_ Assistant Lecturer (2010_2014)

_ Tutor (2002_2010)

Interest           :  Teaching,Culture

​​​​Daw Win Win Mar

Lecturer

M.A

Culture, Lexicology

[email protected]

University Avenue, Kamaryut Township., Yangon Chinese Dept, First Floor, Oriental Hall

Education

– B. Sc (Physics) in 1997 from Workers`College,Yangon University.

– Diploma in Chinese in 2001 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

– MA (Chinese) in 2013 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

Experiences

– L.D.C  : State Peace and Development Council

(9.7.1993 to 12.7.1995)

– U.D.C  : State Peace and Development Council

(12.7.1995 to 20.1.2001)

– Tutor : Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Chinese Department

(21.1.2002 to 28.2.2010)

– Assistant Lecturer : Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Chinese Department

(1.3.2010 to 23.6.2014)

– Assistant Lecturer : Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Chinese Department

(30.6.2014 to 23.12.2014)

– Lecturer   : Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Chinese Department

(24.12.2014 to 30.8.2015)

– Lecturer: Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Chinese Department

(1.9.2015 to today )

Tranings

– Chinese Course Training, Yunnan University, the People’s Republic of China

(1. 12. 2004 to 29. 12. 2004)

– Chinese Course Training, the People’s Republic of China (10. 4. 2019 to 24. 4. 2019)

Research

MA Thesis

A Comparative Study of Catering Culture of Myanmar and Chinese

Daw Kyin Than

Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture

+95-9-5057142

[email protected]

Academic Background

– MA (Chinese) YUFL (2011-2013)

–  LL.B (YU) (1984 – 1992)

Trainings

– Certificate of Advanced Training Program (Beijing Language & Culture University) 2017

– Certificate of Long term Training Program (Beijing Foreign Studies University) 2006

– Certificate of Short term Training Program (Yunnan University) 2004

– Certificate of Short term Training Program (Yunnan Normal University) 2003

– Diploma in Chinese ( Yangon Institute of Foreign Languages)  (1998 )

Work Experience 

– Lecturer (YUFL) (2014 July – present)

– Lecturer (MUFL) (2012 November – 2014 Jul)

– Assistant Lecturer (YUFL & MUFL)   (2006-2012)

YUFL (2010 Feb –2012Nov) / MUFL (2008Feb – 2010 Feb) / YUFL (2006 Dec – 2008Jan)

– Tutor (YUFL & MUFL)   (1999-2006)

YUFL (2002 Jul – 2006 Dec) / MUFL (1999 Feb – 2002 Jul)

Papers and publications

– Comparative study of the usage of punctuation marks in Chinese Language and English Language: [YUFL research journal, Vol.9, No.1, December, 2018]

Comparative study of the usage of punctuation marks in Chinese Language and English Language

In written form, punctuation marks are used together with words or expressions so that the meaning will be more precise. In studying literature, it is important to be able to read, write and speak clearly without ambiguity. In this paper, punctuation marks in Chinese and English are collected from textbooks, dictionaries, research papers and internet websites and compared them to find the similarities and differences in terms of characteristics, terms, usages and forms between the two languages.

​Dr. Su Hlaing Myat

Lecturer

Ph.D

Sociolinguistics, Culture, Literature, Translation

[email protected]

I. Academic Background                    

B.A (Chinese), Yangon University of Foreign Languages, (2006)

Dip in English, University of Yangon, (2012)

M.A (Chinese), Beijing Language and Culture University, (2015)

Ph.D (Chinese), Beijing Language and Culture University, (2020)

II. Participate in Committee of University

Member of YUFL Internal Assessment and Quality Assurance Administrative Committee

III. Work Experiences            

2009-2016                   Tutor, Chinese Department, YUFL

2016-2019                   Assistant Lecturer, Chinese Department, YUFL

2019-2021                   Lecturer, Chinese Department, YUFL

2021-Today                 Associate Professor, Chinese Department, YUFL

IV. Research & Project Activities (During study abroad)

(1) School-level team projects, “Belt and Road” along some of the national language survey, Beijing Language University, subject group members and undertake research and writing tasks, as well as the conclusion of the project.

(2) School-level Graduate Innovation Fund Project: “Myanmar’s Language Policy and Language Status Survey”, Beijing Language and Culture University.

​Dr. Thi Thi Thein

Associate Professor 

Ph.D

Teaching Methodology, Culture, Lexicology

[email protected]

I. Academic Background

B.Sc (Phys) Q in 1995 from Yangon University.

Dip (Chi) in 2001from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

MA (Chi) in 2013 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

Ph.D (Chi) in 2019 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

II. Member of Senate Committee on International Relations

III. Experiences

2002-2010      Tutor, Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

2010-2014      Assistant Lecturer, Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign

                        Languages

2014-2015       Lecturer, Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign

                        Languages

2015-2016       Lecturer, Chinese Department, Mandalay University of Foreign

                        Languages

2016-2019       Lecturer, Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign

            Languages

2019- Today   Associate Professor, Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign

                        Languages 

IV.Published Research

2014       The Study of Affixes in Chinese

               Universities Research Journal, 2014,Vol.7, No.6

Abstract

This paper included six prefixes and eight suffixes. It is stated with examples that prefixes and suffixes are joined with nouns and verbs. It is found that by joining Chinese words with affixes some do not change their meanings but their grammatical rules.

2018    The Study of usage and meanings of numbers in Chinese

Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2018,Vol.9, No.1

Abstract

ဤစာတမ်းတွင် တရုတ်ဘာသာလေ့လာသော ကျောင်းသားများအတွက် ကိန်းဂဏန်းများ၏ တက်ကျသံ ကြောင့် ခေ‌‌‌ဝေမှု ပြောင်းလဲသွားပုံကို စကားပုံများနှင့် အင်တာနက်အသုံးများတွင် အရေးပါပုံတို့ကို ဉပမာများနှင့်တကွ တင်ပြထားပါသည်။ ထို့ပြင် တရုတ်လူမျိုးတို့၏နှစ်သက်သော နမိတ်ဆောင်ကိန်းတို့ကို လည်းဖော်ပြထားပါသည်။(ဤလေ့လာတွေ့ရှိချက်များသည် တရုတ်ဘာသာလေ့လာသော ကျောင်းသား များအတွက်  စာပေရေးသားမှုကို အထောက်အကူဖြစ်စေသည့်အပြင် အချင်းချင်းစကားပြောဆိုသည့်အခါ တွင်လည်း တက်ကျသံမှန်ကန်စွာဖြင့် ပြောဆိုနိုင်မည်ဖြစ်သည်။) 

  1. Academic Research

MA Thesis

A Study of the Polysemy of Chinese and Myanmar Language

Ph.D Thesis

A Study of the Utensils made of Gold, Silver and Ceramic in Tang period

Abstract

In 618 BC, Emperor Li Yuan started to establish the Tang period. This period had succeeded a lot on the fields of cultural, economic and diplomatic affairs. The utensils which are made of gold and silver were widely used in Tang period. A factual account for this thesis paper is mainly separated into two parts. All the factual information is collected from the books on the historical records of the Tang period and based on the some formal research. And this thesis is mainly specialized on “the making of arts of cutlery types and designs in the Tang period”. Descriptive method is used as a research method. Some of the photos of utensils have been taken from internet websites. The thesis has been described by dividing into eleven chapters. Chapter (1) is introduction for research. Chapter (2) is composed of arts and cultural exchange for the making of gold and silver utensils in Tang period. Chapter (3) is about the several sorts of tea cup and chapter (4) is the description about many kinds of tea bowl in Tang period. Chapter (5) is the description about varieties of Tang plates and how to make them. Chapter (6) is the interpretation of Tri-colored porcelain of the Tang dynasty and pots, cups and plates which are made up of Tang san cai (three glazes). Chapter (7) is research on the uses Tang Royal silver alcohol cups and tea cups of the period. Chapter (8) is mentioned about on the pattern of utensils. Chapter (9) is the study of utensils which were influenced by the culture of Middle-East and West regions. Chapter (10) is consideration of making the Tang utensils pattern and art. Chapter (11) is deduction for research.

  • Biography

    Professor & Head

    Chinese Department

    Dr Khin May Cho is a Professor of Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar present time.

  • Educational Background

    • Ph.D (Chinese), Beijing Language and Culture University, China. 2010
    • M.A (Chinese), Beijing Language and Culture University, China. 2004
    • Diploma in Chinese, Institute of Foreign Languages (IFL), Yangon. 1995
    • B.Sc (Chemistry)(Q), Yangon University, 1987
  • Work Experience

    • Professor & Head of Chinese Department , YUFL (2019, May)
    • Associate Professor, (Head) Department of Chinese (2015, August)
    • Lecturer (2010 – 2015)
    • Assistant Lecturer (2004 – 2010)
    • Tutor (1997 – 2004)
  • Email

    [email protected]
  • Participated in Publishing Books

    1. Myanmar Reviewer, Chinese-Myanmar Picture Dictionary, Commercial Press, Beijing, China, 2009
    2. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Teacher`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    3. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Student`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    4. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Work Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    5. Special Reviewer, LEARN CHINESE WITH ME (Student`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    6. Special Reviewer, LEARN CHINESE WITH ME (Work Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    7. Myanmar Reviewer, Chinese-Myanmar Small Picture Dictionary , Commercial press, Beijing, China, 2010
    8. Myanmar Reviewer, 800 Chinese Characters Dictionary, Foreign Language Teaching and Research press, Beijing, China, 2010
  • Fields of Research

    Linguistics and Culture
  • Area of Interests

    Linguistics and Culture
  • Participate in Committee of University

    • Chairman, Committee for Student Assessment (2018 to now)
    • Member, Strategic Planning Committee (2019-2020 )
    • Member, International Relation Office (2016 to 2019)
  • Reviewer in Publishing Books

    She has participated as the reviewer of the following books published in the People’s Republic of China:

    1. Myanmar Reviewer, Chinese-Myanmar Picture Dictionary, Commercial Press, Beijing, China, 2009
    2. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Teacher`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    3. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Student`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    4. Special Reviewer, KUAILE HANYU (Student`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    5. Special Reviewer, LEARN CHINESE WITH ME (Student`s Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    6. Special Reviewer, LEARN CHINESE WITH ME (Work Book), People`s Education Press, Beijing, China, 2010
    7. Myanmar Reviewer, Chinese-Myanmar Small Picture Dictionary, Commercial press, Beijing, China, 2010
    8. Myanmar Reviewer, 800 Chinese Characters Dictionary, Foreign Language Teaching and Research press, Beijing, China, 2010

  • Biography

    Dr. Yin Myo Tint’s Profile

              Dr. Yin Myo Tint earned her Bachelor’s degree in 1991, M.A degree in 1997. She passed the PhD Preliminary course in Year 2000. She obtained her PhD degree from Yangon University in 2004, her dissertation title is ” A Study of Myanmar Noun Phrases from Linguistic Point of View.” She graduated her Diploma in English in 2010. She served her duties as a tutor, assistant lecturer and lecturer at the Department of Myanmar in Dagon University, Yangon University, Meiktila University, Taungoo University ,Mandalay University of Foreign Languages and Yangon University of Foreign Languages. She has been serving her duties as Lecturer, Associate Professor and Professor and Head at the Department of Linguistics, since 2013. In the present, she is serving her duties as the Head of Department in the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages. She submitted papers in various fields in linguistics to university research journals and international research conferences.

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    1995 -1999 Dagon University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2000-2003 Yangon University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2004-2008 Meikhtilar University Department of Myanmar Assistant Lecturer
    2008- 2012 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Myanmar Lecturer
    2012- 2013 Taungoo University Department of Myanmar Lecturer
    2013- 2015 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
    2015- 2016 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
    2017- 2019 MandalayUniversity of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Professor and Head
    2020 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Professor and Head
  • Education

    PhD (Linguistics)
  • Area of Interests

    General Linguistics, Applied Linguistics , Historical Linguistics , Sociolinguistics, and Language Teaching

    The papers she submitted are as follows;

    Annual Researches 

    1995                  The Study of Agricultural Terminologies in Bagan Era

    1996                  The Study of Terminologies of the Arts in Bagan Era

    2006                 The Sociolinguistic Study of Meikhtila Regional Dialect Vocabulary

    2007                  The Spoken Myanmar and the Concept of ‘ Hope ‘ (Sociolinguistic Point of View)

    2010-2012        Teaching Methodologies of Pronunciation and Meaning in Teaching Myanmar   Language to Foreign Students

    2003-2004       Myanmar Nouns with Weak Internal Stability

    2015-2016         A Study of Some Particle Usages from Pragmatic point of view

    2016-2017          A Study of Hedges in Myanmar

    2018 – 2019      A Study of Lexicography

    2019 – 2020      Historical Linguistics; Semantic Changes in the Myanmar Language from Bagan Era to Present days

    Presented Researches

    2000               The Study of the Structure of Similes from the ‘ Shwezigone ‘ Pagoda Stone Inscription in    Mon Language

    2000                The Study of Shin Ottamakyaw‘s Travelogue and the ” Shwesettaw Thwar” Travelogue in Terms of Symbols

    2000                The Influence of Pali Literature on Myanmar Literature

    2001                The Role of Prepositions and Particles in Forming Nouns ( Linguistic Point of View)

    2002                The Study of Noun-Modifying in Myanmar Language ( Linguistic Point of View)

    2003                The Semantic Function and Grammatical Function of Myanmar Nouns

    2004                The Concepts of Myanmar Grammar and Parts of Speech

    2005                The Basic Characteristics of Myanmar Language (Presented at the Paper Reading Session at the 4th Anniversary of Meikhtila University)

    2006                The Dignity of Myanmar Women (Presented at the Paper Reading Session at the 5th Anniversary of Meikhtila University)

    2006                Myanmar Literature in KongBaung Era

    2006                The Nature of Dialect Vocabulary (Sociolinguistic Point of View)

    2007                The Nature of Myanmar Slangs (Sociolinguistic Point of View) (Presented at the Paper Reading Session at the 6th Anniversary of Meikhtila University)

    2008                The Study of Myanmar Words with No Internal Stability (The 7th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science)

    2009                The Semantic Study of Kin Wun Min Gyi‘s Travelogue about the journey to France (The 8th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science)

    2010                The Role of Linguistics in Teaching Myanmar Language to Foreigners (The 9th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science)

    2011                Means of Change in Myanmar Speech Sounds (The 10th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science)

    2014               The Study of Modifying in Myanmar Compound Nouns ( Linguistic Point of View) (The Paper Reading Session of the 50th Year Golden Jubilee of Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2014                The Role of Markers /ga/  /go/ /hma/ Colloquial Myanmar (The Paper Reading Session of the Disciplines in Yangon University of Foreign Languages) (  Linguistic Point of View)

    2015              The Role of Particles  /ga/ , /go/ , /hma/ ,  /hnit/ in Myanmar Language Teaching (Conference on Myanmar Language Teaching in Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2016                 A Study of Hedges in Colloquial Myanmar (The Paper Reading Session of the 51th Year    of Yangon University of Foreign Languages) (Pragmatic Point of View)

    2017                How to write Academic Research Papers (Mini Talks & Presentation in Mandalay university of Foreign Languages) ( 26 . 5 . 2017 )

    2017               A Study of Some Written Particles which are Unstable Grammatical Function (The Paper Reading Session of the 25th Year Silver Jubilee of Taunggyi University) ( Linguistic Point of View)

    2017              How to write Research Papers on Language ( Workshop on Research Methodology in  Mandalay university of Foreign Languages) ( 16 . 11. 2017 )

    2017              A Study of Some Slangs which are   commonly used in Myanmar (The Paper Reading Session of the 20th Anniversary of Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)

    Published Research Papers ( Yearly )

    2005                The Basic Characteristics of Myanmar Language ( Linguistic Point of View)

    ( Meikhtila University Research Journal, Vol.1, No.1)

    2008                The Role of Particles in Noun Phrase (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (From the Linguistic Point of View) ( URJ )

    2008                The Study of Myanmar Noun Words with No Internal Stability (The 7th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science) ( MAAS )

    2009                The Semantic Study of Kin Wun Min Gyi‘s Travelogue about the journey to France (The 8th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science) ( MAAS )

    2009                The Characteristics of Myanmar Slang (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (Sociolinguistic Point of View) ( URJ )

    2010                The Role of Linguistics in Teaching Myanmar Language to Foreigners

    (The 9th Research Paper Reading Session of the Academy of Arts and Science)  ( MAAS )

    2010                The Role of Affixes in Noun Phrase (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (Linguistic Point of  View)  ( URJ )

    2011               A Study of Change in Myanmar Speech Sounds (The 10th Research Paper Reading   Session of the Academy of Arts and Science) ( MAAS )

    2011                A Study of Some Euphemisms which are commonly used in Myanmar (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal. Vol.3, No.1)

    2012                The Role of Particles and Affixes in Myanmar Grammar (Linguistic   of View) ( Taungoo University Research Journal, Vol.1, No.1)

    2013                Regional Dialects in Mandalay Area (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal. Vol.5, No. 1) (Linguistic Point of View)

    2015               The Role of Marker / ga / / go / and / hma / in Colloquial Myanmar (JBRS. Vol.7, No.6) (Linguistic Point of  View) ( URJ )

    2016                 A Study of Hedges in Colloquial Myanmar (The Paper Reading Session of the 51th Year    of Yangon University of Foreign Languages) ( Pragmatic Point of View)

    2016           The Role of Myanmar Particles /ko/, / hma/, and  /nyint/ in the Myanmar Language Teaching as Foreign Language ( 1st Conference on Burma/Myanmar Studies by Inalco Uni and YUFL) (6 – 7 January, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2017            A Study of Some Written Particles which are Unstable Grammatical Function

    ( Academic Research Papers Book for  the 25th Year Silver Jubilee of Taunggyi University)

    2018           Significance of Myanmar Particles ( 2nd International Conference on Burma/Myanmar  Studies ICBM 2 )(16 – 18 February, University of Mandalay )

    2020           A Comparative Study of the Usages of Adverb in Myanmar Language by means of Affixation and Reduplication ( 1st International  Conference on Language and Humanities  6-7 January 2020, Yangon University of Foreign Languages )

    2020           An Analysis of Deviant Forms in the Myanmar Newspapers and Journals     (JBRS. Vol.7, No.6)   ( URJ )

    Published University Research Journals

    2005    The Basic Characteristics of Myanmar Language (Linguistic Point of View)

    ( Meikhtila University Research Journal, Vol.1, No.1) ( MURJ )

    2011    A Study of Some Euphemisms which are commonly used in Myanmar (Sociolinguistic   Linguistic Point of View) (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal. Vol.3, No.1) (YUFL)

    2012    The Role of Particles and Affixes in Myanmar Grammar (Linguistic Point of View)

    ( Taungoo University Research Journal, Vol.1, No.1) (TURJ)

    2013    Regional Dialects in Mandalay Area (Sociolinguistic Point of View)

    (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal. Vol.5, No. 1) (YUFL)

    2016   A Study of Hedges in Colloquial Myanmar (Pragmatic Point of View)

    (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal. Vol.5, No. 1) (YUFL)

    Published Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science Research Journals ( MAAS )

    2008     The Study of Myanmar Noun Words with No Internal Stability      ( Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science Research Journal. Vol. 1, No.6 A ) ( MAAS )

    2009    The Semantic Study of Kin Wun Min Gyi‘s Travelogue about the journey to France (Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science Research Journal. Vol.7 , No. 7B) ( MAAS )

    2010    The Role of Linguistics in Teaching Myanmar Language to Foreigners ( Myanmar Academy of   Arts and Science Research Journal . Vol.8 , No.7B  ) ( MAAS )

    2011    A Study of Change in Myanmar Speech Sounds (Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science  Research Journal. Vol.10 , No.8 )( MAAS )

    Published All Universities Research Journals ( URJ )

    2008    The Role of Particles in Noun Phrase (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (Linguistic Point of  View)

    2009    The Characteristics of Myanmar Slang (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (Sociolinguistic Point of View)

    2010    The Role of Affixes in Noun Phrase (JBRS. Vol.7, No.1) (Linguistic Point of View)

    2015    The Role of Marker / ga / / go / and / hma / in Colloquial Myanmar (JBRS. Vol.7, No.6)

                                                                                                                    (Linguistic Point of  View)

    2020    An Analysis of Deviant Forms in the Myanmar Newspaper and Journals (Applied Linguistics)

    International Conference Papers

    2016   The Role of Myanmar Particles /ko/, / hma/, and  /nyint/ in the Myanmar Language Teaching as Foreign Language ( 1st Conference on Burma/Myanmar Studies by Inalco Uni and YUFL) (6 – 7 January, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2018    Significance of Myanmar Particles ( 2nd International Conference on Burma/Myanmar      Studies ICBM 2 )(16 – 18 February, University of Mandalay )

    2020   A Comparative Study of the Usages of Adverb in Myanmar Language by means of   Affixation and Reduplication ( 1st International  Conference on Language and Humanities  6-7 January 2020, Yangon University of Foreign Languages )

    The Researches Presented at the Department

    2007            The Comparative Study of Literature of Knowledge (Thuta) and Literature of Aesthetics (Ratha) (Department of Myanmar, Meikhtila University)

    2008            The Study of Short Stories with the Essence of Life (Department of Myanmar, Meikhtila University)

    2009            Mean Stream of Myanmar Slang (Department of Myanmar, Yangon University of  Foreign Languages)

    2010            The Role of Grammar in Teaching Myanmar Language to Foreign Learners (Department of Myanmar, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2011            The Role of Speech Sound in Teaching Myanmar Language to Foreign Learners (Department of Myanmar, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2013           Myanmar Language and Its Standard of Internal Stability (Department of Myanmar,Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2014           Regional Dialects in Mandalay Area (Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of  Foreign Languages)

    2015           A Study of Some Particle Usages from Pragmatic point of view  (Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    2016          A Study of Hedges in Myanmar   (Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of  Foreign Languages)

    2017          A Study of Meik Htilar Regional Dialects ( Weekly Research Paper, Mandalay  University of Foreign Languages )

    2018         A Study of Myanmar particle’ Khe’  (Mandalay  University of Foreign Languages )

    On-Going Research

    2021                   An approach to Historical Linguistics

  • Biography

    Dr. Sandar Htay’s Profile

    Dr. Sandar Htay is a Lecturer of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA, Hons (English) in 2005 from the East University of Yangon and MA in 2007 from the Yangon  University. She got her Dip in ICT in 2002, Dip in Communicative English in 2002, Dip in English in 2005 from the Yangon University and Post-graduate Diploma in Applied Linguistics in 2014 from SEAMEO၊ RELC Singapore.

    She was a member of Quality Assurance Committee of YUFL. She is also a member of curriculum development group of the Department of Linguistics. Throughout her career, she wrote papers on applied linguistics fields of linguistics in university research journals, universities research conferences and international research conference. The papers she wrote were

    • A Study of the Role of Content and Language Integrated Learning Observed in the First Year Non-English Specialization Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • A Study of the Effect of Different Types of Corrective Feedback on Foreign Language Student Writing Observed in the First Year Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Linguistics Studies: Effective Teaching Myanmar as a Foreign Language through Rhymes
    • A Linguistic Study of Myanmar Rhymes in The New Syllabus for Primary Level Students in Myanmar
    • A Study of the Association between Learner Language Aptitude and the Effectiveness of Implicit Corrective Feedback on Accuracy in Writing
    • A Study of the Association between Learner Language Aptitude and the Effectiveness of Implicit Corrective Feedback on Accuracy in Writing

    At present, she is a candidate for the degree of Ph. D in applied linguistics at Khon Kaen University, Thailand. At the same time, she is reviewing the diploma courses and developing a curriculum and syllabi for a new course.

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    2009-2013 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of English Tutor
    2013- 2016 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Tutor
    2016-2019 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Assistant Lecturer
    2019 – 2021 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
    2021 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
  • Area of Interests

     

    General Linguistics, Applied Linguistics and Language Teaching

     

  • Research Papers

    A Study of the Performance of Third Year BA English Students in Translation
    Abstract
    This research paper deals with the performance of the third year BA English students at YUFL. First, literature review is presented. Then, it is followed by the analysis of students’ performance in first semester and second semester. In doing this research, qualitative method is used. Findings and discussion session are presented in the last part of the research paper.

     

    The Role of Memorization in Learning English as a Foreign Language Observed in the First Year Non-English Specialization Students
    Abstract

    This aims to study how memorization is connected with learning English. Memorization is used to help learners to internalize what they have learned to use in actual communication. Memorization is a mental process, so the choice of qualitative method as the main data collection and analysis tool is appropriate. There are two questionnaires, one for teachers and one for students. And semi-structured interviews were constructed in order to capture students’ and teachers’ perceptions and uses of memorization in learning English. The outcomes point out that students should know the distinction between good and poor memorization and avoid learning by heart without understanding the context of the task. Teachers should explain and constantly remind the students the potential roles of memorization in their learning.

     

    Linguistic Studies: Effective Teaching Myanmar as a ForeignLanguage through Rhymes
    Abstract

    Teaching Myanmar as a foreign language plays a vital role in developing country, as different people from several countries are working in the transitional period in Myanmar. It is important that for those who are working in business, communications and other fields, if they speak Myanmar, there will be a mutual understanding between the needs and cultural desires. Nowadays, there would be an increasing number of foreigners who are learning Myanmar as a foreign language. This study aims to focus on the better way to support the learners’ language proficiency in productive skills. Moreover, at the basic level in teaching a foreign language, the rhymes can be used as the teaching materials to develop not only the learners’ oral fluency but also their language learning or acquisition. In this study, it is investigated that to what extent the use of the rhymes analyzed in Linguistic point view in teaching Myanmar as a foreign language setting helps the learners improve their language proficiency. The descriptive-qualitative method is used in analyzing the data. The data are the rhymes prescribed in the Grade I Primary Textbook in Myanmar. The rhymes were analyzed in phonological, morphological, lexical, syntactic and semantic levels with the pedagogical objectives. The lessons were designed based on the results of each level of linguistic analysis. The subjects of the study are 36 adult foreign learners who are learning Myanmar as a foreign language. This study compares the result of a group of the language learners taught in traditional ways and the other group taught through the rhymes with the lessons designed from linguistic point of view. The learners in different groups studied the common language patterns. Moreover, the results of the questionnaire with closed-ended questions which reflect the student satisfaction are also analyzed in this research. It is found out that the lesson of the linguistically analyzed rhymes has a significant effect on teaching Myanmar as a foreign language. The group taught the language through the lessons became more proficient than the other group taught in traditional ways. With linguistic point of view, although most of the rhymes are structured to help the first language learners to develop their fluency with accurate pronunciation, it is hoped that it can be applied in teaching Myanmar as a Foreign Language in different aspects. It is also found that the rhymes aim not only at teaching the pronunciation, spelling and vocabulary but also at teaching morals and manners. It is hoped that the study will be useful for those who are in the field of teaching and learning Myanmar as a foreign language as well as who are studying general Linguistic analysis.

     

    A Study of the Effect of Different Types of Corrective Feedback on Foreign Language Student Writing Observed in the First Year Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    Abstract
    The value of corrective feedback on foreign language learner student writing becomes prominent in recent years. This paper aims to analyse the use of feedback given in teaching writing skills at Yangon University of Foreign Languages (YUFL) and their effects, and to focus on the better way to support students’ writing development. This research paper deals with the performance of the YUFL first year students on writing skills. In this research, it is investigated whether the type of feedback (direct, implicit written feedback with correction code and student-researcher 2 minute individual conferences; direct, explicit written feedback only; no corrective feedback) given to two different specialization students on the types of linguistic errors which most frequently occurred in their task resulted in improved accuracy in their new piece of writing. An analysis is made of the outcomes obtained in these three groups. The significant variations in accuracy across two writing tasks statistically support that there is a significant effect for the combination of written and conference feedback on accuracy improvement. It is hoped that the present study will be useful for both teachers and learners who are trying to develop their writing skills in second language teaching and learning setting.

     

    Corpus-based Data for Determining the Vocabulary Found in the ICLH Research Articles Written by Myanmar Researchers
    Abstract
    This study explores the use of the lexical words in the academic articles written by the Myanmar scholars in the English language. The lexical words, the vocabulary, is regarded as one of the main features in academic writing. The purpose of the study is to develop a list of the most frequent vocabulary used by the Myanmar researchers in the field of language teaching and social sciences and compared it with the lists of West’s (1953) General Service (GSL) and Coxhead’s (2000) Academic Word Lists (AWL). The corpus approximately 170,000 running words was build using the 39 academic research articles, written by Myanmar scholars, presented at the 1st International Conference on Languages and Humanities (ICLH) which was hold at Yangon University of Foreign Languages in 2020. The lists of the frequent words found in respective levels of GSL and AWL were developed. The analysis revealed that the top 20 frequent words included 18 basic words and only two academic words. The results also show that, amongst 2000 word families of GSL, 731 word families occurred frequently in the articles with the coverage of 79% of the tokens in the corpus. For academic words, among 570, only 96 word families with the coverage of 9 % of the all tokens were found as the frequent words in the research articles. It is hoped that the construction of the lists will definitely provide the Myanmar researchers the knowledge on the use of vocabulary in academic writing of the research articles in the English language.

     

    A Study of the Association between Learner Language Aptitude and the Effectiveness of Implicit Corrective Feedback on Accuracy in Writing
    Abstract
    TThe study aims to investigate the association between learner language aptitude and the effectiveness of implicit corrective feedback on grammatical accuracy in writing. The instruments that used in this study were Language Aptitude Test, a narrative writing task and an implicit corrective feedback. The target structure was Past tense. The performance of the students in the first draft and the final version were compared to investigated the effects of the corrective feedback. The objects of the study are 18 upper secondary (Grade 10) Myanmar students who were studying English as a compulsory subject in their school curriculum. Their proficiency levels were pre-intermediate. As it was a quantitative research, the data were statically analyzed to investigate the correlation between language aptitude and the effectiveness of implicit corrective feedback. The results indicated that there was a significant relation between learner language aptitude and the effectiveness of implicit corrective feedback. It was proved that the high language aptitude learners performed better than the low language aptitude learners after receiving the implicit feedback. Moreover, the correlation between three components of language aptitude (working memory, grammatical sensibility, and language analytical ability) and the effectiveness of implicit corrective feedback was investigated. The findings revealed that language analytical ability was the best positive predictor for the effectiveness of the implicit corrective feedback in writing skills.

     

  • Daw Soe Lae Lae Naing

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Email

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

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  • Book Publication

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  • Conference Presentations

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  • Paper Publications

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  • Conducting Research

  • Daw May Thwe Htoon

  • Position

    Associate Professor & Head of French Department

  • Email

    [email protected], [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.Sc (Chemistry) (Q) in 1991 from Yangon University
    • Diploma in French in 1999 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Diploma in English Language Proficiency in 2004 from SEAMEO CHAT
    • Diploma in International Law in 2004 from Yangon University
    • Diploma in Global English in 2005 from Yangon University
    • DAPsy, Post Graduate Diploma in Applied Psychology in 2006 from Yangon University
    • PGDCA, Post Gradate Diploma in Computer Application in 2006 from Yangon University
    • M.A (French) in 2013 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Diploma in Italian in 2017 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Diploma in Linguistics in 2019 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Diploma in French Language Studied in 2020 from University of Texas, Austin (Online)
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Participation in Committees of YUFL

      • French Department’s Board of Study
      • French Department Research Committee
      • French Department Strategic Planning Administrative Committee
      • Senate Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics
      • Member of The Scientific Committee (DOC.EU) REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC (University of Bucharest) in Romania (From 2019 November- up to now)

    Curriculum Project / Plan (teaching textbook)

        • Langage Utilisé en Classe de Langue (2008, August) Hand Book
        • အသုံးဝင်သော အခြေခံပြင်သစ်ဘာသာလက်စွဲစာအုပ် ( Le Français Courant de Tous Les Jours) (2012, June) Hand Book
  • Book Publication

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  • Conference Presentations

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  • Paper Publications

    A Brief Study on Translation of Myanmar and English Proverbs into French by Third Year B.A French Students (Universities Research Journal, December 2011, Vol.4, No.6, Pgs: 91 to 110, (Publication), (ပြည်တွင်း))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This paper is a comparative study. French translation and interpretation are taught to the third year BA students who are studying French at Yangon University of Foreign Languages. Myanmar proverbs and English proverbs are translated into French in Tutorial Classes. Their translations are compared with French Original Proverbs. These proverbs are studied comparatively with the original French proverbs. According to the study, some difficulties Myanmar proverbs are translated to French. When English proverb are translated to French, it can be translated accurately. These proverbs of English and French also have the same meaning. The research area is demarcated and it involves fifteen proverbs which are metaphorical expressions concerning animals.

     

    “LA CROYANCE, LES COUTUMES ET LA CULTURE DE LA BIRMANIE”(ANII 1900-1930 FENOMENE SOCIOCULTURALE) (DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, AN 3 – NR.3, 2019, pgs : 121 to 131, ISSN-L 2601 -1204, University of Bucharest (Universitatea din Bucuresti), Romania, Bucharest, (Peer Reviewed Journal) (Publication), (ပြည်ပ))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    Chaque nation a sa propre histoire, sa coutume, sa tradition, sa croyance, sa littérature, sa religion etc. Il existe la croyance de religion, celle de tradition, celle de coutume etc., dans l’esprit des peuples du Myanmar. Ils respectent aussi la religion. Dans cet article, le système d’onomastique basée sur l’astrologie, les alphabets du Myanmar, les noms birmans, les jours et les fleurs des jours de la semaine selon l’astrologie du Myanmar, le pot de Thingyan et la préparation du pot de Thingyan sont présentés. Les Myanmars croient non seulement à la mythologie mais aussi au destin. Dès la naissance, la plupart des gens ont fait leur horoscope.

     

    A Study of the Experience, Knowledge and Attitude of Myanmar Students learning Italian Language (YUFL Research Journal, July 2019, Vol.10, No.1, pgs: 97 to 109, (Publication) (ပြည်တွင်း))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This paper is a study of the experience, the knowledge and the attitude of Myanmar Students learning Italian Language. In this study, (23) Italian specializing students were surveyed. A questionnaire including (15) items with two extreme opposite degrees of attitude scales is used. (56 %) of the students may be able to study and learn Italian Language without difficulties, (83 %) of the students know the value of the Italian literature, the culture, the civilization, the history, the expression, the usages and the stylistics of Italian authors in literature and (83 %) of students have positive attitude on evaluative essence and on the behavioral attitude to improve the teaching and learning of Italian Language. They are eager to contribute for the development of the country. The aim of this paper is to know the experience, the knowledge and the attitude of the students learning Italian Language, in order to help the students who are facing difficulty with Italian Language and to let them appreciate the value of Italian Language and Italian Literature.

     

    The Comparative Studies of the Stylistics between a Burmese Poem of Min Thu Wun and a French Poem of Arthur Rimbaud (The 1st INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGES AND HUMANITIES 2020, January 2020, pgs: 106 to 115, (Proceedings) (6-7 January 2020, YUFL), (ပြည်တွင်း), (Second author))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This paper is the comparative study of the stylistics between a Burmese poem, “Thu Hmar Dan” (His last words) of Min Tun Wun and a French poem, “Le Dormeur du Val” (The sleeping man in the valley) of Arthur Rambo. Both of these poems describe the cruelty and imagery of the war, which causes many people to lose their lives, their love ones, their properties, etc.This paper is presented by using analytical method, analyzing the styles of two poets. So, the study is significant as it will help the reader to understand the two authors’ point of view stylistically on linguistic basic rather in the domain of literature.
    Key words: stylistics, poet, poem, Imagery of war, metonymy, sound device, aesthetic analysis.

     

    A Brief of Stylistics Analysis of the Poem “Cradle Song” By Min Thu Wun (MURC – 2nd Myanmar Universities’ Research Conference 2020, June 2020, pgs: 200 to 206, (25th- 27th June, 2020), (ပြည်တွင်း) )
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This paper is basically analyzed on the stylistics devices of the poem “Cradle Song” written by Sayar Gyi Min Thu Wun. This poem “Cradle Song or ပုခက်လွဲချင်း” from a book of poetry, “Nursery Songs for Maung Khway”, is one of Poet Min Thu Wun’s Songs of Innocence and it possesses the feel of a sweet, childhood lullaby. “ပုခက်လွဲချင်း”is translated in English by Sayar Gyi Gordon. H. Luce. The poem is created with beautiful words and the figure of speech. The purpose of this study is done to help the students who have some difficulties when they analyze the poem, to investigate the role of Stylistics and Linguistics, to realize the importance of stylistics devices in analyzing a poem, to can analyze and criticize the different poems well, and to encourage the interest in reading and writing. In this study, the importance of stylistics devices is highlighted. Besides, the course-works of eight students, attending in Second Year Master French Specialization are analyzed. According to the data analysis, the students realize how the poet uses poetic devices effectively in the poem to attract the readers, which stylistics devices are essential in communicating thoughts and ideas, what a poem is about, and which messages and theme the poet conveys the readers to understand his point of view stylistically. According to the findings of research, most of the students could analyze stylistics devices in a poem without difficulty and they improve their ideas in Reading and Writing Skills after learning Stylistics. As a result, the stylistics devices are needed for language learners and readers to understand and criticize the poem well. Finally, as the role of Stylistics is important in comprehending and criticizing a poem or a text, descriptive method is used to analyze the specific data of Second Year Master Students, attending in French as a foreign languages FFL who analyzed a poem “Cradle Song” written by Sayar Gyi Min Thu Wun. It is expected that this study can give a great interest for the students and language learners who want to criticize the poem well and language teachers who want to give help for learners or their students to have great interest in learning Stylistics.
    Keywords — Poetic devices, Phonological level, Deviation, Lexical level and Morphological level.

     

    La Pagode Kyaiktiyo et Ses Legendes (MANIFESTARI ALE ETNICULUI IN ISTORIE, LITERATURA SI ARTA)(DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, NR.5 – AN 2020, pgs : 32 to 41, ISSN-L 2601 -1204, University of Bucharest (Universitatea din Bucuresti), Romania, Bucharest, (Peer Reviewed Journal) (Publication), (ပြည်ပ))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    Kyaiktiyo (Le Golden Rock) (ကျိုက်ထီးရိုး) est un site de pèlerinage bouddhiste bien connu à l’État de Mon (မွန်ပြည်နယ်), en Birmanie (Myanmar) (Figure 1). Il s’agit d’une petite pagode (7,3 mètres (24 fts) construite au sommet d’un rocher de granit recouvert de feuilles d’or collées par ses dévots mâles. La pagode est située près de Kyaikto (ကျိုက်ထိုမြို့), dans l’État de Mon, dans la partie du nord de la côte de Tenasserim. C’est-à-dire, Le Golden Rock est situé au sommet de la colline Kyaiktiyo, c’est sur la crête de Paung-laung (ပေါင်းလောင်း) des montagnes de l’Est de Yoma (ရိုးမ). Il est à une distance de 210 kilomètres de Yangon (ရန်ကုန်မြို့) et à 140 kilomètres au nord de Mawlamyine (မော်လမြိုင်မြို့), la capitale de l’État de Mon.
    Keywords: L’histoire, la fête, les légendes, les pagodes satellites

     

    A Study on Cohesive Devices in Stylistics from an Extract of a French Novel “Voyages d’un Sédantaire” by Francis de Miomandre (YUFL Research Journal, June 2020, Vol.11, No.2, pgs: 221 to 234, (Publication), (ပြည်တွင်း)
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This study is mainly focused on cohesive devices in Stylistics from an extract “Un Ami des Oiseaux” from the book “Voyages d’un Sédentaire” (1981) by French Author, Francis de Miomandre, (1880-1959). This extract is constructed with the cohesive relations between its linguistic features and beautiful stylistics devices. Stylistics is one of the modules for Second Year Master French Specialization students at YUFL. The purpose of this study is to help the students who have some difficulties when they analyze the texts, to realize the vital role of cohesive devices, to criticize the texts easily, to encourage the students to be interested in reading and writing, and to get better ideas both in written and spoken form. In this study, the importance of cohesive devices and discourse markers is highlighted. In addition, the system of discourse ie. grammatical cohesion such as reference, substitution, ellipsis, conjunction, and lexical cohesion such as repetition, synonym, superordinate, general words, collocation and sentence connectors, is analyzed. After reading the text, the students realize how the author uses them effectively in the text to attract the readers, which discourses markers are essential in communicating ideas, what a text is about, and which messages the author gives the readers. In this study, the works in the class of Second Year Master French Specialization students are analyzed. According to the findings of research, most of the students could analyze cohesive devices without difficulty and they improve their Writing Skills after learning the discourse. As a result, the cohesive devices and discourse markers are needed for language learners and readers to understand the text and criticize well. As the role of the cohesive devices and discourse markers is important in comprehending and analyzing a text, descriptive method is used to analyze the specific data of Second Year Master Students, attending in French as a foreign language FFL. It is expected that this study can give a lot of advantages for readers or students who want to criticize the text well and for language teachers who want to help the learners to have great interest in reading a variety of authentic texts.
    Key words: grammatical cohesion, lexical cohesions, discourse markers.

     

    A Brief Study of the Result of the Proverbs and Adages from Myanmar and English into French by the Fourth Year BA Students Learning French (URJ, December 2019, Vol.12, No.9, Pg: 61- 72) (Publication), (ပြည်တွင်း)
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    This paper is a comparative study French translation and interpretation are taught to the fourth year BA students who are studying French at Yangon University of Foreign Languages. In this paper Myanmar proverbs and adages and English proverbs and adages which are translated into French, are the same sense in French. In addition, these proverbs and adages are studied comparatively with the original meaning and sense in French. In this study, some difficulties can be found when translation is made from Myanmar proverbs into French. However when English proverbs and adages are translated into French, it can be found that it is easy for students to translate accurately. Because these proverbs and adages of English and French also have the same meaning and sense. In this paper, ten proverbs and adages from the Myanmar and English which are metaphorical expressions concerning parts of the human body, are analyzed.

     

    Une étude des proverbes et des dictons liés à la numérologie en Birmanie (DOC.EU, University of Bucharest (DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, An 5, nr.7/decembrie 2021, pgs : 16 to 23, ISSN-L 2601 -1204, University of Bucharest (Universitatea din Bucuresti), Romania, Bucharest, (Peer Reviewed Journal) (Publication), (ပြည်ပ))
    Daw May Thwe Htoon
    Abstract

    In this article, Burmese [Myanmar} proverbs and sayings are compared to some proverbs found in French and English to refer not only to students who are interested in the language and culture of Burma, but also to anyone who want to learn as knowledge. This research paper explores French and English proverbs and saying that are not exactly the same as Burmese proverbs, but have similar meaning and usage. It is a collection of proverbs and sayings from English, French and Burmese, so it will be useful not only for Myanmar students who are learning French but also for French students who are learning Burmese. This article is analyzed only twenty Burmese proverbs and saying related to numerology.
    Key words: proverbs, saying, numerology, significance

     

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing research

    • An Analysis of the System of Verbs in French Short Story “Une Triste Nouvelle” by Voltaire (URJ 2020, Vol. 13, No. 1)
    • Une étude sur les plants médicaux Tayaw-Kinpun et le shampoing médical et traditionnel en Birmanie (Myanmar)
    • A Study of Learning Experiences, Knowledge and Perception of French Language Learners in YUFL (Daw May Thwe Htoon)
    • A Comparative Study of Italian, French and Myanmar Proverbs and Sayings that are Related to Animals (Daw May Thwe Htoon and Daw May Thu Myint)
    • The Sociolinguistic Study of French Vocabulary from Kin Wun Min Gyi‘s Travelogue about the journey to France (Dr. Yin Myo Tint and Daw May Thwe Htoon)

    Educational Plan

    • Participate in Curriculum Development Project of YUFL Upgrading 2025 Project (member of Curriculum Committee)
    • Participate in YUFL Strategic Plan project (2023-2025)
  • Daw Khaing Khaing Soe

    Lecturer
    International Relations Department

  • Dr Tin Tin Mar San

    Lecturer
    International Relations Department

  • Daw Nann Thin Thin Aye

    Tutor
    German Department

  • Daw Khin Moe Htoo

    Tutor
    German Department

  • Daw Hnin Thida

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching foreign Languages, Interpretation.

  • Daw Aye Myat Myat Myo

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching foreign Languages, Teaching Methodology, linguistics

  • U Hlaing Minn Khant

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Pedagogical Education, Teaching Methodologies for RFL, Curriculum Design, Phonetics, Philology and Linguistics languages.

  • U Linn Htin Maw

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Pedagogical Education, Pragmatics, Syntactic, Sociology, Curriculum Design, Philology and Communication Skills

  • Daw Pann Nu Yi

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching foreign languages,Teaching Methodology, literature andphonetics

  • Daw Htar Htar Thwe

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Morphology, Literature

  • Daw Win Pa Pa Aung

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Literature and Linguistics

  • Daw Khin Phone Myint

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Q)

  • Area of Interests

    Literature

  • Daw Myat Saw Mu

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Linguistics and Literature

  • Daw Yi Yi Htay

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Russian Literature

  • U Aung Hlaing Myat

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching methods for Translation and Interpretation

  • Daw Aye Myint Kyaing

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Teaching Methodology, linguistics

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching, learning and research paper writing

  • U Aye Min Htut

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Russian Literature, Teaching Method

  • Daw Mu Mu Khin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching Techniques, Practical Grammar, Tourism Development

  • Daw Win Win Thaung

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    M.A (Russian)

  • Area of Interests

    Morphology and Synthetic

  • Daw Phyu Phyu Win

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

  • Area of Interests

    Grammar

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Russian) (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
    • M.A (Russian) (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
    • Diploma in German (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
    • Diploma in English (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    A Study of the Russian Verbs of Motion
    Abstract
    This paper studies verbs of motion in Russian Language. Differences of the usages in different Russian verbs of motion are described. This study also analyses the way, in which the Russian verbs of motion are evolved by adding prefixes to the existing verbs, with the example sentences. As the study focuses on the most commonly used Russian verbs of motion, it can be beneficial for the Myanmar learners of Russian language.

     

    A Study of Some Superstitious Notions in Russian and Myanmar Cultures
    Abstract

    Every Language has plenty of traditions and superstitions. Russian traditions, superstitions and beliefs include superstitions and customs of Russians and Myanmar. Many of them are now inseparable parts of everyday life, or simply common social etiquette, though they often have their origins in superstition. Awareness of them, and their perceived importance, depends on various factors including region and age. Some are extremely common and practiced by the vast majority of the population, while some are extremely obscure and could be more regionally based.Traditions and superstitions represent an area of the nation descriptions. The learner can’t understand the traditions and superstitions, if they do not know its custom expression. This paper studies some traditions and superstitions in Russian and Myanmar. It is not possible to study all existing traditions and superstitions of languages. It aimed at helping the learners to interpret an expression. The aim of this paper is to improve language knowledge and to understand, what traditions and superstitions are and how many traditions and superstitions are. This paper can help learner to improve their language proficiency. Its overall meaning implies a separate one different from the meanings of individual words in it. The descriptive and analytical research methods are used.

     

    A Comparative Study on the Adverbs of Manner and Time in Russian and Myanmar Languages
    Abstract

    This research presents the adverbs of manner and time in Russian and Myanmar languages in a comparative way. In Russian, there are (6) types of adverbs classified in term of meaning and adverbs relating to pronouns. In Myanmar language, the adverbs can be classified into (5) types in term of meaning and (3) types in term of structure. Adverbs can be used to modify verbs, adjectives and other adverbs. In this research, the usages of adverbs in questions and the ways of making questions are presented with example sentences.

  • Conducting Research

    • A Comparative Study of the Some Idioms in Russian and Myanmar languages (URJ)
    • An Analytical Study of the Complex Participle Construction in Russian Grammar

  • Daw Sein Sein Aye

    Associate Professor
    Korean Department
    [email protected]

  • Academic Background

    • B.Econ (Stats:),1984,Yangon University of Economics
    • B.Econ (Stats:) (Hons:), 1985, Yangon University of Economics
    • M.Econ (Stats:), 1992, Yangon University of Economics
    • M.A (Korean), 2012, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Dip in Korean, 1995, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Dip in Korean, 1997, Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea
    • Dip in Global English,2014, Yangon University
    • Dip in Education Management, 2014, Yangon University
    • KOICA Training and Development Program for Korean Language and Culture Experts, (online class), 2020, Hallym University, Seoul, Korea
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor, (YUE), (1996 to 1994),
    • Assistance Lecturer, (YUE), (1994 to 1995)
    • Assistance Lecturer, (YUFL), (1995 to 1999)
    • Lecturer, (YUFL), (1999 to 2003)
    • Lecturer / Head of Department, (MUFL), (2003 to 2004)
    • Lecturer, (YUFL), (2004 to 2005)
    • Associate Professor, (YUFL), (2005 to 2014)
    • Associate Professor / Head of Department (YUFL), (2014 to 2017)
    • Associate Professor, (YUFL), (2017 up to now)
  • Activity Committee

    • Students assessment committee (yufl)
    • Finance and Administration committee (yufl)
    • Capital Budget Management committee (yufl)
  • Attendance to Conferences

    • Seminar of Discussion for Formation of Korean Alphabets (2015, Seoul University, Seoul, Korea)
    • 22nd International Conference on Korean Studies (2016, Jawahanal Nehru University, New Deli, India)
    • 23rd International Conference on Korean Studies (2017, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
    • 1st Myanmar-Korean Language Education Conference, YUFL, Yangon, Myanmr (2016)
    • 3rd Myanmar-Korean Language Education Conference, YUFL,Yangon, Myanmar (2019)
  • Research Papers

    • A Comparative Study of Forming of Negative in Korean and Myanmar. (Universities Research Journal 2012, Vol-5, No 7)
    • Contrastive Study of Negation in Korean and Myanmar (22nd International Conference on Korean Studies, 2016 November, Proceedings by Nehru University, India)
    • Method of Korean Culture Education through the comparison of Korean and Myanmar Culture: focusing on Korean and Myanmar Traditional Games. (23rd International Conference on Korean Studies, 2017 January, Proceedings by Korea University)
    • Comparison of Proverbs in Korean and Myanmar.(Focusing on Korean text books which are used in Korean Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages). Proceeding by Oesolhoe (Narla Sarran Journal) 128 volume, 2020

     

    A Comparative Study of Forming of Negative in Korean and Myanmar
    Abstract

    Korean and Myanmar differ in their origins, but their sentence structures are similar as they are both SOV languages. The aim of this paper is to reveal similarities and differences in negative sentence structures in both languages since there are certain peculiarities in such structures. The negative sentences in both languages are compared on the basis of four sentence types: declarative, interrogative, pro positive and imperative. It is found that short negative form in both languages is similar but long negative form is different. In negative sentences in both languages , quality verb is not used in pro positive sentence. The study of the similarities and differences of negative sentence structures in Korean and Myanmar, it is hoped, will contribute a great deal to teaching of the Korean languages. In the same way, it is of much help to the Koreans studying Myanmar for a better understanding of negative sentences in Myanmar.

     

    Contrastive Study of Negation in Korean and Myanmar
    Abstract

    Although Myanmar and Korean are of different origins, their sentence structures are found to be SOV. Therefore, their basic sentence structure is found to be the same. This paper aim at introduce and compare the negative sentence patterns in Myanmar and Korean. In the negative sentence of Myanmar, the two types of negative sentence pattern: the negative particle “ma” preceding the verb, and the negative particle “ma” preceding the verb and the particle “bu” following the verb. The negative sentence of Korean to build the negative adverb “an” before the verb as well as the negative word “ ji-an-da ” following the verb.

    A contrastive method is used to profound the distinct features of the negative sentence construction in the two languages of different origins and results that come from a discussion of similarities and differences on the basis of the negative sentence construction.

    The simple sentence in Myanmar includes such negative words as “ ma / ma …bu / par/ pay / che ” and the negative words in the simple sentence in Korean include “ an, mot”. In the interrogative sentence of Myanmar has such negative word as “ ma….bu la / tha..ne / tha…loe / tha… lae / tha…doe ” and in Korean, the interrogative sentence has “ an, mot”. In Myanmar, the imperative sentence has “ ma..ne / ya” and in Korean. “mal” is used both in imperative and “Let’s” Invitational sentences. Therefore, in both languages, it is known that the use of negative sentence very depending on sentence pattern.

    It is common that quality verb is not used in negative imperative sentence in both languages. In addition, since action verb (or) quality verb can invariably be used to make negation in simple and interrogative sentences, such sentences can be said to be common in both languages. In Korean, the use of quality verb in the simple negative sentence is limited, but in Myanmar, there is no such limitation. In giving reasons, the two languages are found to be totally different.

     

    Method of Korean Culture Education through the comparison of Korean and Myanmar Culture: focusing on Korean and Myanmar Traditional Games
    Abstract

    This research paper reveals seven categories of Korean traditional games in Korean reading text book to support teaching and learning in Korean. Among these games, this paper deals with the similarities and differences between Myanmar traditional games. “The tug of war” game is studied to get a lot of knowledge form teachers who teach Korean language by using lesson plan as well as for students who are learning the Korean language.

     

    Comparison of Proverbs in Korean and Myanmar (Focusing on Korean text books which are used in Korean Department, YUFL)
    Abstract
    There are many proverbs in every country and they emphasize the sentences more meaningful both in writing and speaking. I hope for studying pro verbs will contribute to Myanmar learners who are learning Korean and Korean learners who are learning Myanmar language in understanding about local people’s daily life, mindset, personality, food, clothing, shelter, society, legend and history and learning easily about their culture and customs. The proverbs in this paper are based on the 26 Korean proverbs learned in Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Bachelor and Diploma (3rd and 4th Year) Korean textbook, exercises and reading textbooks (from Yonsei University) comparing with the meaning of Myanmar proverbs. According to the first noun of Korean proverb, these are divided into living thing and non-living things. While comparing the meanings, I analyzed by using well-known proverbs and Korean and Myanmar dictionaries that a lot of Myanmar learners generally use. In finding similarities and differences between the proverbs according to both nations and people of their daily lives, way of thinking, attitude, and the customs related to food, clothing, shelter, history and geography. Among 26 proverbs of 18 proverbs have similarities and the remaining of 8 are different. Moreover, among 18 proverbs mentioned above, the figurative expressions used in 5 proverbs have the exact meaning both in Korean and Myanmar and the remaining 13 proverbs have little differences. I think that there are differences in the culture, customs and way of thinking of everyday life due to different factors such as history, geographical environment, and climate and soil conditions. I hope that the contents of this paper will provide in learning Korean learners and for Koreans who are learning Myanmar culture.

     

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Daw Aye Myat Thu

    Tutor
    Korean Department
    BA(Korean, Yangon University Of Foreign languages)

  • Daw Poe Ei Hlaing

    Tutor
    Korean Department
    BA(Korean, Yangon University Of Foreign languages)

  • Area of Interests

    Reading

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor in Yangon University of Foreign Languages (5.11.2021~ up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    —

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Daw Hnin Myat Noe Oo

    Tutor
    Korean Department
    BA(Korean,Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

  • Area of Interests

    Syntax and Culture

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor in Yangon University of Foreign Languages ( 5.11.2021~ up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    both two languages. And then in 3rd person pronoun, the usage in Myanmar is simpler than

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Daw May Poe Phyu

    Tutor
    Korean Department
    MA(Korean Language, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

  • Area of Interests

    lexeme and grammar

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
    • M.A ( Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor in Yangon University of Foreign Languages (5.11.2021~ up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    —

  • Conducting Research

    • A Study of the Methods of Teaching Korean Intentional Expressions to Third Year and Fourth Year Korean Specialization Students at YUFL

  • Daw Aye Mya Thandar Maung

    Lecturer
    Korean Department
    MA (Korean Studies: Teaching Korean as a Foreign Language, Ewha Womans University)

  • Area of Interests

    Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean), Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar.
    • M.A (Korean Studies: Teaching Korean as a Foreign Language), Ewha Womans University, Korea.
    • Diploma in English, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar
    • Diploma in Global English, Yangon University, Myanmar
    • English Language Course for Higher Education Teachers (ELCHET, 3/2013)
    • Certificate of Korean Language Teacher (Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Republic of Korea)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor, Korean Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2012 September – 2016 August)
    • Assistant Lecturer, Korean Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2016 August – 2020 March)
    • Lecturer, Korean Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (From 2020 August – up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    • 23rd International Conference on Korean Studies, Re-examination Education and Research on Korean Language and Literature in Southeast Asia, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Yangon, Myanmar.
    • The 8th Korean Festival: The International Conference on Korean Language Education in Thailand 2018, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
  • Research Papers

    A Comparative and Contrastive Study of Korean and Myanmar Basic Sentence Pattern, (23rd International Conference on Korean Studies, Re-examination Education and Research on Korean Language and Literature in Southeast Asia, 261-275)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to analyze the similarities and differences between the basic sentence patterns of Korean and Myanmar. In this study, the basic sentence pattern of Korean is divided into 7 patterns according to sentence components referencing Lee Ik-seop (2005). Meanwhile there are 9 patterns in Myanmar with reference to ‘Myanmar Grammar’, published by Myanmar Commission (2005). In Korean, predicates are divided into 3 categories as ‘verbs, adjectives, and copulative verb (이다)’. But in Myanmar, predicates are divided into 3 types as ‘action verb, occurrence verb and state verb’ according to their meanings and 3 categories as ‘single verb, feature verb, and compound verb’ according to their structures. In Myanmar, verbs are divided in detail, so there are a lot of basic sentence forms. Both of Korean and Myanmar are SOV-type languages so there are more similarities than differences in basic sentence patterns.

    Key words: Basic sentence pattern, similarities, differences, sentence components, meaning, structure.

     

    Current Situation and Development Plans for Korean Language Education in Universities of Foreign Languages, Myanmar: Focused on Needs of Myanmar Students in Korea, The 8th Korean Festival: (The International Conference on Korean Language Education in Thailand 2018, 215-223)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to examine the current situation of Korean Language education in Myanmar and to find out the problems and also propose the development plans for Korean Language education in Myanmar. For this, this study conducted a survey to find the difficulties and needs of students who are learning in Korea. According to the results of survey, there are three reasons for problems of Korean Education in Myanmar. The first one is the insufficient of professional teachers in Korean Language Education. The second is the luck of test book which is suitable for Myanmar students and the last is the curriculum problem of Korean Department in University of Foreign Languages. Therefore, this study suggested the development plans for these problems. By complementing these problems, Korean language Education in Myanmar will develop to day.

    Key words: Korean Language Education, Current situation, development plan, needs, survey, insufficient, professional teacher, Curriculum

     

    A Study on Myanmar Korean Language Learners’ Comprehension of Korean Refusal Speech Acts. (11st International Academic Conference, Literature and Language Culture in Northeast Asia”, The Association for Korean Culture Studies, 360-367.)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to examine how Myanmar Korean language learners comprehend Korean refusal speech acts. The subjects of this study were 60 undergraduate students majoring in Korean language at Y University in Myanmar and 30 Korean native speakers. In the process of collecting data for this study, 3 different surveys were conducted: (1) a survey about the probability of situations, (2) a proficiency assessment survey, and (3) a survey evaluating the understanding of refusal speech acts. The collected data was analyzed by using IBM SPSS Statistics 25.0.
    As a result, there were statistically significant differences between all three groups in understanding Korean refusal speech acts. While the Korean native speakers understood the intentions of the speaker in his/her performance of a refusal speech act, Myanmar learners often accepted the speaker’s refusal strategy as plain speech instead of understanding its pragmatic meaning. The study was significant due to its investigation of Myanmar Korean language learners’ comprehension of Korean refusal speech acts, which was a research topic that had never been conducted before in the field of Korean language education. However, it could not analyze the results with various variables and could not provide an effective educational method for Myanmar Korean language learners; therefore, this paper suggests a relevant follow-up study.

    Key words: Korean refusal speech acts, Myanmar Korean language learners, comprehension, refusal strategies, pragmatic meaning, variables.

     

    A Study on the Use of Discourse Markers According to the Level of Burden of Subject in Interview Discourse: focus on Myanmar Korean Learners and Korean Native Speakers. Bilingual Research 81, 209-237
    Abstract
    The purpose of this study is to examine the use of discourse markers to the level of burden of subject in interview discourse, focus on Korean native speakers and Myanmar Korean advanced learners. For this, the study conducted interviews with 15 participants in each group. The subjects of the interview were divided into upper, middle, and lower according to the level of burden of subject, and there is a total of three. A total of 6739 syntactic words were produced by Korean native speakers, and the total number of discourse markers was 752 times, so one discourse marker was used in 8.96 syntactic words. Meanwhile, in the case of learners, a total of 3082 syntactic works were produced, and a total of 722 discourse markers were used, so one discourse markers was used for 4.41 words.
    As a result, Korean native speakers used the most discourse markers when the subject had a burden, but the learners used discourse markers regardless of the level of burden of subject. Korean native speakers used various functional discourse markers depending on the subject of interview, but learners repeatedly used limited discourse markers. Interestingly, when learners couldn’t think of the next content well, or when they took a long time to think, switching to their native language occurred. At that time, learners were using discourse markers in their mother tongue that do not exist in Korean. In many cases, Korean native speakers use two or more discourse markers combined, and this can be said to be a characteristic of Korean native speaker.

    Key words: Interview discourse, Subject, Level of burden, Discourse marker, Switching.

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Current Situation and Development Plans for Korean Studies Education in Myanmar: focusing on Learner Needs Analysis
    • A Study on the Performance and Response of Greeting Speech Act According to Social Variables of Korean Native Speakers and Myanmar Native Speakers

  • Daw Ei Shwe Sin Win

    Lecturer
    Korean Department
    Ph.D(Thesis), MA(Korean Language & Literature, Kyung Hee University)

  • Area of Interests

    Teaching Methodology, Media Education Theory, Social Linguistics, Language Culture

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages), 2005-2008
    • M.A(Q) (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages), 2012-2014
    • M.A (Korean Language & Literature, Kyung Hee University, Korea), 2014-2016
    • Ph.D (Thesis, Kyung Hee University, Korea), 2016-Present
    • Diploma in Global English, (Yangon University), 2009-2011
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages), 2009-2016
    • Assistant Lecturer (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages), 2016-2019
    • Lecturer (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages), 2019-Present
  • Academic Activities

    • Faculty Member of AAMC (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Faculty Member of IQA (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Category Manager in Ecampus (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • HRD Online Classes Developer (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Textbook Developer of DTVET (Department of Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
  • Conference Presentations

    • Current State of Affairs & Prospect of Korean Education in Myanmar University-Abstract
    • Current Issue and Future Plan of Korean Education in YUFL- Abstract
    • A Study on FLIPPED Learning Teaching Model for Korean History & Culture Class- Focusing on the Survey of Korean Learner Needs in Myanmar – Abstract
  • Research Papers

    A Comparative Study on the Symbolic Meanings of Color Terms -Focusing on the Basic Color Lexicons of the Korean and Burmese Language- (Journal of the International Network For Korean Language and Culture, Vol-15, No-3, Pg 161-186)
    Abstract

    This study aims to conduct a comparison of Korean and Burmese language through color lexicons based on symbolic meaning. Moreover, the linguistic and cultural characteristics of Korean and Burmese language are also examined in this study. The word order of Korean and Burmese (subject+ object+ predicate) is similar. In contrast, from the perspective of the lexicon, the Myanmar lexicon is influenced by the native language or Pali whose lexicon mostly used in written language but not in daily life. Consequently, based on the color terms and lexicons of Korean and Myanmar examined in this study their basic meaning, symbolic meaning and form are compared. The lexicons of different languages are considered to have distinct characteristics, and so many expression also have their own specific symbols. In other words, although the created symbolic meanings of a color also have similarity: it has been shown that there are different too. This study compared the basic color lexicons of the two languages. The results of the analysis indicate that the basic meanings of color terms from the two languages are not so different, but the can have different symbolic meanings. Youth is symbolized by blue in Korean language, but in Myanmar language, it is symbolized by the color yellow. The division and meaning of the color terms are explained separately in details in this papers. Furthermore, this study attempts an analysis and supplementation of other learners’ study results, while its practical application is possible in Korean education. Through the similarities and difference in the two languages, in order to address the present limitation of the expression of color terms, this study presents a guidance plan for basic color terms through the investigation of awareness regarding these terms. The results of this study can help learners achieve fluent communication and can also be used as an easier and better education resource. The alignment of the color terms shows the basic meaning, morphologic structure, cognitive linguistic idiomatic expression and lexicon.

    Key Words: color terms, color lexicon, cognitive linguistics, symbolic meaning, comparison

     

    A Contrastive Study of Plural Forms “-deul” in Korean and “tou”, “twei” and “mya” in Myanmar for Improvement of Foreign Language Education (Journal of ‘Han-gul’, Vol-1, No-80, Pg 191-221)
    Abstract

    This study aims on dealing with the grammatical category of the plural form ‘-들(-deul)’ in Korean. Except for dealing with the grammatical category, this study intends to decide what kind of teaching method is more appropriate to foreigner learners. The plural forms of Myanmar are under the influence of English plural forms as much as those of Korean. Therefore, when two languages are taught in a second language, confusion arises. After first revealing this kind of problems and deciding the suitable standard of appearance of ‘-들(-deul)’ by grade, this study is significant from the point of view that ‘-들(-deul)’ is one of the grammatical terms to be taught in textbook. It is necessary to educate foreigner learners to put ‘-들(-deul)’ behind perceivably whether the whole sentence is in plural form, the subject or noun is pluralize and the noun is an abstract noun or not. In the situation of putting ‘-들(-deul)’ behind the adverb or end of a word, I will take the position that specific explanation or education should be done.

    Key Words: plural forms, education plan, abstracted noun, interlanguage, Myanmar language

     

    A Study of Introduction to FLIPPED Learning for Korean History & Culture Class – Focusing on the Survey of Korean Learner Needs in Myanmar – (Studies in South East Asia, Vol-29, No-2, Pg 67-98)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study was to study Myanmar for the purpose of making new attempts at the Korean language education field for learners who were accustomed to the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
    Nowadays learners who are interested in language and have diversified learning paths still move much to use media rather than paper in education. Despite the weakness of environmental factors and infrastructure, overseas study participants first conducted a survey on the premise that new students would accept positively new attempts.
    The survey found that Myanmar learners were accustomed to the media and welcomed new attempts. And remembering the unfamiliar vocabulary in the comprehensive framework of the history and culture of the target language in the learner’s factor was the most obstacle. In addition, the part of the pre-learning part included in the external perception in the concept of flip learning was found to be significant, but the possibility of the application of the flip learning in the actual class appeared to be great. Therefore, for Myanmar Korean learners, it is important to note that the flip-learning teaching method in the “Korean History & Culture Class” will have a positive teaching effect.

    Key Words: flip learning, Korean history and culture, self-efficacy, Interest, learner factors, Myanmar learner

     

    Current Status and Tasks of Korean Language Evaluation at the University of Foreign Languages in Myanmar (The 29th International Conference on Korean Language, No-29, Pg 296-297)
    Abstract
    Language evaluation is a measurement of how to achieve the goal of language learning with communication skills and to effectively use social linguistic expressions. (Lee Wan-ki (2003)) According to his book, especially at overseas education field, non-native Korean teachers have many difficulties measuring language evaluations efficiently. This study started with how to evaluate Korean language skills at overseas education sites in consideration of these problems.
    In this study, we will take the performance evaluation test conducted by the University of Foreign Studies in Myanmar as an example, first look at the prior study and design and review the research method. In Myanmar, performance evaluations are being conducted, with four main criteria of evaluation: function, culture, history, literature, performance evaluation, and several speech performance evaluations such as presentations, interviews, roundtable meetings, discussions and simulations. A total of 16 weeks, the undergraduate program of Korean studies in Myanmar conducts five performance evaluations (four times at the end of the year plus one final) in the form of monthly and final exams (20 percent) and final exams (80 percent) within the regular curriculum. Speaking’s ji-pil test is about the same as in the first grade and in the second year, the multiple-choice question is almost the same as the Korean proficiency test. Talk is divided into lipid (60%) and interview (20%) for evaluation. Two teachers are organized into teams to interview one learner.
    The results of the study suggest that first, the assessment should be made for curriculum assessment, teacher evaluation and learner-tailored assessment. Second, teachers recognized the need for experts in evaluation, so they found it urgent to develop and apply a style, and to score standards. Third, systematic measures for assessment should be prepared and support from the school was insufficient. Finally, learners should be able to evaluate teachers’ lectures and develop lectures. The evaluation method takes a considerable amount of time for teachers to evaluate the answer sheet, and the teacher’s negative response time is large. Interactions between teachers use the method in which multiple teachers evaluate one answer sheet, which is highly reliable among teachers. This study suggests that achievement towards mastery should also be evaluated. Teachers should also develop the ability or an eye to familiarize themselves with concepts or principles in the production and procedure of assessment tools for evaluation purposes and to analyze or understand assessment tools. Based on the results of its review of the Korean language evaluation system in Myanmar, it revealed the problem and proposed educationally efficient measures. In conclusion, the paper wanted to reveal that the achievement evaluation can be systematically analyzed in Korean language education and nurtured in conducting an assessment that is consistent with the curriculum.

    Key words: Performance Evaluation, Assessment Tools, Language Assessment, Teachers and Students, Myanmar students of Korean study, Needs analysis

     

  • Conducting Research

    • A Study on the Interest’s Level of Language Teachers in the Blended Learning-focusing on YUFL & MUFL
    • A Case Study on the Practical Using of Flipped-Learning Model for Korean Linguistic Module of MA(Q) –Based on the Bloom’s Taxonomy
    • A Comparative Study on the Euphemisms in Korean and Myanmar Language-Focusing on request and rejection expression

  • Daw Saw Shin Ngwe

    Lecturer
    MA (Korean Language and Literature, Kyung Hee University)
    Korean Department

  • Area of Interests

    Second Language acquisition
  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean) (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • M.A (Korean) (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • M.A (Korean Language and Literature) (Kyung Hee University, Korea)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor of Korean Department, YUFL (2009-2016)
    • Assistant Lecturer of Korean Department, YUFL (2016-2019)
    • Lecturer of Korean Department, YUFL (2019- up to now)
  • Activity Committee

    —

  • Attendance to Conferences

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  • Research Papers

    An Analysis of Learning Motivation of Korean Learners in Myanmar: Focusing on Korean Certificate Course Learners. (The language and Culture, 2019, Vol. 15, No. 4: 235-262.)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to investigate the learning motivation of Korean learners who are studying in Korean Certificate Course at Yangon University of Foreign Languages. In this study, motivational questionnaire was developed and data were collected through questionnaire survey method. As a result, eight motivational factors: ‘interest in Kpop’, ‘interest in Korean language’, ‘job’, ‘interest in Korean dramas and TV programs’, ‘interest in Korean culture’, ‘travel to Korea’, ‘interest in studying in Korea’, ‘interest in a foreign language’ were found. Among them, ‘interest in Kpop’ was a main motivational factor to learn Korean language. In addition, it can be confirmed that there are differences in learning motivation according to learners’ variables. The results of this study will help to develop various Korean language programs in the future by understanding the various motives of Korean learners in Myanmar. Furthermore, it can be used as a basic data to find a teaching strategy that reflects the motivation of the learners for continuous Korean learning.

     

    A Study on the Acquisition of Korean Negation ‘안’, ‘못’ by Myanmar Learners. (Studies in Foreign Language Education, 2020, Vol.34, No.1, 323-355)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to investigate the acquisition of semantic characteristics of ‘안’, ‘못’ Korean Negation by Myanmar learners. To do this, first, research questions were developed through comparison of Korean negation and Myanmar negation, and then, grammatical judgment test was conducted to measure learners’ judgment on semantic characteristics of ‘안’, ‘못’ negative expressions. As a result of this analysis, learners differed in acquiring ‘안’ negative expressions and ‘못’ negative expressions, and there were different acquisition patterns by learner’s level. This is due to the difference between the mother tongue and the target language, and semantic characteristics of the negative expressions of the target language cannot be properly distinguished. Based on these results, when teaching the ‘안’ and ‘못’ negative expressions, it is necessary to explain them explicitly so that the semantic characteristics of the negative expressions can be well recognized and understood. In this way, learners can see the difference between these two expressions and begin to correct them so that they can move up one level of acquisition. This study identified well-acquired and poorly-acquired negation, which can be used as a basic data for preparing teaching methods for negative expressions in the future.

     

    A Study on the Analysis of Korean Language Learning Strategies According to Variables of Myanmar Korean Learners. (Teaching Korean as a Foreign Language, 2020, Vol.57., 219-250)
    Abstract

    This study aims to analyze the Korean language learning strategies according to the variables of Myanmar learners and provide educational implications that can be applied in the educational field. For this reason, SILL was used to analyze Korean Learning strategy and the findings of this study were analyzed according to learner variables. As a result, it was found that there was a significant differences in the use of learning strategies according to learners’ variables. Female learners were more likely to use strategies than male learners. And then academic purpose learners were more use than general purpose learners and job purpose learners. Furthermore, second year students used strategy the most, and the mid-Korean achievement learner group used strategy most. This study was meaningful in that it was possible to objectively identify the use of strategies by quantifying and specifically identifying the strategies that learners use and how they learn Korean. In addition, this study suggested a method that can be used in the classroom for efficient teaching and learning of Korean Language. Based on these findings, it is expected that a systematic methodology for teaching learning strategies that fit the characteristics of Korean language learners in Myanmar in the future.

     

    The Effectiveness of Teaching Communication Strategies on Speaking Skills for B.A Second Year Korean Specialization Students (Best paper award)
    Abstract
    This paper explores the study of the effectiveness of communication strategies in the academic field, which are taught to B.A Second Year Korean Specialization students with an aim to develop the strategic competence of the students. In this study, the data is collected in order to find out how the strategic competence of the students has improved after training students with the use of communication strategies in the classrooms and it also compares the students’ use of before and after strategies. The data shows that students mostly used ineffective strategies to improve their speaking skills before being trained with communication strategies, however, the use of effective strategies for developing speaking skills is found to be increased after training them with communication strategies in the classrooms. This shows the evidence of strategic competence development of students and also brings the result of positive feedback from the students on the effectiveness of communication skills in developing students’ speaking skills.

     

    Analysis of Learning Motivation of Myanmar Korean Learners. (The Korean Language and Culture Education Society, 2019, Vol.2. 254- 263)
    Abstract
    The study revealed the motivation of Myanmar’s Korean language learners through factor analysis. It will also help develop various Korean language programs in the future by understanding the various motivations of Myanmar’s Korean language learners. It can also be used as a basic resource to find teaching strategies to induce effective Korean language learning, as well as to come up with educational measures that reflect learners’ motivation for continuing to learn Korean.

     

    A Study on the Acquisition of Negative Expressions by Myanmar Learners Focusing on ‘안’, ‘못’ negative expressions. (The Society of Korean Language Education, 2019, Vol.1., 149-159)
    Abstract
    In this study, a grammaticality judgment test was conducted to determine the general learning patterns of the semantic characteristics of ‘안’ and ‘못’ negative expressions and how they learned the semantic characteristics of ‘안’ and ‘못’ negatives by level. According to the analysis, four negatives were found in the order of simple negation > intention negation > external negation > ability negation > ability negation, and the comparison of the correct answer rate of each negation showed that simple negation was the best learned negation for Myanmar’s Korean learners. On the other hand, the correct answer rate was not very high for the remaining negatives. This shows that Myanmar Korean language learners have difficulty learning “intentional negation,” “external negation” and “ability negation.” In addition, learners showed different aspects of learning about the semantic characteristics of negation by level, especially in the case of simple negation, it turned out to be a well-acquired negation every level.

     

    A Study on Syntactic Complexity of Myanmar Korean Learners. (Korea Grammar Education, 2020, Vol. 2. 311-329)
    Abstract
    In this study, the syntactic complexity and the use of related grammar items were examined together. As a result of the analysis, as proficiency improved, it was possible to see a natural phenomenon of expanding sentences using syntactically complex structures such as complex sentences. The learners’ attempts on sentence expansion were confirmed, but on the one hand, there was a phenomenon of making substitution errors in the use of grammar items related to sentence expansion. When looking at the learner’s error, it could be confirmed that learners made an error because they did not recognize the meaning or function of the corresponding grammatical expression well, or they were not able to distinguish the variant of the word. Therefore, it is necessary for the learners to learn the meanings and functions of similar grammar or expressions and use them in context, rather than simply translating the vocabulary, grammar or expressions in the textbook. Finally, in this study, it may seem natural that the syntactic complexity also improves as learners become more proficient, but it is meaningful in that a study on the syntactic complexity was attempted for Myanmar Korean learners who haven’t tried it yet.

     

    A study on syntactic complexity of Myanmar students learning Korean by their academic years. (Studies in Foreign Language Education, 2021, Vol. 35, No.1, 105-129)
    Abstract
    This study collected and analyzed the compositions of Myanmar students learning Korean to determine the development pattern in syntactic complexity depending on their academic years. Syntactic complexity is divided into syntactic complexity from sentence length, syntactic complexity from sentence expansion, and syntactic complexity from types of sentence expansion. Then, syntactic complexity measurement indicators were used for objective measurement, and the usage patterns of grammatical items related to syntactic complexity were also examined. The results showed that, in the comparison of means, the number of morphemes per sentence, ratio of complex sentence, number of clauses per sentence, number of coordinate clauses per sentence, and number of embedded clauses per sentence all increased overall depending on academic years. Moreover, as a result of statistical verification, in most measurements, second year students showed a significant difference with third year or fourth year students, but there was no significant difference between third year and fourth year students. In other words, development of syntactic complexity among Myanmar students learning Korean was clearly revealed only between second year and third year, after which the development of syntactic complexity became more insignificant. For use of grammatical items related to syntactic complexity, by the time the learners reached fourth year, they produced grammatical items they could not use before. This proves the learners’ attempt in sentence expansion, but on the other hand, they also showed replacement errors in use of grammatical items related to sentence expansion. The results of this study will be the basic data that for efficient teaching and learning of the Korean language for Myanmar learners.

     

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Daw Wai Nu San

    Associate Professor
    Korean Department
    BA (Geography, Yangon University), MA (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

  • Area of Interests

    Morphology

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Geography, Yangon University)
    • M.A (Korean, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Diploma in Korean (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Diploma in Global English (Yangon University)
    • Post Graduate Diploma in Computer Application (Yangon University)
    • Post Graduate Diploma in Myanmar History and Culture (Yangon University)
    • Diploma in Business Law (Yangon University)
    • Training and Development Program for Korean Language and Culture Experts (Hallym University, 2018)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor – Yangon University of Foreign Languages- From 24.3.2003 to 9.1.2012
    • Assistant Lecturer – Yangon University of Foreign Languages 10.1.2012-1.5.2016
    • Lecturer – Yangon University of Foreign Languages- From 2-5-2016 to 1-12-2019
    • Associate Professor – Yangon University of Foreign Languages- From 2-12-2019 -up to now
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    A Comparative Study of Myanmar Proverbs and Korean Proverbs (Focus on Animals), URJ (Vol 7, No 6, 2015 February)
    Abstract

    Proverbs are greatly concerned with most of us and they take part of the important role in our daily routines. This research aims at revealing similarities and differences of the proverbs of Korean and Myanmar languages that have been studied through the ones which has got metaphors with animals. The study also focuses on the common proverbs based on 218 proverbs that have got metaphors concerned with animals extracted from the books of Myanmar Proverbs and 326 Korean proverbs greatly related to the ones including metaphor of animals. The findings of the study proves that 20% of the proverbs are similar to each other in terms of meaning and the use of metaphors while 80% of the proverbs are metaphorically different regardless of similar meaning.

     

    မြန်မာနှင့် ကိုရီးယားစကာရှိ လူ့အသုံးအဆောင်ပစ္စည်းဆိုင်ရာ စကားထာအချို့ကို လေ့လာခြင်း (YUFL Research Journal, Vol 9, No 1, 2018 December)
    Abstract

    စကားထာများသည် လူမျိုးတစ်မျိုး၏ လူနေမှုဘဝနှင့် ဆက်စပ်မှုရှိပြီ၊ လူမျိုးတစ်မျိုး၏ ယဉ်ကျေးမှု အဆင့်အတန်းနှင့် လူနေမှုစနစ်တို့ကို သိရှိနိုင်ပေသည်။ မြန်မာနိုင်ငံနှင့် ကိုရီးယားနိုင်ငံတို့တွင် ရှေးယခင် ခေတ်အဆက်ဆက်မှ ယနေ့ထိတိုင်အောင် စကားထာဝှက်သည့် အလေ့အထကို ကျင့်သုံးခဲ့ကြပေသည်။ ထိုစကားထာများမှာ အဖြေတူညီကြသော်လည်း စကားထာဝှက်သည့် အတွေးအခေါ်မှာ ခြားနား ပေသည်။ ထိုစကားထာများမှ မြန်မာနှင့် ကိုရီးယားဘာသာစကားရှိ လူ့အသုံးအဆောင်ပစ္စည်းဆိုင်ရာ စကားထာအချို့ကို ရွေးချယ်ကာ ကိုရီးယားဘာသာစကားကို လေ့လာသင်ယူနေကြသော ကျောင်းသား၊ ကျောင်းသူများနှင့် မြန်မာဘာသာစကားကို လေ့လာသင်ယူနေကြသည့် ကျောင်းသား၊ ကျောင်းသူများ သိရှိနိုင်စေရန်အတွက် ရည်ရွယ်ပြီး လေ့လာတင်ပြထားပါသည်။

     

    A Comparative Study of Riddles by Some Ethnic Groups in Myanmar and Korea (MUFL, Research Journal, Vol 10, No 1, 2019 July)
    Abstract

    As Riddles are related to the life style of a national race, its cultural standard and social system can be seen through the riddles. Through the long history and until now, Myanmar national races and Koreans have been practicing the habit of posing riddles. This paper is the comparative study of riddles with the same answer and their meanings by some ethnic groups of Myanmar and Koreans. In this research, the meanings of each riddle from the two countries are learned thoroughly through their similarities and differences. This study can make the readers see the similarities and differences on their thoughts and opinions from Koreans. Moreover, the basic characters, life styles and cultures can casually be observed through their traditional riddles.

  • Conducting Research

    —

Daw Khine Thu Thu Tun

Lecturer

Writing

Daw Ei Ei Mar

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Culture, Business Japanese

Daw Wah Wah Shein

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Culture, Japanese Grammar

U Kyaw Tun Naing

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Literature

Daw Khine Khine Zin

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Culture, Teaching Methodology

Daw Soe Khin Khin

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Second Language Acquisition & Teaching Methodology

  • Dr. Win Win Nwe

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A(Hons;). 1997, University of Yangon
    • M.A, 2000, University of Yangon
    • Title, The Old Irrigation system of kyaukse district, Konboung period
    • Ph.D, 2007, University of Yangon
    • Title, The History of Transportation in Yangon (1948-1958)
  • Working Experience

    • University of Pyay (28-1-2002 – 31-8-2002)
    • University of Yangon (1-9-2002 – 4-12-2012)
    • Pathein University (2012 – 2014)
    • Dagon University (2014 – 2021)
    • Dawei University (4-2-2021 – 16-9-2022)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages (19-9-2022 – present)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    • Win Win Nwe, Dr.Lecturer, “The Outstanding Famous Persons of Ayeyarwady Division, Monywa University Reserarch Journal Vol.II, October 2019.
    • Win Win Nwe, Dr.Ap, “Tradition and Customs of Mon National Race” Dawei University Research Journal Vol.13, July 2022.
  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Research Fields

    Social and Economy, Cultural History.

  • Dr Khin Mar Swe

    Professor
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Hons) Myanmar (1993) – University of Mandalay
    • M.A Myanmar (1997) – University of Yangon
    • Ph.D Myanmar (2006) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    မိမိပါဝင်ဆောင်ရွက်ဆဲ၊ဆောင်ရွက်ခဲ့သောပညာရပ်ဆိုင်ရာ ကော်မတီများ အဖွဲ့အစည်းများ၊လှုပ်ရှားမှုများ

    • Visiting professor at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China (2020-2021)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages Kahtein Implementation Committee (Chair) (2021)
    • Yangon University (Developing a Myanmar language curriculum for basic education level) (2018-2019)
    • Yangon University Buddhist Association (Member) (2017)
    • Maubin University Buddhist Association (Member) (2015)
    • University Magazine Committee (Bago University, Maubin University, Yangon University)

    မိမိပါဝင်ရေးသားပြုစုခဲ့သော ပညာရပ်ဆိုင်ရာ၊သင်ကြားရေးဆိုင်ရာ သင်ရိုးစာအုပ်များ သို့မဟုတ်စီမံချက်များ

    • Myanmar Essay for University Entrance Exam (Dagon University) (2003)
    • Myanmar Writing & Reading for Foreign Students (Maharsarakham University, Thailand) (2018)
    • Myanmarsar Journal for Grade 11(Yangon University) (2019)
  • Conference Presentations

    • Current State of Affairs & Prospect of Korean Education in Myanmar University-Abstract
    • Current Issue and Future Plan of Korean Education in YUFL- Abstract
    • A Study on FLIPPED Learning Teaching Model for Korean History & Culture Class- Focusing on the Survey of Korean Learner Needs in Myanmar – Abstract
  • Research Papers

    Some Features of Adverbial in Myanmar Language (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science, Vol IX ( pg 59-75) Jun 2011)
    Abstract

    This paper presents the nature of adverbs while analyzing some pure adverbs. Adverbs are grammatical words systematically made and these are composed of separate structure and precise function within a sentence. In Myanmar language, there are adverbs taken out of noun-verb, and there are also pure adverbs take out of noun-verb with indistinct features. Those pure adverbs with indistinct features are presented in comparison with Myanmar dialects. The information in this paper may provide readers with the nature of adverbs while helping them to classify Myanmar grammatical words.

     

    The Role of Preposition in Myanmar Language (Maubin University Research Journal,2015, Vol 7, pg1-10)
    Abstract

    This paper presents the nature of preposition in Myanmar language. It’s main focus of study is in grammatical linguistics. That’s why this paper provides the readers with glossaries of preposition and their functions within a sentence. It also makes sure to consist distinct key points to identify prepositions. Readers may learn prepositions that match with these key points in various classifications.

     

    The Problem of Real Adjective in Myanmar Language (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science Vol XVII, pg 193-212) Jun 2019)
    Abstract

    This paper argues on whether there are pure adjectives or not from a linguistics point of view. Among the academics studying Myanmar language, some believe there is no pure adjectives while other believe one way around. This became an argument while setting the number of part of speech in Myanmar language. This paper focuses on presenting possible answers regarding the case. In the first part of this paper, readers may find information about the problems of pure adjectives from the part of speech while presenting criteria of adjectives and argues whether or not there are pure adjectives on the second part. By solving the argument, a nature of Myanmar language may be presented.

     

    The Important of Particles in Myanmar Language (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science Vol XVIII, pg 767-780) August 2020)
    Abstract
    This paper presents the importance of particles in Myanmar language. In classification of part of speech, it is defined by some linguistics professions only to consist nouns, verbs, particles. There are also some papers focused on the complexity and delicacy of particles in Myanmar language. This paper will present the opinions of linguistics professional about particles, the components of particles and the various types of particles. The importance of particles will be presented from various point of view.

     

  • Conducting Research

    • The connection between the Burmese inscription of the Bagan period with the Pyu & Mon scripts.
    • Preparing research paper for YUFL 60 minutes Talks (2021)
    • Preparing research (Teaching Methodology for Myanmar Language to Foreigners)
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Course

  • Daw Khaing Su Ye Nyunt

  • Position

    Lecturer

    Department of French, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

  • Academic Background

    • 2009 _ 2012 BA (French), YUFL
    • 2012 _ 2013 Diploma in English, YUFL
    • 2019 (January) MA (French), YUFL
  • Working Experience

  • Academic Activities

    • 2.2015 _ 1.3.2019 Tutor at Department of French, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (YUFL)
    • 3.2019 _ 1.12.2021 Assistant lecturer at Department of French, YUFL
    • 12.2021_ Present. Lecturer at Department of French, YUFL
  • Research Title and Publication

    (1) 2020 A Study of Teaching Speaking Skills to French Languages Learners (at Intermediate Level) from Yangon University of Foreign Languages, University Research Journal. Vol.11, No (1): Pgs: 80-91.

    (2) 2020 LA PRATIQUE D’ESPIONNAGE DE LA BIRMANIE À L’ÉPOQUE DU ROI MINN DONE, L’Art de l’Espionnage: de la réalité à la fiction DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, Romania. NR 6, 2020, Pgs: 25-31

    (1). A study of Teaching Speaking Skills to French Language Learners (at Intermediate Level) from Yangon University of Foreign Languages (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, Vol.11, No.1)

    Abstract: This research analyses the techniques used by the teachers in teaching Speaking Skills to French Specialization students at an intermediate Level from YUFL and it also observes the weakness and the difficulties encountered by the students in learning communicative skills. The study aims to discover the best ways to help students to enhance in speaking. To collect the data on the techniques used by the teachers, a questionnaire composed of 20 questions was given to them. In addition, to find out the students’ needs and the difficulties in speaking skills, an experiment was also carried out. In this matter, oral pre-test and post-test were conducted with the students of Third Year French Specialization at YUFL. All the data collected were analyzed by using quantitative and qualitative methods. As the result, we found out that the teachers use the sheer quantity of different methods and approaches in teaching Speaking Skills to the students. And lack of vocabulary, expression, grammar knowledge and mixed pronunciation between French and English are the problems mostly encountered by the students. In addition, they (most of the Myanmar students) feel shy and nervous to carry out a public presentation even though they do it in front of their closed classmates. But after performing the oral pre-test and post-test, we discovered a significant improvement in their speaking skills.

     

    (2). LA PRATIQUE D’ESPIONNAGE DE LA BIRMANIE À L’ÉPOQUE DU ROI MINN DONE, L’Art de l’Espionnage: de la réalité à la fiction DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, Romania. NR 6, 2020, Pgs: 25-31

    Abstract: Le Roi Minn Done est un roi de la dynastie Kong Baung. Il était un roi absolument remarquable ayant réalisé tant de nouveaux projets pour le développement de son pays, la Birmanie. D’après les recherches historiques, on dit qu’il s’est marié avec une cinquantaine de femmes. Parmi ces femmes, la reine Taung Shwe Yay a accouché deux princes Myin Kon et Myinn Khone Tine. Même si le Roi Minn Done avait une vingtaine de fils, il a couronné son petit frère, le Prince Ka Naung comme le Dauphin. Là, une énorme jalousie est née surtout chez les deux princes Myin Kon et Myinn Khone Tine contre le Prince Ka Naung. Cette jalousie les a conduits à manifester et assassiner le Roi et le Dauphin avec l’aide d’un écrivain connu Salay U Ponnya. Malheureusement, manque d’une bonne pratique d’espionnage, le Roi et le Dauphin ne connaissaient rien concernant la manifestation en avance. Donc, le jour de la manifestation, le 2 août 1866, le Dauphin a été assassiné. Par contre, heureusement, le Roi n’avait aucune blessure. Après l’assassinat de son petit frère (le Dauphin Ka Naung), le Roi a commencé à pratiquer l’espionnage avec tant d’effort afin de se protéger ainsi que son pays.

    Mots clés: la dynastie Kong Baung, le Roi Minn Done, le Dauphin Ka Naung, les princes Myin Kon et Myinn Khone Tine, Salay U Ponnya, manifestation, assassinat, espionnage

  • Publishing Books

  • Area of Interests

    • Language teaching,
    • Stylistics,
    • Literature
  • Conferences

    • Member of YUFL Institutional Assessment and Quality Assurance Committee
  • Email

    [email protected], [email protected]

  • Conducting Research

    (1) Les endroits historiques et remarquables du royaume Pada. DOC.EU, REVISTA CU PROFIL ACADEMIC, Romania.

  • Dr Tin Myo Thwe

  • Position

    Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    PhD ( International Relations) from Yangon University

  • Area of Interests

    Political and Social Issues

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Academic Committees

    • Senate Committee on International Relations

    Current Academic Activities

    • Preparing Lecture
    • Drawing Course Guide and Lesson Plan
    • Undertaking for curriculum Development
    • Doing Ground Check in the Campus
    • Myanmar’s Cooperation with BIMST on Narcotic Drugs Programmes: Rehabilitation Sector
  • Book Publication

    Research papers in the field of international Relations

    • Ethnic Issues in Asia: Sri Lanka and Thailand, MAAS Journal, June 2010.
    • Myanmar’s Cooperation with ASEAN on Narcotic Drugs Control Programme since 1988, EYU Research Journal, 2011.
    • Myanmar’s Effort to Eradicate Drugs Abuse among Youths Since 1988, Journal of MAAS.
    • Bilateral Trade between India and Myanmar: Current Situation and Prospect, Asia Research Journal.
    • Myanmar Political Development that effects on United States’ Attitudes since 2010, Dagon University Research Journal
  • Teaching Courses:

    • IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
    • DIR III: Diplomacy
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Abstract for Research papers as follows:

    Bilateral Trade between India and Myanmar: Current Situation and Prospect
    Abstract

    Myanmar serves as the gateway to India’s “Look East policy. India is striving all out to strengthen its relationship with Myanmar to achieve its stated objective of economic development. The current Indian government has infused a new momentum to keep its contacts with Myanmar. As a result, Indo-Myanmar relationship is witnessing an unprecedented upswing in the recent years. The scope of this paper is to focus on an overview of the Indo-Myanmar trade relationship, then to look at the normal trade and border trade and to discuss suggestions for development of trade between the two countries. In this paper, facts and figures about the two- way trade of these countries are analyzed to examine the situation of Indo-Myanmar trade relations. It is found thatIndo-Myanmar trade relations is mutually important for their national development although trade volume between the two countries is still diminutive in comparison with volume of trade between Myanmar and China and there are some problems and obstacles in trading between the two countries. The future global growth leaders would be the Asian Triangle of China, India, and the ASEAN and the industrial clusters that would be formed in this triangle. As Myanmar is geographically well-situated in this triangle, it is an opportunity for Myanmar to achieve its national goals. By drawing up a systematic and synergetic policy, the two countries can identity their strengths and requirements and then work towards mutual benefit.

     

    Ethnic Issues in Asia: Sri Lanka and Thailand
    Abstract

    Some one billion people in its worldwide belong to minority groups, many of whom are subject to discrimination and exclusion, and more often the victims of violence. Some Asian countries are also facing with the ethnic problems between major ethnic groups. In Sri Lanka, there are wo major ethnic groups like Sinhalese and Tamils. The Sinhalese as major group increased their domination of the island’s political and economic life without constitutional safeguards of minority groups’ rights for Tamils. The Tamils were diminished in all areas of ethnic competition. Likewise, in Thailand, the Malay-Muslim majority provinces in southern Thailand Norathiwat, Yala and Pattani, to a lesser extent, Sultan have a long history of tense relations with the Thai Buddhist state. The southern region was once the center of Islamic scholarship in South East Asia. and Malay Sultanates. So, Thai central government had inspired into these three states under his control as one united Thai state through the solely unit of historical, cultural, political and economic system. it paved the way for separatist among a minority of Muslims. For these purposes, ethnic tensions are occurring between government concerned and minority ethnic groups in these two countries. This paper aims to analyze the root causes of these ethnic tensions and effective control of governments.

     

    Myanmar’s Cooperation with ASEAN on Narcotic Drugs Control Programmes Since 1988
    Abstract

    The problem of narcotic drugs is an evil legacy of the colonialists not only harming the nation’s dignity and social norms, but also threatening the entire mankind of the world. The Successive Myanmar governments have doing their utmost to eliminate this drug menace while carrying out development programmes at a good pace in these areas where drugs are produced. Myanmar is in pursuit of the 15- Year Narcotic Drugs Elimination Plan (199- 2014) with the target of freeing from narcotic drugs by 2014 in it. Under the plan, Myanmar is encouraging cultivating of poppy- substitute croups apart from the supply elimination, reduction, reduction of demand and law enforcement. Myanmar could declare as the drug free zones in the areas such as Mongla Special Region (4), Shan State East, Kokang Special Region (1), Shan State North, and Wa Special Region (2). For these purpose Myanmar has been cooperating with ASEAN on narcotic drugs control programmes. Myanmar delegations attend the ASEAN Senior Officials Meetings on narcotic drugs matters every year. At the same time, Myanmar has been cooperating with ASEAN’s ten projects on drug abuse control. So ASEAN decided to designate the year 2015 for a “Drug Free ASEAN” instead of the year 2020. This paper is aimed to analyze to the effective cooperation of Myanmar and ASEAN on narcotic drugs control.

     

    Myanmar’s Effort to Eradicate Drugs Abuse among Youths since 1988
    Abstract

    A common challenge of today, illicit drug is increasingly threatening human society in the world. The dangerous of narcotic drugs can ruin to the prestige and human resources of a country. The most sophisticated drug like Amphetamine is widely spread and abused especially among youths and under -privileged communities. As the youths are of an inquisitive nature, it not only leads them to become victims of narcotic drugs but also devour the youths. So, Myanmar addressed these issues of drug abuse among marginalized youths in region by conducting a policy as well as an action oriented projects by cooperating with Governmental Organizations (GOs), (NGOs) and International Non- Non-Governmental Organizations Governmental Organizations (INGOs). This paper aims to examine the success of Myanmar’s effort to eradicate the drug abuse among youths.

     

    Myanmar Political Development that effects on United States’ Attitudes since 2010
    Abstract

    The political sphere is undergoing changes and development in Myanmar. The Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP) government called semi- democratic government came to power in March 2011 after 2010 general election. Under USDP government, many reforms and changes were made in Myanmar political development. President U Thein Sein could shake hands with opposition leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi to enter Myanmar political atmosphere and then re-registered as a political party ahead of the by-election. USDP government could start to sign the draft Nation-wide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) there the 70 years long term insurgencies rooted in Myanmar. After 2015 general election, USDP transferred to power to winning National League for Democracy (NLD) government peacefully. NLD government was welcomed by many countries in the international communities’ including the United States. Union Peace Conference called 21st century Ponglong conference could hold by NLD government for national reconciliation and building federal union in Myanmar as good minestrone in Myanmar political development. Nevertheless, both governments remain to settle the Rakhine state issue and national reconciliation for union peace process in Myanmar political development. For that reason, the author would like to analyze the two questions in this research paper. These are how do United States’ attitude look upon Myanmar political development and what are the assumptions of the Executive the (State department and president) and the legislative branch (Congress) on Political development of Myanmar.

  • Biography

    Dr. Tun Tun Khaing

    Professor

    Department of Geography

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Email: [email protected]

    Phone: 09 794939265

  • Area of Interests

  • Education

    B.A (Q), 1986 – Magway Degree Collage

    M.A, 1996 – Mandalay University

    Title: – “Regional Geography of Pakokku Township”

    PhD, 2013 – University of Yangon

    Title: – “Morphometric Analysis of the Yaw Drainage Basin”

     

    Institutions I have serviced

    Pyay University – 1998-2003 (Tutor)

    Dagon University – 2003-2005 (Tutor)

    Nationalities Youth Resource Development Degree Collage – 2005-2006 (Tutor)

    Dagon University – 2006-2010 (Assistant Lecturer)

    Dawei University – 2010-2012 (Lecturer)

    East Yangon University – 2012-2015 (Lecturer)

    Myeik University – 2015-2018 (Associate Professor)

    Taungoo University – 2018-2019 (Associate Professor)

    West Yangon University – December, 2019- September, 2021 (Associate Professor)

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages – 3 September, 2021- Present (Professor)

  • Research Title and Publication

    Tun Tun Khaing, Associate Professor

    Title: “Morphometric Analysis of  Myintkyibauk Stream within Taungoo Township Using Geo-spatial Technology” Taungoo University  Research Journal 2019, Vol-10, No.1.

     

    M.A Thesis Supervision

    Hsu Thet Paing Htwe (2. Mahar-Pa-1) “Drainage Basin Morphometry of the Little Tanintharyi River” March, 2017, Myeik University

     

    Research Field

    River Morphology, Transportation Network Analysis, and Spatial Distribution Analysis

     

    Committee I have included

    Upgrading YUFL 2025 Research Committee

  • Biography

    Dr Yee Yee Cho

    Professor

    Department of Geography

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Email: [email protected]

    Phone: 09 978988272

  • Area of Interests

  • Education

    B.A (Hons),1993,University of Mandalay

    M.A, 2000, University of Mandalay

    Title , Intra -urban Passenger Transportation of Mandalay City

    Ph.D, 2018, University of Mandalay

    Title, Soil Physical Properties and Cropping Patterns of Taungdwingyi Township

     

    Institutions I have serviced

    Pyay Degree College (1998-2001)

    Dagon University (2001-2002)

    Nationalities Youth Resource Development Degree College Yangon(2002-2005)
    Dagon University (2005-2010)
    Sittway University (2010-2011)
    Pakokku University (2011-2013)
    University of Mandalay (2013-2014)
    Pakokku University (2014-2015)
    University of Magway (2015-2018)
    Pyay University(2018-2021)
    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (September2021-Present)

  • Research Title and Publication

    Soil Physical Properties and Paddy Cultivation in Taungdwingyi Township, Magway Region (Myanmar)
    Geo-eye International Journal, India, vol6, No1, June 2017
    A Geographical Study on Agricultural Land Used in Taungdwingyi Township
    Pyay University Research Journal, vol 10, No1, December

     

    MA Thesis Supervision
    Kyaw Min Htay(2MA-Geog-19)A Geographical Study on Crop Patterns of Taungdwingyi Township (May.2017)
    Hla Myo Aung(2MA-Geog-7)A Geographical Study of Paddy Cultivation in Pwintphyu Township(November.2018)
    Htet Htet San(2MA Geog-2)An Integrated Study on Paddy Cultivation in Aunglan Township(February.2021)

     

    Research Fields
    Human and Agricultural Geography

  • Biography

    Daw Khin Saw Myint

    Associate Professor

    Department of Geography

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Email: [email protected]

    Phone: 095057742

  • Area of Interests

  • Education

    B.A (Hons), 1996, University of Yangon

    M.A 2000, University of Yangon

    Title, Urban Landuse of Padamya Myothit

     

    Institutions I have serviced

    West Yangon University (2002-2010)

    Myeik University (2010-2011)

    West Yangon University (2011-2018)

    Myeik University (2018-2019)

    West Yangon University (2019-2021)

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (October 2021-present)

  • Research Title and Publication

  • Biography

    Daw Muyar Phyu Phyu Win

    Associate Professor

    Department of Geography

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Email: [email protected]

    Phone: 09686837648

  • Area of Interests

  • Education

    B.A (Hons:) 1994, University of Yangon

    M.A, 1998, University of Yangon

    Title, Geographical Study of the Traditional Medicinal Plants

     

    Institutions I have serviced

    Kyee Myin Tai, Colleague, Yangon (1997-2000)

    East Yangon University (2000-2003)

    Sittwe University (2003-2004)

    Taungoo University (2004-2008)

    East Yangon University (2008-2014)

    Taungoo University (2014-2019)

    Dagon University (2019-2021)

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (October 2021-present)

  • Research Title and Publication

    MA Thesis Supervision
    Suilen Tial (2.Mahar G-7) A Geographical Study of Socio-economic Conditions in Hakha Town, Chin State. (February-2021).

  • Biography

    Name: Daw Yu Yu Khaing
    Position: Lecturer
    Phone: 09265591425

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    • B.A (Hons),2009,DangonUniversity
    • M.A, 2012, Dangon University
    • Title, Relationship between Pupils and Teachers
  • Working Experiences

    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages (February2015-Present)
  • Conferences, Publications and Research Programme

    —

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Biography

    Name: Dr. Chaw Rupar
    Female

  • Email

    [email protected], [email protected]

  • Education

    • B.A (Hons.), Oriental Studies, Dagon University, 2004
    • M.A, Oriental Studies, Yangon University, 2006
    • PhD, Oriental Studies, Yangon University, 2011
  • Working Experiences

    • Tutor (2005-2010), Department of Oriental Studies, East Yangon University
    • Tutor (2010-2011), Department of Oriental Studies, Dawei University
    • Tutor (2011-2013), Department of Oriental Studies, Yangon University
    • Assistant Lecturer (2013-2016), Department of Oriental Studies, Yangon University
    • Lecturer (2016-2018), Department of Oriental Studies, Yangon University
    • Lecturer (2018-2019), Department of Oriental Studies, Dawei University
    • Associate Professor (2019-2021), Department of Oriental Studies, East Yangon University
    • Professor (2021-Today), Department of Oriental Studies, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Conferences, Publications and Research Programme

    Conferences

    • Extending the Knowledge of Research Design for Social Science (SEAMO CHAT)(2013)
    • Upgrading Teaching Methodology and Workshop in Oriental Studies at Yangon University (2014)
    • The First International Conference on Awakening Words Translated: The Pāḷi Tipiṭaka Translation in Myanmar & Beyond (2016)
    • YU Curriculum Review Workshop Preponed for the Planned Facilities of Art (Humanities), Social Sciences & Law (2018)
    • The Centenary Celebrations of YU International Conference on Remembering the Past & Ways forward: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Pāḷi, Abhidhamma, and Buddhist Studies (2020)

     

    The Study of the Impact of the Monastic Schools in Thanlyin Township, East Yangon University Research Journal, Vol.II, No.I , (2010-2011)
    Abstract

    The Monastic Schools Thanlyin Township have co-operated with the local authorities and populace in the endeavors for ethical awareness, improvement in education and general knowledge with the view to the preservation of environment and nature resources from deterioration in Thanlyin Township where the East Yangon University situated. This paper is study in such endeavors. There exit seven monastic schools in Thanlyin Township. This paper will present have these schools have contributed in inculcating good, civilized behaviors and improving the knowledge of the youths by evaluating the strong and weak points of these schools.

     

    Impact of the Mahāsamaya discourses on the peaceful coexistence in our society, Yangon University Research Journal, Vol.5, No.1, 2013, December
    Abstract

    The Mahāsamaya Sutta is the seven Sutta of the Mahāvagga, Dīgha Nikāya. The Buddha expounded the Sutta on the Full-Moon day of Jeṭṭhamāsa to the celestial beings. The Buddha gave them the six discourses after the Mahāsamaya Sutta. He divided them into six Caritas with their inclination. The Mahāsamaya Sutta alone is not only called the Mahāsamaya Sutta, but it includes the six Suttas following to the Mahāsamaya Sutta, altogether these seven Suttas are called the Mahāsamaya Suttas. These Suttas are special importance for the personal, national and international interest, educates as not to discriminate the class of the people. These Suttas are special important as they impact on the peaceful coexistence in our society from all aspects. And they are the practices for the final goal.

     

    ရှု့မြင်သူရင်အေးထားဝယ်မြို့မယဉ်ငေး, Research Papers in Commemoration of the Foundation Day of Dawei University (2019)
    Abstract

    ထားဝယ်မြို့သည် ထင်ရှားသောရှေးဟောင်းစေတိပုထိုးများ၊ သာသနိက အဆောက်အအုံများ၊ ဘုန်းတော်ကြီးကျောင်းများစွာဖြင့် ဗုဒ္ဓသာသနာထွန်းကားရာ ဒေသတစ်ခုဖြစ်ပါသည်။ ထားဝယ်မြို့တွင်ရှိသောာ ဘုန်းတော်ကြီးကျောင်းများ အနက်မှ ထားဝယ်မြို့၏ကျက်သရေဆောင်ဖြစ်သော မြို့မယဉ်ငေးသာသနာ့ရိပ်သာ အကြောင်းကို လေ့လာတင်ပြသွားမည်ဖြစ်ပါသည်။ ဤစာတမ်းတွင် ယဉ်ငေးဟု ခေါ်တွင်ရခြင်းအကြောင်း၊ မူလယဉ်ငေးဆရာတော် အဂ္ဂမဟာကမ္မဋ္ဌာနစရိယ ဘဒ္ဒန္တ ဣန္ဒြိယ၏ သာသနာပြုလုပ်ငန်းများ၊ မြို့မယဉ်ငေး မဟာစည်သာသနာ့ရိပ်သာ ပဓာနနာယက ဆရာတော်ဘဒ္ဒန္တဣန္ဒဉာဏလက်ထက် သာသနာရေးဆောင်ရွက် ချက်များကို လေ့လာတင်ပြသွားမည်ဖြစ်ပါသည်။ ထိုသာသနာပြုလုပ်ငန်းများ လုပ်ဆောင်ရသောရည်ရွယ်ချက်၊ ထိုသို့ လုပ်ဆောင်ခြင်းဖြင့်ရရှိလာသော အကျိုး ကျေးဇူးများကိုလည်း လေ့လာတင်ပြသွားပါမည်။ ယခု မြို့မယဉ်ငေး မဟာစည် သာသနာ့ရိပ်သာ၌ ဖွင့်လှစ်နေသော ဗုဒ္ဓယဉ်ကျေးမှုအခြေပြုသင်တန်း၊ ဘုန်းတော် ကြီးသင်ပညာရေးကျောင်း၊ ဓမ္မစကူး(လ်)ကျောင်းတော်၊ ဗုဒ္ဓကောလိပ်ဖွင့်လှစ်ခြင်း နှင့် ထိုသင်တန်းများဖွင့်လှစ်ခြင်းသည် ထားဝယ်ဒေသကို အကျိုးပြုမှုများစွာရှိ ကြောင်းကို ပြည့်စုံစွာ လေ့လာတင်ပြထားပါသည်။

     

    Analysis of the View towards the Thought-Conception (Vitakka Carita), Dawei University Research Journal, Vol.II, No.1, December, 2019
    Abstract

    Carita signifies the intrinsic nature of a person which is revealed when one is in normal state without being preoccupied with anything. The temperaments of people differ owing to the diversity of their actions or kamma. Habitual actions tend to form particular temperament. The Cūḷabyūha Sutta is taught in accordance with the inclination towards thought-conception (vitakka carita). The Cūḷabyūha Sutta belongs to the Aṭṭhakavagga of the Suttanipāta. The Buddha expounded the Sutta on the full-moon day of Jeṭṭhamāsa to the celestial beings. The Cūḷabyūha Sutta is on a description of disputing philosophers. The Buddha gave this discourse after the Mahāsamaya Sutta. He divided them into six Caritas with their inclination. This Sutta consists of seventeen verses. The Cūḷabyūha Sutta explains to abandon vitakka. Because of conceptual thought, the philosophers resolute their views as truth, they consider others to be fools. There is only one truth. If one wants to have Path and Fruition, he has to abandon wrong views. According to this Sutta, the one of thought-conception should have to discard the wrong views and to make effort to understand the real truth. A Recitation of this Sutta is beneficial but the most important is to be practised according to one’s temperament (carita) individually. The Cūḷabyūha Sutta is not only for recitation but also worthy to practise as they lead the one to the highest bliss, Nibbāna.

  • Area of Interests

  • Conducting Research

  • Biography

    Name: Dr. Myat Myat Htun
    Gender: Female
    Birth of Date : 2-7-1973
    Nationality: Myanmar
    Religion: Buddhist

  • Email

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

  • Education

    B.A (Hons.) Oriental Studies, Yangon University, 1998
    M.A (Credit) Oriental Studies, Yangon University, 2001
    M. Res (Oriental Studies) Yangon University, 2002
    Ph. D (Oriental Studies) Yangon University, 2007
  • Working Experiences

    Tutor (2002-2005) Department of Oriental Studies, East Yangon University
    Tutor (2005-2007) Department of Oriental Studies, Myeik University
    Assistant Lecturer (2007-2013) Faculty of Foreign Language and Translation,
    International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University
    Lecturer (2013-2018) Faculty of Foreign Language and Translation,
    International Theravada Buddhist Missionary University
    Lecturer (2018) Academic Department,
    National University of Arts and Culture, Mandalay
    Lecturer (2018-2019) Department of Oriental Studies,
    Mawlamyaing University
    Assistant Professor (2019-2020) Department of Oriental Studies,
    Yangon University
    Professor and Head (2020-2021) Department of Oriental Studies,
    Taunggoke University
    Professor and Head (2021- ) Department of Oriental Studies,
    Yangon University Foreign Languages

  • Conferences, Publications and Research Programme

    1. “ထေရဝါဒဗုဒ္ဓသာသနာမော်ကွန်းဝင်ဆဋ္ဌသင်္ဂါယနာဓမ္မသဘင်” Theravāda Buddhasāsana-mo-gun-win-chaṭṭha-saṁgāyanā-dhamma-dha-bin”, Yangon, Myanmar, 2007 (Book)
    2. “မြန်မာနိုင်ငံရှိ ပါဠိအဘိဓာန်ကျမ်းများလေ့လာချက်” Presented to the Seminar on upgrading Pāḷi Language in Ministry of Religious Affairs, Myanmar, 2008. (Book)
    3. “Chaṭṭha Saṁgāyanā, The Sixth Buddhist Council in Myanmar” Presented to the Seminar on the 2nd International Association of Theravāda Buddhist Universities Conference, Myanmar, 2009. (Book)
    4. “Undiscovered Pāḷi Text in Myanmar” Presented to the Seminar on the 2nd International Buddhist Research Conference, Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, Thailand, 2010.

    Abstract

    Mastery of Pāḷi language is absolutely essential for understanding of Theravāda Buddhism. In Myanmar, since the introduction of Theravāda Buddhism in P€11th century generation of Pāḷi scholars especially learned monks have composed various works in Pāḷi However, many of them are not known to the scholars outside the country.The present attempts to introduce four major Pāḷi works by Myanmar Pāḷi scholars. Therīpadānadipanī, a commentary on the Therīpadāna, by Ven. Dr.Kumarābhivaṁsa (1928-     ), fills one of the gaps in Pāḷi literature. The Therīpadāna has no commentary before this work. The other work, vipassanānayappakaranaṁ, first written by Mahasi Sayadaw (1904-1982), one of the leading and famous meditation masters of our time has been translated into by Ven. Dr.Kumarābhivaṁsa. There is one grammatical work, virtually unknown to scholars outside Myanmar, or even most Myanmar scholars is Saddhattharatanavī. The work, in four volumes, was written one after another ( in 1928 ) by four grammarians from Myanmar, namely Sayadaw Somābhisiri, Ven. Sūriya, Ven. Ñāṇa and Ven. Rājindabhivaṁsa (Phayaphyu Sayadaw).  Dhātudīpikā was written by Ven. Dr. Nandamālābhivaṁsa (1940-      ) would be rearrangement of Pāḷi Root. This work will be a great help to the students of Pāḷi language and easing the difficulties of finding Pāḷi root and reading Pāḷi grammar. The content introduction of each work is important in its own right and in the history of Pāḷi language and literature. The publication of these four Pāḷi texts would also be put in the context of upgrading Pāḷi studies in Myanmar by State Pariyatti, Universities and The International Theravāda Buddhist Missionary University.

    1. “Etymology of the word Saṁgāyanā” Presented to the Seminar on the 3rd International Buddhist Research Conference, Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, Thailand, 2011.

    Abstract

    The Pāḷi term, ‘Saṁgāyanā” is known to the Theravāda Buddhists in Myanmar as the unanimous recitation of Piṭaka Texts by the Saṁgha Order. However, according to the Pāḷi Texts such as Cūḷavagga Pāḷi, Pārājikakaṇḍa Aṭṭhakathā of Vinaya Pitaka, and Dīpavaṁsa which clearly mention the records of the First Buddhist Council to the Fourth Buddhist Council, the term ‘Saṁgāyanā” has variety of meanings. It is also found that the word Saṁgāyanā was significant in the history of Pāḷi literature. The word Saṁgāyanā was explained with reference to Pāḷi Buddhist scriptures, commentaries and sub-commentaries using Pāḷi Dictionaries and other treaties. This paper tries to explain word Saṁgāyanā from etymological and Pāḷi grammatical point of view. Although it is easy to define the word Saṁgāyanā from grammatical point of view it had deep and rich meanings. The convening of Saṁgāyanās resulted in getting the purified and standard Tipitaka text. The purity of the scriptures means the purity of practice and purity of Saṁgha. Since the study of Buddhist Scriptures (Pariyatti) it’s the foundation of Sāsana, the Saṁgāyanās augurs well for the future of Buddhism. Because of the Saṁgāyanās Myanmar as a leading Theravāda country could share genuine Theravāda Buddhist Dhamma with the rest of the world.

    1. “Etymology of the word Saṁgāyanā” Journal of International Buddhist Studies (JIBS) (ISSN.1906-6244) Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, Thailand, 2011.

    Abstract

    The Pāḷi term, ‘Saṁgāyanā” is known to the Theravāda Buddhists in Myanmar as the unanimous recitation of Piṭaka Texts by the Saṁgha Order. However, according to the Pāḷi Texts such as Cūḷavagga Pāḷi, Pārājikakaṇḍa Aṭṭhakathā of Vinaya Pitaka, and Dīpavaṁsa which clearly mention the records of the First Buddhist Council to the Fourth Buddhist Council, the term ‘Saṁgāyanā” has variety of meanings. It is also found that the word Saṁgāyanā was significant in the history of Pāḷi literature. The word Saṁgāyanā was explained with reference to Pāḷi Buddhist scriptures, commentaries and sub-commentaries using Pāḷi Dictionaries and other treaties. This paper tries to explain word Saṁgāyanā from etymological and Pāḷi grammatical point of view. Although it is easy to define the word Saṁgāyanā from grammatical point of view it had deep and rich meanings. The convening of Saṁgāyanās resulted in getting the purified and standard Tipitaka text. The purity of the scriptures means the purity of practice and purity of Saṁgha. Since the study of Buddhist Scriptures (Pariyatti) it’s the foundation of Sāsana, the Saṁgāyanās augurs well for the future of Buddhism. Because of the Saṁgāyanās Myanmar as a leading Theravāda country could share genuine Theravāda Buddhist Dhamma with the rest of the world.

    1. “Venerable Vicittasārābhivaṁsa and His Contributions to the Pariyatti Sāsana” Presented to the Seminar on the 4th International Buddhist Research Conference, Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University, Thailand, 2012.

    Abstract

    This paper attempts to explain how one of the most famous monks named the most Ven. Vicittasarābhivaṁsa, contributed to the promotion of Buddhist education (Pariyatti) in Myanmar. Because of his contribution to Pariyatti-Sasana (in study of Buddhist scriptures Myanmar become one of the leading Theravada countries in Pāḷi and Buddhist scholarship.The first part of the paper will trace his academic training cover in his early age and how he passed the Pāḷi scriptural examinations with flying colours. Particular attention will be given to how he became the first Tipiṭakadhara (the learned monk who can committed 8026 pages of Tipiṭaka text to his memory) in Myanmar which is the essential requirement for convening of the Sixth Buddhist Council in 1954. He was recorded in Genius book as the Myanmar monk who had powerful memory of committing more than 30000 pages to his memory. Secondly, the paper tries to describe his vital role in actual recitation of Tipitaka text in the Sixth Buddhist Council. He was the one who answered all the questions relating to Tipiṭaka text asked by Mahasi Sayadaw. His astounding contribution will remain as historical landmark in history of Buddhism in Myanmar. Thirdly, the paper will attempt to explain how his tireless effort in founding the two Sāsana Universities, one in Yangon and one in Mandalay, in 1986. Because of foundation of Pariyatti Sāsana by the most Ven. Vicittasārābhivaṁsa, the two Sāsana Universities have produced outstanding Buddhist scholars, missionaries and dhamma preachers both inside and outside Myanmar. Besides, his monastery in Minkon, upper Myanmar, is the training school for future Tipiṭakadhara Sayadaw and this resulted in producing both ten Tipiṭakadhara Sayadaws. Myanmar is the only country which has the tradition of keeping Tipiṭaka text in human memory. Undoubtedly, the most Ven. Vicittasārābhivaṁsa occupied the unrivalled place in the history of promotion and propagation of Buddha Sāsana in Myanmar.

    1. “Buddhism and Tolerance: Towards Living with Peace and Harmony of Multiculturalism” Presented to Myanmar Universities’ Research Conference 2019, Yangon University, 2019.

    Abstract

    In the world, there are many crises of views concerning multiculturalism and some are the sensitive of their beliefs. Some are soft but some are strong of their point of view of religious power. All people want to live peace and harmony of their living in daily life. Everywhere are challenges of the power influence of the world. They had been forgot loving-kindness and tolerance with each other in their societies. They are riding and leading of selfish and conceit. These are troubling to stay with peace and stability of the world. By holding the narrow-intolerance stance on their extreme ism, there is no gain for the peace of the world. This research paper attempts the tolerance of Buddhism and to live the peaceful world for the future pleasant world. The peace and stability are depended on the tolerance of human being. Everyone has to apply on the practice of noble sublime:-mettā, karuṇā, muditā and upekkhā. Having practices with noble sublime, this is needed to live with tolerance. The tolerance is important for living of peace and stability in the world. By holding these noble sublime can create peace and stability. The Buddha propagates his missionaries with tolerance and forgiveness. The Buddha, himself is threatened by multiculturalism. He solved and conquered the problem with tolerance in his missionary. Nowadays, the world is burning with isms, political, social, economic, environment, etc. so that the tolerance is needed to live in harmony with multiculturalism.

    1. “The Dreams and Omens in Pali Literature” University Research Journal, Vol. 12, 2019.

    Abstract

    Dreams and Omens are dreamt in every body. The people accepted the dreams and omens as the forerunner activities in their life. As a person cannot countless one’s dreams and there are so many dreams in one’s long life. Some are imagine what they want to be and some are reality what they make to be in the future existences. Some people have to make sure their imagine to reality it is so called landmark. Dreams are applied and related to our societies. It can be studied practical and theory of arts and science subjects. The nature of dreams and omens are alarmed to be nearly come on any circumstances of people that it is also called omen (Pubbanimitta). And dreams are the former sign known as owmen whatever can be seen in their societies and envoriments that sometimes dream has appeared their desires. Dreams are  throw a flood of light on the psychology, philosophical and religious impact on India at the time of the Buddha. According to the Buddhist prespective, dreams have depended on beings of kamma, mind, climate and nutrition. This paper  informs to the distinguished people who have dreams in Pāḷi Literaure as much as mention.

    Research Programme

    1. A Study on Impact of Monastic Education in Taunggoke (Local need for Taunggoke University’s Research) (One year Project)
  • Area of Interests

  • Conducting Research

  • Dr Win Marlar Thein

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    PhD (International Relations) from Yangon University

  • Area of Interests

    Social Development

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    Research papers in the field of international Relations

    • South Korea’s official development assistance to Myanmar since 2010
  • Teaching Courses:

    • IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Abstract for Research papers as follows:

    South Korea’s official development assistance to Myanmar since 2010
    Win Marlar Thein
    Abstract

    Official development assistance is necessary to promote the economic development and welfare of developing countries. South Korea provided ODA since 1987 for supporting economic development and reducing poverty in partner countries. South Korea’s ODA to Myanmar has put emphasis on its positive on its positive contribution to Myanmar’s development, particularly supporting growth in rural areas. In Myanmar, KOIA specially focuses on the agriculture and rural development, industrial and economic development, administrative, governance, and human resource development sectors. Since Myanmar’s political transition in 2010, South Korea became as the six largest trade and investment partner for Myanmar. After 2015 election, South Korea paid more attention on investment and ODA to Myanmar. This paper examines how and why South Korea gives ODA to Myanmar, what kinds of development aids are provided by South Korea and how to provide in development sector.

  • Daw Soe Soe Kyi

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    M.A (International Relations) from Dagon University

  • Area of Interests

    International Relations and Economic Issues

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Current Academic Activities

    • Preparing Lecture
    • Participating in the financial activities of Department of International Relations
    • Participating in the maintenance activities of University Building
  • Book Publication

    —

  • Teaching Courses:

    • IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Abstract for Research papers as follows:

    Japan’s ODA Policy towards Five Mainland Southeast Asian Countries
    Abstract

    Development assistance is traditionally given by developed countries to developing countries to assist in the recipient country’s economic development, and improve social conditions with the country. Different countries adopt different approaches, depending on the resources available as well as their policy objectives in giving aid. In 1991, when the Japanese government announced the four guidelines of Official Development Assistance (ODA), it pledged to use the foreign aid to promote human rights and democracy. In the history of Japan’s ODA, the bilateral scheme has been predominant: Japan provides a certain country with aid through bilateral negotiation and agreement and with the anticipation that the aid will help socio-economic development in the recipient country. Japan’s ODA is usually divided into two categories: bilateral and multilateral. Bilateral aid on the other hand is the scheme where Japan provides aid to a single recipient country on the basis of the two parties’ negotiation and agreement. Multilateral aid is the scheme within which Japan provides a budget to international or multi-governmental organizations. And the most frequently used classification of bilateral assistance is based on the three types of payment: grants, yen loans, and technical assistance. Tokyo’s foreign aid strategy, ranging from bilateral, sub-regional, to regional assistance plans, successfully secures its political and economic interests in mainland Southeast Asia.

    Key words: ODA, foreign policy, ASEAN, human rights

     

    Japan’s Search for Normalcy: Japan’s Policy in Southeast Asia after the Cold War
    Abstract

    During the Cold War, the main emphasis of Japan’s foreign policy in Southeast Asia was placed on economic diplomacy. However, after the end of the Cold War, her policy in Southeast Asia has gradually shifted to political and security orientated diplomacy. This research argues that the Persian Gulf War crisis of 1990-1991 had been one of the factors that brought about the turning point in Japan’s Southeast Asian foreign policy. During the Gulf War, Japan was greatly criticized for practicing what is called checkbook diplomacy, which means giving only financial support to the war and peace cause without making any human contributions of sending military forces to the Gulf region. From that time onwards, Japan has opened a new chapter in her foreign policy. On 15 June 1992, the Japanese Diet passed The Law Concerning Cooperation in UN Peacekeeping and Other Operations, marking a turning point in Japanese foreign policy. This law was the first manifest in changes to Japan’s Southeast Asian policy, such as the dispatch of Self Defence Force (SDF) to support the United Nations Peacekeeping Operations (UNPKO) in Cambodia in 1992. Analyzing Japan’s changing policy, case study design has been applied to examine the specific effects of Japan’s policy change on Southeast Asia after the Cold War. The research points out the fact that Japan has been playing more and more actively in the political and security affairs of the Southeast Asia region but also in other international affairs both within and outside the region.

    Key words: foreign policy, proactive, Article IX, UNPKO, SDF, ARF

     

    Japan’s Proactive Role in Myanmar Democratic Transition
    Abstract

    After the 2010 general elections, Myanmar started to transform from an authoritarian to a semi-democratic government. With the democratic transition process, the new government initiated a series of reforms, including the loosening of political and economic restrictions and the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest. Following the 2012 by-election, the Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba recognized the election as a notable step in Myanmar’s democratic transition. In May 2013, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe paid an official visit to Myanmar. It was the first visit of a Japanese prime minister since 1977, signifying Japan’s return to Myanmar after long decades. During Prime Minister Abe’s visit to Myanmar, he expressed his readiness to assist Myanmar government’s efforts for democratization and to improve infrastructure development through Official Development Assistance (ODA). In 2016, Tokyo announced plans to contribute 800 billion yen over five years at public and private levels, based on the “Japan-Myanmar Cooperation Program”, to support Myanmar’s efforts for peace, national reconciliation and economic development. Based on this background, the research question is that why Japan has played such a proactive role in Myanmar’s democratic transition under the leadership of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

    Key words: proactive, democratic transition, national reconciliation, economic development, Official Development Assistance (ODA), Indo-Pacific strategy

     

    Refugee Repatriation Issue between Myanmar and Bangladesh
    Abstract

    This paper aims to study challenges and constraints in refugee repatriation process between Myanmar and Bangladesh. Following the Tatmadaw’s counter-insurgency operation against the terrorist attacks of Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) in northern Rakhine State in August 2017, it is reported that more than 700,000 refugees have fled to Bangladesh. Most of refugees have sought shelter in established refugee camps along the border and makeshift camps in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. Although Myanmar and Bangladesh agreed to a procedural framework for repatriation, no Bengali refugees has returned through official channels. On the other hand, it is becoming an increasingly pressing issue among international community as the mass flows of refugees who left Myanmar. The global media and international Human Rights Council reports have focused on the humanitarian situation of displaced people, human rights violations and the legal status of Bengalis in Myanmar. Therefore, Bengali issue has become more complex for a continuous implementation of repatriation process. At present, the repatriation process between Myanmar and Bangladesh has virtually stagnated. Upon this background, this paper argues that it is crucial that the Governments of Myanmar and Bangladesh commit themselves not only to any voluntary return and safe of refugees but also to the positive steps that will be required to ensure their implementation of repatriation process.

    Key words: repatriation, MoU, responses, citizenship, third party, challenges

     

    Myanmar’s Political Reforms: Its Impacts and Implications for Myanmar-China Relations
    Abstract

    Since President U Thein Sein took office on 30 March 2011, his government carried out a series of reforms: political reform, socio-economic reform, and administrative reform. Under the political reform, the new government opened new space for political oppositions, Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) that had been allowed to form and participate in political, economic and social development. On 30 September 2011, President U Thein Sein announced that his government decided to suspend the construction of Myitsone dam in accordance with the wishes of Myanmar people. It also called for an investigation of the Latpadaung Copper Mine project which finally led to a renegotiation for better terms and conditions in favour of Myanmar. This research paper analyzes that although Myanmar has been on friendly relations with China since 1988, the relationship between Myanmar and China has little strains after suspending the largest Chinese investment in the Myintsone dam project in 2011. It is found that the political reform in Myanmar since 2011 have generated unexpected impacts on Chinese investments in Myanmar and implications for bilateral relations, as well as complicated China’s policy towards Myanmar.

    Key words: political reform, public opinion, rapprochement, bilateral relations

  • Dr Thant Yin Win

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    PhD (International Relations) from Mandalay University

  • Area of Interests

    Foreign policy and Foreign relations

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Academic Committees

    • Member of Institutional Assessment and Quality Assurance Committee (IAQA Committee, YUFL)
    • Junior Programme Officer (Secretary General Office, Myanmar National Commission for UNESCO)

    Current Academic Activities

    • Japan’s Indo-Pacific Strategy: What does it mean for Myanmar?
    • Institutional Leadership in Internal Quality Assurance (IQA) in Higher Education of Myanmar
  • Book Publication

    Research papers in the field of international Relations

    • Japan’s ODA Policy towards Five Mainland Southeast Asian Countries
    • Japan’s Search for Normalcy: Japan’s Policy in Southeast Asia after the Cold War
    • Japan’s Proactive Role in Myanmar Democratic Transition
    • Refugee Repatriation Issue between Myanmar and Bangladesh
    • e. Myanmar’s Political Reforms: Its Impacts and Implications for Myanmar-China Relations
  • Teaching Courses:

    • IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
    • DIR IV: International Relations after Cold War
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Abstract for Research papers as follows:

    Japan’s ODA Policy towards Five Mainland Southeast Asian Countries
    Abstract

    Development assistance is traditionally given by developed countries to developing countries to assist in the recipient country’s economic development, and improve social conditions with the country. Different countries adopt different approaches, depending on the resources available as well as their policy objectives in giving aid. In 1991, when the Japanese government announced the four guidelines of Official Development Assistance (ODA), it pledged to use the foreign aid to promote human rights and democracy. In the history of Japan’s ODA, the bilateral scheme has been predominant: Japan provides a certain country with aid through bilateral negotiation and agreement and with the anticipation that the aid will help socio-economic development in the recipient country. Japan’s ODA is usually divided into two categories: bilateral and multilateral. Bilateral aid on the other hand is the scheme where Japan provides aid to a single recipient country on the basis of the two parties’ negotiation and agreement. Multilateral aid is the scheme within which Japan provides a budget to international or multi-governmental organizations. And the most frequently used classification of bilateral assistance is based on the three types of payment: grants, yen loans, and technical assistance. Tokyo’s foreign aid strategy, ranging from bilateral, sub-regional, to regional assistance plans, successfully secures its political and economic interests in mainland Southeast Asia.

    Key words: ODA, foreign policy, ASEAN, human rights

     

    Japan’s Search for Normalcy: Japan’s Policy in Southeast Asia after the Cold War
    Abstract

    During the Cold War, the main emphasis of Japan’s foreign policy in Southeast Asia was placed on economic diplomacy. However, after the end of the Cold War, her policy in Southeast Asia has gradually shifted to political and security orientated diplomacy. This research argues that the Persian Gulf War crisis of 1990-1991 had been one of the factors that brought about the turning point in Japan’s Southeast Asian foreign policy. During the Gulf War, Japan was greatly criticized for practicing what is called checkbook diplomacy, which means giving only financial support to the war and peace cause without making any human contributions of sending military forces to the Gulf region. From that time onwards, Japan has opened a new chapter in her foreign policy. On 15 June 1992, the Japanese Diet passed The Law Concerning Cooperation in UN Peacekeeping and Other Operations, marking a turning point in Japanese foreign policy. This law was the first manifest in changes to Japan’s Southeast Asian policy, such as the dispatch of Self Defence Force (SDF) to support the United Nations Peacekeeping Operations (UNPKO) in Cambodia in 1992. Analyzing Japan’s changing policy, case study design has been applied to examine the specific effects of Japan’s policy change on Southeast Asia after the Cold War. The research points out the fact that Japan has been playing more and more actively in the political and security affairs of the Southeast Asia region but also in other international affairs both within and outside the region.

    Key words: foreign policy, proactive, Article IX, UNPKO, SDF, ARF

     

    Japan’s Proactive Role in Myanmar Democratic Transition
    Abstract

    After the 2010 general elections, Myanmar started to transform from an authoritarian to a semi-democratic government. With the democratic transition process, the new government initiated a series of reforms, including the loosening of political and economic restrictions and the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest. Following the 2012 by-election, the Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba recognized the election as a notable step in Myanmar’s democratic transition. In May 2013, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe paid an official visit to Myanmar. It was the first visit of a Japanese prime minister since 1977, signifying Japan’s return to Myanmar after long decades. During Prime Minister Abe’s visit to Myanmar, he expressed his readiness to assist Myanmar government’s efforts for democratization and to improve infrastructure development through Official Development Assistance (ODA). In 2016, Tokyo announced plans to contribute 800 billion yen over five years at public and private levels, based on the “Japan-Myanmar Cooperation Program”, to support Myanmar’s efforts for peace, national reconciliation and economic development. Based on this background, the research question is that why Japan has played such a proactive role in Myanmar’s democratic transition under the leadership of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

    Key words: proactive, democratic transition, national reconciliation, economic development, Official Development Assistance (ODA), Indo-Pacific strategy

     

    Refugee Repatriation Issue between Myanmar and Bangladesh
    Abstract

    This paper aims to study challenges and constraints in refugee repatriation process between Myanmar and Bangladesh. Following the Tatmadaw’s counter-insurgency operation against the terrorist attacks of Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army (ARSA) in northern Rakhine State in August 2017, it is reported that more than 700,000 refugees have fled to Bangladesh. Most of refugees have sought shelter in established refugee camps along the border and makeshift camps in Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. Although Myanmar and Bangladesh agreed to a procedural framework for repatriation, no Bengali refugees has returned through official channels. On the other hand, it is becoming an increasingly pressing issue among international community as the mass flows of refugees who left Myanmar. The global media and international Human Rights Council reports have focused on the humanitarian situation of displaced people, human rights violations and the legal status of Bengalis in Myanmar. Therefore, Bengali issue has become more complex for a continuous implementation of repatriation process. At present, the repatriation process between Myanmar and Bangladesh has virtually stagnated. Upon this background, this paper argues that it is crucial that the Governments of Myanmar and Bangladesh commit themselves not only to any voluntary return and safe of refugees but also to the positive steps that will be required to ensure their implementation of repatriation process.

    Key words: repatriation, MoU, responses, citizenship, third party, challenges

     

    Myanmar’s Political Reforms: Its Impacts and Implications for Myanmar-China Relations
    Abstract

    Since President U Thein Sein took office on 30 March 2011, his government carried out a series of reforms: political reform, socio-economic reform, and administrative reform. Under the political reform, the new government opened new space for political oppositions, Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) that had been allowed to form and participate in political, economic and social development. On 30 September 2011, President U Thein Sein announced that his government decided to suspend the construction of Myitsone dam in accordance with the wishes of Myanmar people. It also called for an investigation of the Latpadaung Copper Mine project which finally led to a renegotiation for better terms and conditions in favour of Myanmar. This research paper analyzes that although Myanmar has been on friendly relations with China since 1988, the relationship between Myanmar and China has little strains after suspending the largest Chinese investment in the Myintsone dam project in 2011. It is found that the political reform in Myanmar since 2011 have generated unexpected impacts on Chinese investments in Myanmar and implications for bilateral relations, as well as complicated China’s policy towards Myanmar.

    Key words: political reform, public opinion, rapprochement, bilateral relations

  • Daw Min Min Thet

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Education

    MRes ( International Relations ) from Dagon University

  • Area of Interests

    Political  and Social Issues , Culture

  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Current Academic Activities

    • Preparing Lecture
  • Book Publication

    Research papers in the field of international Relations

    • Myanmar Cultural Cooperation with ASEAN  (1988-2006 )
  • Teaching Courses:

    • IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Abstract for Research papers as follows:

    Myanmar Cultural Cooperation With ASEAN ( 1988 -2006 )
    Abstract

    The Association of southeast  Asian Nations  ( ASEAN ) was formed in 8th August 1967 . Myanmar became a member of ASEAN in 23rd July 1997 and Myanmar participated with ASEAN Committee on Culture and Information ( COCI ) . Myanmar  has also been participating on ASEAN-COCI programmers and protection end preservation of cultural resources by regional and international cooperation . By cooperating in this sector with member countries, Myanmar gains the benefits and the friendship with the member become more solid. Finally, she reaches to the organization’s goals of building a region of peace, freedom, social justice and economic well-being. In this regard, she sends many delegates to the  member countries . On the other hand,  she actively attends the meetings, conferences and workshops. Beside, she implements several socio-cultural projects under the third pillar, its socio-cultural community.

  • Biography

    Dr. Theingi Htar’s Profile

    Dr. Theingi Htar is an Assistant Lecturer of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA, Hons (Myanmar) in 2004, MA in 2009, MRes in 2010 from the East University of Yangon, and Ph. D in 2015 from the Yangon University.

    She is a member of curriculum development group of the department of Linguistics. She wrote and presented a paper “A Corpus-based Study of Syntax in Myanmar” in the University Research Conference.

    At present, she is reviewing the diploma courses and developing a curriculum and syllabi for a new course under the guidance of her head of the department.

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    2015 – 2018 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Tutor
    2018 -2021 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Assistant Lecturer
    2021 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
  • Area of Interests

    General Linguistics, Psycholinguistics and Sociolinguistics

  • Research Papers

    A Corpus-based Study of Syntax in Myanmar
    Abstract
    In the area of applied linguistics, corpus linguistics is important like other fields. Nowadays, computer technology is used to analyse large collections of spoken and written texts, or corpora which have been carefully designed to represent specific domains of such language use as academic reading and writing. Myanmar is the official language of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar. Various Scholars give different views on the Myanmar Language. Myanmar Language Commission (MLC) standardized that it is composed of nine parts of speech in the Myanmar grammar such as noun, pronoun, adjective, adverb, verb, post-positional marker, particle, conjunction and interjection which are known as traditional grammar. Dr. Kathleen Forbes (The Part of Speech in Burmese and the Burmese Qualifiers, 1969) stated that there are four parts of speech such as noun, verb, preposition and qualifier in Myanmar. Dr. Khin Aye (2013) pointed out that from the linguistic point of view; there should be five parts of speech such as noun, verb, particle, qualifier, and interjection in Myanmar, especially in spoken form. This paper is analysed the syntax of Myanmar from the linguistic point of view, according to Dr. Khin Aye(2013). It is also represented with tree representations. In this paper, it is presented what corpus linguistics is, how it can be applied in teaching language especially teaching Myanmar, how it is useful for research and presented other information. All the data are collected from the daily newspapers, The Mirror and The New Light of Myanmar. Resources are also included which will give a great help for those who are interested in this field, who are interested in teaching Myanmar and who want to do for other studies.

  • Biography

    Daw Moe Yin Nyeinn’s Profile

    Daw Moe Yin Nyeinn is an Associate Professor of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA, Qualified (English) in 1996 from the University of Yangon and MA in 2002 from the Dagon University. She got Diploma in Japanese in 2001 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

    She is a member of Effective Teaching and Learning Committee of YUFL. She is also a member of curriculum development group of the department of Linguistics. Throughout her career, she wrote papers on various fields of linguistics in university research journals, universities research conferences and international research conference. The papers she wrote were

    • Effective Teaching Grammar to Beginners
    • The Role of Memorization in Learning English as a Foreign Language Observed in the First Year Non-English Specialization Students
    • A Study of the Role of Content and Language Integrated Learning Observed in the First Year Non-English Specialization Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • The Role of Discourse Markers in Criticizing A Short Story
    • A Morphological Analysis of Myanmar Modifiers
    • A Corpus-Based Study of Syntax in Myanmar
    • An Analysis of Deviant Forms in the Myanmar Newspapers and Journals

    At present, she is reviewing the diploma courses and developing a curriculum and syllabi for a new course.

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    1998 – 2004 Dagon University Department of English Tutor
    2004-2006 Dawei University Department of English Tutor
    2006-2011 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of English Assistant Lecturer
    2011- 2013 Sagaing Institute of Education Department of English Lecturer
    2013- 2019 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
    2019 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
  • Area of Interests

    General Linguistics, Applied Linguistics and Language Teaching

  • Research Papers

    Effective Ways of Teaching Grammar to Beginners
    Abstract
    We are today seeing the growth of interesting new procedures and techniques, many of which challenge our traditional views of what should happen in the classroom. The researcher feels that this deductive approach should be used in our teaching grammar to the beginner level of English in our country. This paper is divided into four main parts. Part I deals with some techniques of teaching grammar. Part 2 is concerned with how to plan a grammar lesson. In this part the deductive approach is introduced, and the results used in the classroom are presented. In part 3, observations are described. Finally, in part 4, several factors that teachers need to take into consideration are discussed.

     

    The Role of Memorization in Learning English as a Foreign Language Observed in the First Year Non-English Specialization Students
    Abstract

    This aims to study how memorization is connected with learning English. Memorization is used to help learners to internalize what they have learned to use in actual communication. Memorization is a mental process, so the choice of qualitative method as the main data collection and analysis tool is appropriate. There are two questionnaires, one for teachers and one for students. And semi-structured interviews were constructed in order to capture students’ and teachers’ perceptions and uses of memorization in learning English. The outcomes point out that students should know the distinction between good and poor memorization and avoid learning by heart without understanding the context of the task. Teachers should explain and constantly remind the students the potential roles of memorization in their learning.

     

    A Study of The Role of Content and Language Integrated Learning Observed in The First Year Non-English Specialization Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    Abstract
    Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) is used to enhance students’ interpersonal and language skills. This paper aims to analyse the use of CLIL in teaching linguistics content at Yangon University of Foreign Languages (YUFL) and their effects, and to focus on the alternative way of teaching content, that of teaching through language CLIL is a method used in the teaching-learning process, so the choice of qualitative method as the main data collection is appropriate. This research paper deals with the performance of the first-year non-English specialization students in Linguistics at YUFL. This study compares a CLIL class of 30 students and a non-CLIL class, a traditional class of 30 students. The students in the two classes studied a common theme. An analysis is made of the outcomes obtained in both classes. It is also based on a questionnaire with closed-ended questions. The present study provides empirical data on teaching and learning through CLIL and is an exploratory report on the potential of CLIL for teaching content at higher education level.

     

    The Role of Discourse Markers in Criticizing a Short Story
    Abstract
    While reading a text, if one knows the role of discourse markers, it can help him to read a text and to communicate what he has read with his friends and to express his ideas. In this study, the importance of cohesive devices, discourse markers, is highlighted. This study is done to realize the importance of cohesive devices in reading a text, to criticize a text well, to know the greater effect of written discourse analysis in linguistic studies on readers and to arouse the interests in reading. After reading a text, one should analyse and criticize what a text is about, what the writer’s attitude is, what the message for the readers is, what the characteristics in the text’s attitudes are and whether readers can feel as if he or she were in that text. In this study, the works of students, attending in Second Year Part-Time Diploma in Linguistics, are analyzed. Discourse Analysis is one of the courses for Diploma in Linguistics and it can help a lot in translation and interpretation, teaching and learning languages and so on. Our Second Year Diploma in Linguistic Students, altogether eight, studied this course in their Second Year. Our students are from different fields, most are language teachers, some are translators, and some are interpreters. As the role of discourse markers are important in comprehending and criticizing a text, descriptive method is used to analyse the specific data of Second Year Part-Time Diploma in Linguistics Students who analysed a modern Myanmar Short Story “ အမေပြောသော မြင်းမိုရ်အကြောင်း ” by ရိုးရာ(မကန) from the Mirror Daily,(8 July 2018). It is hoped that this paper can give a great help for readers who want to feel and criticize the text well and for teachers who want to give help for learners to have great interest in reading authentic texts.

     

    A Morphological Analysis of Myanmar Modifiers
    Abstract
    This paper specifically studies the systems of Myanmar modifiers focusing on morphological theories. This analytical study is based on the morphological level. The significant feature of the Myanmar language is that it is a tonal language. Moreover it is a type of monosyllabic and agglutinative language which has a syntactic structure of a Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) pattern. Morphology is a branch of grammar and it deals with the internal structure of the potential complex words of a language. Morphology in Myanmar is primarily the system of derivation and affixation. This paper mainly focuses on the derivational system. The aim of this paper is to analyse the modifiers on the basis of their structures and to classify the systems of the Myanmar modifiers focusing on the morphological theories. In this paper, the data were collected from colloquial Myanmar and the Myanmar Dictionary. Most of the modifiers in Myanmar have figurative power so that they can make a speaker’s feeling more meaningful and at the same time, they can give imply meaning. Four modifier patterns; rhyme, chime, zero substitution and substitution, are mainly analyzed in this paper. Moreover, sub-patterns based on the derivational morphology and compounding which is a favourite way of coining new technical vocabulary are also categorized. Derivational process generally acts on verbs, turning them into nouns or noun-like expressions that can often function as either nominal or adverbials. In this study, it can be found that verbs are turned into adverbs and can function as adverbials. In compounding, some compounds cannot be substituted (zero substitution) with other words in a certain position, i.e. in A+B pattern, neither A nor B is substituted with C as in A+C or C+B. So it can be found that agglutination is very prominent in such compound processes generally on noun+verb compounds, which can function as adverbials. In addition, it is significant that in some derivations and compound words in Myanmar, rhyming and chiming are intermeshed and have strong agglutinative type that others cannot be substituted between them. In this paper, collective data and findings are illustrated with explanations. This study may be of some help to the Myanmar language teachers in teaching Myanmar as a foreign language. It can also help the foreign students studying the Myanmar language.

     

    A Corpus-based Study of Syntax in Myanmar
    Abstract
    In the area of applied linguistics, corpus linguistics is important like other fields. Nowadays, computer technology is used to analyse large collections of spoken and written texts, or corpora which have been carefully designed to represent specific domains of such language use as academic reading and writing. Myanmar is the official language of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar. Various Scholars give different views on the Myanmar Language. Myanmar Language Commission (MLC) standardized that it is composed of nine parts of speech in the Myanmar grammar such as noun, pronoun, adjective, adverb, verb, post-positional marker, particle, conjunction and interjection which are known as traditional grammar. Dr. Kathleen Forbes (The Part of Speech in Burmese and the Burmese Qualifiers, 1969) stated that there are four parts of speech such as noun, verb, preposition and qualifier in Myanmar. Dr. Khin Aye (2013) pointed out that from the linguistic point of view; there should be five parts of speech such as noun, verb, particle, qualifier, and interjection in Myanmar, especially in spoken form. This paper is analysed the syntax of Myanmar from the linguistic point of view, according to Dr. Khin Aye(2013). It is also represented with tree representations. In this paper, it is presented what corpus linguistics is, how it can be applied in teaching language especially teaching Myanmar, how it is useful for research and presented other information. All the data are collected from the daily newspapers, The Mirror and The New Light of Myanmar. Resources are also included which will give a great help for those who are interested in this field, who are interested in teaching Myanmar and who want to do for other studies.

     

    An Analysis of Deviant Forms in the Myanmar Newspaper and Journals
    Abstract
    This research studies the common deviant forms (error) found in Myanmar Daily & Weekly newspapers, and journals. The aims of this research are to find out these forms found in the Myanmar print media and to find out the way to avoid them. The data are collected from news and advertisements from seven Myanmar Daily & Weekly newspapers, and journals (ကြေးမုံ၊မြန်မာ့အလင်း News Watch, and 7 Day Daily from 2013 to 2020). This research work has been limited in scope through the public and private newspapers and journals. The discussion in this research will view the importance of print media in education. The data are analysed in three levels: pronunciation level, word level, and phrase level. Both qualitative method and quantitative method are used to analyze the data. This research paper is analysed to study the incorrect grammatical usages and phrase order in Myanmar and to analyse these usages from the linguistic point of view. It will also be helpful in Myanmar language teaching and learning process.

  • Biography

     

    Daw Naing Naing Htwe’s Profile

    Daw Naing Naing Htwe is a Lecturer of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA in English in 1994 , Diploma in English in 1996 and MA in 2002 from the University of Mawlamyaing. She is a member of curriculum development group of the department of Linguistics. She wrote a paper, “Uses of Functions of a Word “sa /saÙ/” in the PaO Language” in the YUFL research journal.
    At present, she is reviewing the diploma courses and developing a curriculum and syllabi for a new course.

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    1996-2003 Mawlamyaing University Department of English Tutor
    2002 Yangon University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2003-2004 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of English Tutor
    2004-2008 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of English Assistant Lecturer
    2008-2010 Loikaw University Department of English Assistant Lecturer
    2010-2013 Phaan University Department of English Lecturer
    2013 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
  • Area of Interests

    Phonetics, Teaching Writing, Discourse Analysis

  • Research Papers

    Uses and functions of a ward /sa:/ in the Pa O language
    Abstract
    This research paper focuses on introducing the uses of the word /sa:/ in the Pa O language and how it occurs in different utterances. It presents utterances with /sa:/ accompanying with other verbs or adjectives, occurring as verbs in some utterances. The data are collected from the spoken Pa O language used in Thaton Township, Mon State. It reflects Pa O custom, tradition and culture. The method used is the descriptive one that can be applied to teaching and learning Pa O language. The paper introduces certain forms and systems of the Pa O language when the Pa O people come to greet, describe others, give advice and command or order, and express their idea, attitude and feeling.

  • Biography

     

    Dr. Naw San Myint’s Profile

    Dr. Naw San Myint is an Associate Professor of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA, Qualified (Myanmar) in 1986 from the Mawlamyaing Degree Colleague and MA in 1995 from the Malamyaing University. She got her Ph.D in Myanmar in 2011 from the Yangon University. She also got Diploma in Library and Information Studies in 1999 from the Yangon University and Diploma in Chinese in 2005 from the Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

    She is a member of Senate Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics of YUFL. She is also a member of curriculum development group of the Department of Linguistics. Throughout her career, she wrote papers in MUFL research journals. The papers she wrote were

    1. The contrastive study of systems of consonants in Myanmar and Chinese
    2. The tone system of the West Pho Kayin Language

    At present, she is reviewing the diploma courses and developing a curriculum and syllabi for a new course.

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    1997-2002 Institute of Technology Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2002 Yangon University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2002-2003 West University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2003-2004 Phaan University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2004 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Tutor
    2004-2010 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Assistant Lecturer
    2010-2015 Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Lecturer
    2015-2018 Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
    2018 to now Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
  • Area of Interests

    Phonetics, Phonology and Sociolinguistics

  • Research Papers

    The Tone System of the West Poh Kayin Language
    Abstract
    This paper presents a study of the tone system of the West Poh Kayin language on the basis of the theoretical concepts of the tone system. It studies changes of tones resulting in differences of speech sounds, sounds of words, meaning, and in some cases, of grammar in West Poh Kayin language.

     

    A Contrastive Study of Consonants in Myanmar and Chinese
    Abstract

    With a view to contributing towards the learning of languages, the systems of consonants in Myanmar and Chinese are compared from the point of view of phonetics. The consonants in Myanmar and Chinese are classified in terms of place and manner of articulation and voice quality, and they are systematically compared. In this paper, using the contrastive analysis, the similarities and differences of consonants are studied. Detailed description of place and manner of articulation of consonants will be of great help to the foreign students of Myanmar and the Myanmar students of Chinese in producing speech with correct pronunciation.

     

  • Daw Ei Khine Zin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A – French (2003) – Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • M.A – French (2015) – Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • Diploma in Global English (2009) – Yangon University
    • Diploma in International Relations (2015) – Yangon University
    • Diploma in Myanmar History and Culture (2018) – Yangon University
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Participation in Committees of YUFL

    • Senate Committee on International Relations
    • French Department’s Board of Study
    • French Department Research Committee
    • Strategic Planning Administrative Committee

    Curriculum Project / Plan (teaching textbook)

    • အသုံးဝင်သော အခြေခံပြင်သစ်ဘာသာလက်စွဲစာအုပ် (Le Français Courant de Tous Les Jours) (2012, June) Hand Book
    • Writing curriculum for French Language Course for Hotel Management (2020)
  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    Teachers’ Perceptions on Importance of Using Authentic Materials in Teaching Foreign Languages (The 1st International Conference on Language and Humanities 2020, January, Vol. 1, No.1, Page. 138-154)
    Daw Ei Khine Zin
    Abstract
    Today, exposing the students to authentic materials throughout the teaching learning process is crucial. Authentic learning situation is also one of the core pillars which have a connection to the real world in which students can have the opportunity to practice language through the use of authentic materials. It is necessary for the language teachers to develop their own materials according to the needs of learners. In order to achieve the objectives of language teaching, it is important for the language teachers to exploit other materials around them according to the needs of learners and to create interest in them. This study aimed to analyze the foreign language teachers’ perception toward the use of authentic materials in Mandalay University of Foreign Languages (MUFL) and Yangon University of Foreign Languages (YUFL). A quantitative descriptive method was used with structured questionnaire which was based and adapted from original questionnaire developed by Yeung, Ting-Fai. (2011), Soliman E. M. Soliman (2013) and Abdulhakim M. Belaid (2015). Total 101 teachers were included from 16 different departments of two universities. In this study, perception and attitude of the language teachers towards using authentic materials, including effect on students’ motivation and needs of training were observed. The results revealed that using authentic materials is effective, not difficult and achieves positive effect on teaching-learning process. It can also improve student’s motivation and cultural awareness.

    Keywords: authentic materials, language teaching, foreign language classroom, teachers’ perception

     

    Students’ Perception toward The Effect of Class Size in Learning French (The 2nd Myanmar Universities’ Research Conference 2020, June, Vol. 2, Issue.2, Page. 222-227)
    Daw Ei Khine Zin
    Abstract

    The effect of class size on learning a foreign language has been a contentious debate and great issue among researchers in this present days. Since 2011, the number of students studying at Yangon University of Foreign Languages has doubled due to the increase of international communication in various fields and the demand of foreign language is greatly increasing. The aim of the present study was to investigate from the students’ perceptions on large class size and its influences on learning French in Yangon University of Foreign Languages. The methods used in this research were quantitative descriptive in order to obtain accurate information about the main implications that effect the language learning process in large classes. The participants of this study were 177 students from third-year and fourth-year undergraduate students of French language. In order to collect data, questionnaires were used as the research instruments. The finding of this study showed that the students agreed with the view that large class size affects the quality of teaching and learning French. The research findings indicated to identify that while dealing with the negative academic effects which large classes have on students, teachers should consider the social and the psychological effects since these effects are interrelated. Student’s responses focused on their perspectives and experiences of studying in large classes. Students reported that there was a problem of class control and they also agreed that they cannot receive regular feedback from the teacher because of large class size. Students also reported that they cannot receive appropriate attention from their teachers and that the environment is noisy and stressful in large class size. Students in the large classes sensed that the flow of interaction is more from teacher to student than from student to teacher. Data from this study revealed that students prefer small class size and their attitude toward learning French is negatively affected by large class. The findings of the students’ perceptions on learning in large class have been valuable and meaningful to teachers that should take into consideration for better teaching learning process.

    Keywords: students’ perception, class size, large class, language learning, effects

     

    A Study on The Problems Faced by Myanmar Students in Learning French (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, June, Vol. 11, No.2, Page. 243-253)
    Daw Ei Khine Zin
    Abstract

    This study is an analysis of the problems faced by Myanmar students in learning French as a foreign language and the factors affecting Myanmar students in learning French. The data were analysed using quantitative descriptive methods. The questionnaire was used in this study. The sample comprised of 100 students aged between 17 to 19 years including 18 males and 82 females. The population in this research was undergraduate students of third and final year French. Students’ responses were analysed and tabulated. The result of this study indicated that students have problems in learning French based on the students’ responses. The students have problem in internal factor and external factor. In internal factor, the students have problem in proficiency, such as the students have problem in reading skills and they do not understand French idioms and do not have adequate French vocabulary. The students’ finds that it is hard for them to practise in French and to understand the voice of native speaker and they do not have a lot of interest in French. As an external factor, the problem is in the insufficient support from government and French embassy. The findings of the study indicated that lack of exposure, lack of opportunity to practice French outside the classroom and lack of insufficient support were the main external factors. This study will be beneficial for teachers’ curriculum and strategies development for French language teaching.

    Keywords: problems, skills, French as a foreign language, students

     

    The Karen: The Untold Culture and Tradition of the Legendary Tribe In Burma (DOC.EU, Revista Cu Profil Academic, Nr.5, An 2020, July, University of Bucharest, Romania, Page. 25-31), (ISSN 2601-1204)
    Daw Ei Khine Zin
    Abstract
    In this article, Karens’ origin, ethnic subgroups, language, literature and religious beliefs are studied. Because of the lack of national literature for the Karens, the dearth of historical records, and the armed conflicts in Myanmar, many customs and the culture of the Karens have faded into oblivion. Although the Karen is the second largest ethnic nationality group in Myanmar after the Shan, they are still as a little documented people in the history of Myanmar. There is a need to have the existence of the common literature that would write the history of the Karen.

    Keywords: Karen, language, literature, religion, belief

     

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing Research/ Educational Plan

    • Student’s Perception on Outcomes of the Video Assisted Teaching
  • Biography

    Dr. Khin Myat Thwe’s Profile
    Dr. Khin Myat Thwe is an Associate Professor of the Department of Linguistics, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar. She got her BA, Bachelor of Arts in Myanmar, qualified, from the University of Yangon in 1995, MA, Master of Arts in Myanmar from the Yangon University in 2001 and Ph. D in Myanmar from the Yangon University in 2008. She also graduated from Yangon University with a Diploma in Global English in 2010.
    [email protected], [email protected]

     

    Working Experience

    Year (from – to) University Department Position
    2002 – 2003 Pyay University Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2003 – 2010 University of Yangon Department of Myanmar Tutor
    2010 – 2011 University of Yangon Department of Myanmar Assistant Lecturer
    2011 – 2012 University of Dawei Deparment of Myanmar Assistant Lecturer
    2012 – 2014 East Yangon University Department of Myanmar Assistant Lecturer
    2014 – 2018 University of Yangon Department of Myanmar Lecturer
    2018 – 2020 University of Computer Sciences (Myeik) Department of Myanmar Associate Professor (Head of Department)
    2021 – Still Yangon University of Foreign Languages Department of Linguistics Associate Professor
  • Area of Interests

    Semantics, Sociolinguistics, and General Linguistics

    She published articles in university research journals, in journals of Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science, as well as at university research conferences on various fields of linguistic topics throughout her career.
    The papers she wrote were;

    • Parallelism on a style of Myanmar Buddhist Holy Prose
    • The Ambiguities in Everyday Speech
    • An Essay style of Maung Shin Sai Htan by writer Khin Khin Htoo
    • A Study of Deviation from Heart Contents Poems by Zaw Naung
    • A Study of TASAY (Ghost) Poem composed by Kyi Aye
    • A Study of Creation to Ancient Bagan Poetry composed by Zaw Gyi
    • A Study on Creation of Plot and Characters from Pandong (Flower & Peacock) novel by Lin Gar Yi Kyaw
    • The Study of Polysemi of the SYmbols from Myanmar Poems
    • The Harmonious Patterns from Heart Content

  • Daw Thandar Lwin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A, 1994, University of Yangon
    • M.A, 2002, University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    • University of Dawei (2002 – 2003)
    • East Yangon University (2003 – 2014)
    • University of Hpan (2014 – 2016)
    • East Yangon University (2016 – 2021)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages (October 2021- present)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    —

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Dr. Naw Ahr Khu

  • Position

    Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A, 1985, University of Yangon
    • B.A(Hons), 1986, University of Yangon
    • M.A, 1993, University of Yangon
    • Title, A Brief Account of the Kayin Myitta Byamasoya Religious Association
    • Ph.D, 2017, University of Yangon
    • Title, Kayin Myitta Byamasoya in National Affairs (1917-1974)
  • Working Experience

    • Mawlamyine University (1986-1990)
    • University of Yangon (1990-1993)
    • University of Yangon (Hlaing Campus), (1993-1995)
    • Dawei University (1996-1998)
    • Dagon University (1998-2000)
    • Taungoo University (2000-2003)
    • West Yangon University (2003-2011)
    • Hinthada University (2011-2012)
    • Bago University (2012-2016)
    • West Yangon University (2016-2017)
    • Lashio University (2017-2018)
    • Kyaing Tong University (2018-2019)
    • Myeik University (2019-2021)
    • Myingyan Universisty (June, 2021-September, 2021)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages (September 2021, present)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    • Naw Ahr Khu, Lecturer, “Dr . D. Po Min and The White Elephant”, West Yangon University Research Journal, Vol.2, No.1, December, 2010
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    National Activities of Dr. D. Po Min (President of Kayin National Association), May, 2009

    The study of the historical sites in Kawhmu Township, September, 2010

    The Role of Gazetteed and non-Gazetteed Officials of Konbaung Hluttaw, January, 2018

     

  • Conducting Research

    —

  • Daw Nay Zin Kyaw

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Literature and Culture, Translation Studies and Research

  • Academic Background

    • 2000 – 2003 BA (German), YUFL
    • 2006 -2008 Diploma in Global English (University of Yangon)/li>
    • 2012- 2014 MA (German) YUFL, Thesis: Eine Studie über Strategien zur Förderung des Leseverstehens für BA III-Studenten an der YUFL (2014)
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    ဂျာမန်ဆိုရိုးများကို သဒ္ဒါရှုထောင့်မှ လေ့လာခြင်း (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2009, vol.1, No.1)
    Abstract
    ဂျာမန်ဘာသာ လေ့လာသင်ကြားနေသော ကျောင်းသား၊ ကျောင်းသူများ စကားပုံများ၊ ဆိုရိုးများကို လေ့လာရာတွင် သဒ္ဒါနှင့် တွဲဖက်လေ့လာခြင်းဖြင့် အလွယ်တကူ မှတ်မိစေရန်နှင့် အသိပညာ ဗဟုသုတတိုးတက်စေရန် ရည်ရွယ်၍ နယ်ပယ်ကမျိုးစုံရိှ စကားပုံ၊ ဆိုရိုးများကို ဂျာမန်သဒ္ဒါအရ အပိုင်း(၅)ပိုင်းခွဲ၍ အုပ်စုတူရာစုစည်းပြီး စကားပုံ၊ ဆိုရိုး (၃၅) ခုကို ဂျာမန်သဒ္ဒါ အမျိုးအစားတူရာကို အုပ်စုခွဲ၍ စုစည်းတင်ပြထားပါသည်။

     

    A Study of Formal and Informal Usages which are used Differently in German Language (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2011, vol.3, No.1)
    Nay Zin Kyaw*, Tsu Thondayi New**
    Abstract

    This paper is a study of some formal and informal usages of German language in different situations. While studying these usages, different ways of greeting and language used in classroom situation are focused. In German language, there are elecen kinds of greeting words to greet with each other and eight ways of bidding farewell. In studying this paper, the students who are studying German language will have knowledge to use the formal and informal usages, which are used differently, appropriately according to the situation.

     

    A Contrastive Analysis of Affixation System between German and Myanmar (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2014, vol.6, No.1)
    Cherry Soe Lwin*, Tsu Thondayi Nwe**, Nay Zin Kyaw ***
    Abstract

    In this paper, Affixation System of German and Myanmar are analyzed. In this study, German and Myanmar words are described by adding the prefix, interfix and suffix. This paper includes the distinctive form of German and Myanmar affixes. The affixes play the different role in German and Myanmar language. So some affixation systems are studied together with the example words taken from two languages. This paper focuses prefixes, interfixes and suffixes. Descriptive and comparative methods are used in this study.

     

    A Study of the Role of Media that Develop the Speaking Skills and Listening Skills (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2015, vol.6, No.1)
    Myint Myint Aye*, Ei Ei Khaing**, Nay Zin Kyaw***, Swe New Mmwe****
    Abstract

    This paper presents the role of media used in teaching the speaking skill and the listening skill of German language as a foreign language. Media play an important role in teaching a foreign language. With the rise of advanced technology, language teaching is getting more and more effective. This paper aims at effective teaching through the appropriate use of modern media based on the course books prepared in line with the changes of times. By using the media as teaching facilities in teaching, it was found out that students not only showed more interest in learning but also actively took part in classroom activities.

     

    A Study of Translation Errors Made by Third Year German Specialization Students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020 June, Vol.11, No.2)
    Nay Zin Kyaw*, Wai Mar Myint**
    Abstract

    The module “Translation and Interpretation Skills- I” is one of the core courses for third year German specialization students (B 1.1) at YUFL in their first semester. The ability to translate is a language skill that has to be mastered. Here, the students should know that the mother language is very important for translation. German specialization students make errors when they translate German texts into Myanmar. Therefore, an analysis of translation errors is needed to find solutions to these problems. The type of this research was descriptive and quantitative research which used error analysis procedures to classify and analyze the students’ error. The aims of this study were to observe types of translation errors in translating texts from German into Myanmar, to determine the types of translation errors that are most common, to find out the causes of errors and to appreciate their mother language. The results of this study will help languages teachers and learners to improve translation teaching and learning. The participants were 80 third year German specialization students at Yangon University of Foreign Languages. The data were collected from the students’ translated texts. Translation problems and causes of errors were solved by using survey. The data were analyzed by considering by percentage and content analysis. The result shows that the most frequent translation errors are morphology errors. The causes of errors found in this study included carelessness, lack of vocabulary, and anxiety. This Study can be provided in student’s translation skills.
    Keywords: error analysis, translation errors and morphology errors, translation assessment

     

  • Conducting Research

    • A Comparative Study of the Uses of German Modal Particles and Myanmar Verb Support Particles

  • Lei Mon Maung Maung

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, History and Culture, Language Assessment

  • Academic Background

    • 2004 – 2007 BA (German), YUFL
    • 2008 Certificate in Basic Diplomatic Skills, MOFA
    • 2009-2010 Diploma in English, MUFL
    • 2011 – 2012 MA Q (German), YUFL
    • 2013 – 2015 MA (German) YUFL
  • Working Experience

    • 04.09.2009 – 30.11.2011 worked as Tutor at German Department in Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
    • 05.12.2011- 11.08.2016 worked as Tutor at German Department in Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • 12.08.2016 – 01.12.2019 worked as Assistant Lecturer at German Department in Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • 02.12.2019 – today work as Lecturer at German Department in Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Academic Activities

    Participation in Committees of YUFL

    • 18.08.2014-28.08.2014 Training on Teaching Methodology for German Language Teachers, Indonesia, Jakarta
    • 03.08.2020-30.10.2020 Online Training on Teachers’ Competence Improvement
    • 26.07.2021-20.08.2021 Online Sommersprachkurs Deutsch als Fremdsprache
  • Book Publication

    • (2012) A Study of Adverbs of Manner in German and Myanmar
    • (2017) A Study of Speech Act for Directives in the German Language (အကောင်းဆုံးသုတေသနဆု၊ ၂၀၁၇)
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    A Contrastive Study of Adverbs of Manner in German and Myanmar
    Daw Thang Khan Dim*, Daw Lei Mon Maung Maung**, Daw Sein U Swe***
    * Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    ** Tutor, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    *** Tutor, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Abstract
    This paper contrasts adverbs of manner in Myanmar and German. The data from grammar books in Myanmar and German, prescribed books, particularly those on Myanmar grammar, and Internet websites are collected. The data obtained are contrasted and analyzed.

     

    A STUDY OF SPEECH ACT FOR DIRECTIVES IN THE GERMAN LANGUAGE
    Daw Thang Khan Dim*, Daw Lei Mon Maung Maung**, Daw Sein U Swe***
    * Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    ** Assistant Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    *** Assistant Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Abstract

    The basic concept to learn in Speech Act is that a speaker who makes an utterance has the purpose of referring to one action or performance. In this paper, we aim to study the utterances, and about directives such as confirming what is right or wrong about something, questioning, making commands and requests with the use of speech act. Moreover, the understanding of directives by undergraduate students in Second Year and Fourth Year, specializing in German language is analyzed and the findings are discussed and presented in this paper.

     

    Types of Linguistic Losses in Georg Noack’s German Translation of Myanmar Short Story “အသုံးမကျတဲ့မိန်းမ”
    Thang Khan Dim1 , Sein U Swe2 , Lei Mon Maung Maung3
    1 Associate Professor and Head, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    2 Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    3 Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Abstract

    The present study uses a Myanmar short story “အသုံးမကျတဲ့မိန်းမ” and its German translation text “die nutzlose Frau”. The Myanmar short story “အသုံးမကျတဲ့မိန်းမ” is written by “Min Lu” in 1995 and its German translation “die nutzlose Frau” by Georg Noack is published in 2009. The investigated short story was collected from the Myanmar short stories book “လမ်းဖြတ်ကူးသော ဝတ္ထုတိုများ (that are crossing the road)”. Based on theories of translation both of texts are examined, compared, analyzed and described to highlight some semantic, syntactic and cultural losses for translating the short story “die nutzlose Frau” by Georg Noack (2009) and to identify the other features (similarities or differences) in the translation. The study discovered losses occurring in the translating of the literary text. Not only 3 types of losses but also other interesting points were also found because of different society, literature and, selected contemporary short story by translator. It’s figured out that target language readers also get to know Myanmar’s society, economic situation, culture, and also learn about slang used in the 1995s.

     

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing Research

    • (2020) 3 Types of Linguistic Losses in Georg Noack’s German Translation of Myanmar Short Story “အသုံးမကျတဲ့မိန်းမ”

  • Daw Khin Yamon Aye

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching, Language Assessment, Literature, History and Culture

  • Academic Background

    • Diploma (English, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
    • B.A. (German, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages)
    • M.A. (German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor (10.09.2012, German Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Assistant Lecturer (12.08.2016, German Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Lecturer (24.03.2020, German Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
  • Academic Activities

    • Member of The Senate Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics (From 2019 -up to now)
    • Member of YUFL’s Health Care Committee (From 2017 August – 2020)
    • Third Southeast Asian Summer School for German Studies: “German connects ASEAN” (Bangkok, Thailand in 2015)
    • Member of YUFL’s Red-Cross Association (From 2013 July -up to now)
    • Online Course of German Language and Culture by University of Freiburg (2.9.2021-24.9.2021)
  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    A Study of the Personal Denomination in German Business News, Business Journals and Business Magazines
    Wai Mar Myint * Khin Yamon Aye** Sai Sithu Win***
    Lecturer* Assistant Lecturer** Assistant Lecturer ***
    Abstract
    The aim of this study is to find out the functions of personal denomination which indicate or point out someone with a name, a title or an assignment. Personal denomination is a class or kind of persons distinguished by a specific name. In this paper, we focus on how they are used and what these word combinations is used in economic field. Moreover, the understanding of their functions may help language learners to understand how the meaning of the word or vocabulary can be translated and to realize what this personal denomination really means.
    Keywords: Grammar, semantics, linguistics, literature

     

    An Error Analysis of German Specialization Students’ Writing Assignments (B1.1)
    Khin Yamon Aye1
    Abstract

    Error Analysis is one of the important themes in foreign language acquisition research’s field. This study aims to analyse errors in writing assignments of 83 BA III German Specialization Students for the module GER 3102A (B1.1) and to improve students’ writing skills by knowing and correcting their mistakes or errors. In this study, the most common errors found in their writing assignments and the reasons why these errors occur in the writing assignments are presented. For most of these students, Myanmar is their mother language and English is their first foreign language. Using an error classification way, 2 assignments concerning about a personal letter and an application letter by 83 students were analyzed and classified into 17 types of errors according to German Linguist Karin Kleppin. Learners’ errors are firstly identified, classified and finally explained as Corder claimed. As results, 17 types of errors can be found in both assignments. Moreover, case, spelling mistakes and choice of word are the most common errors in their written works and according to the findings, students are weak in grammar e.g. in German case form and then, their carelessness and ignorance of correct spelling make them difficult in learning vocabulary. Moreover, they make the mistakes in choice of word because they are still influenced by the existence of particular system in their first foreign language English and their mother tongue Myanmar.

    Keywords: error analysis, assignments, learners’ errors, case, spelling mistakes, choice of word

     

    The Analysis of Figurative Languages in the selected Poems by Ingeborg Bachmann and Paul Celan
    Khin Yamon Aye
    Lecturer, Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Yangon, Myanmar
    Abstract

    Abstract
    Literature is a term used to describe the written texts, which are aesthetically especially for language arts written and expressed stylistic by the author (Metzler Literatur-Lexikon, 1984: 258). The most intense literary form is the poem. To analyze or understand the linguistic context from the poem the theory of figurative language is also needed. This study focuses on the analysis of figurative languages in the poems of Ingeborg Bachmann and Paul Celan.
    The main objectives of this study is to find out the types of figurative language, in which way it is expressed in poems, what kinds of figurative language is the most frequently used by this both authors and what they mean. Here, one poem from each author is analyzed. In this study, the qualitative method is used and the collecting data are analyzed descriptively. According to the study, on Ingeborg Bachmann’s poem, she uses enjambment, metaphor and personification. Meanwhile, on a selected poem of Paul Celan, he also uses not only enjambment and metaphor but also alliteration, anaphora, ellipsis, irony, oxymoron and symbol. According to the findings, it can be meant that a poem needs literary devices such as alliteration, anaphora and ellipsis etc. which are supplied to form a poem. The most remarkable literary devices such as metaphor and enjambment which are also used by both authors are literally needed to decorate poems.

    Keywords: poem, figurative language, enjambment, metaphor, literature

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Gender-based Differences in Foreign Language Learning Styles in Some Countries in ASEAN and Effect on Teaching Approaches on Expected Learning Outcomes

  • Daw Win Win Aye

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Culture, Linguistics and Translation

  • Academic Background

    • 1986- 1992 B.Sc. (Zoology), Yangon University
    • 1993- 1998 M.Sc. (Zoology) Yangon University Thesis: Morphology and Productive Biology of Danais limniace Cramer, 1775 from Gwe Tauk New (1998)
    • 1996- 2000 Diploma in German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • 2010-2012 MA (German) Yangon University of Foreign Languages Thesis: Die Thematisierung von Wortbildungstypen in ausgewählten Lehrwerken für Deutsch als Fremdsprache (2012)
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Participation in Committees of YUFL

    • Member of Curriculum Modernization Committee (YUFL)
    • Member of Teaching and Learning Effectiveness Committee (YUFL)
    • Member of Management of Students Affairs (YUFL Autonomy)
    • Member of Language Standardization Committee (YUFL)
    • Member of Supporting Learning Committee (YUFL)
    • Member of Library Development Committee (YUFL)
  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    A Comparative Study of Subordinate Clauses in Myanmar and German (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2012, vol.4, No.1)
    Abstract
    In this paper, the similarities and differences of subordinate clauses in Myanmar and German have been studied. In this study, Myanmar and German subordinate clauses have been compared by analyzing their position of the verb. This paper includes the distinctive pattern of German subordinate clause. The subordinate clause plays the distinct role in German language. So subordinate clause is essential to be able to translate easily and effectively from one language to another. In German language, the verb can be moved depending on the position of the subordinate clause. It is found that basic Myanmar and German sentence patterns are same that it has only subject and verb. If a sentence includes subject, verb and object, the sentence patterns are different. The position of the words and the place of the verb are also different. Such similarities and differences have been studied together with the example sentence patterns taken from both languages.

     

    An Analytical Study on German Affixes (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2013, vol.5, No.1)
    Abstract

    In this paper, German affixes are studied. In this study, German words are described by adding the prefix, infix and suffix. This paper includes the distinctive form of German affixes. The affixes play the distinct role in German language and are essential to be able to form the words. Such normal and distinctive forms are studied together with the example words taken from the German language. This paper focuses only on prefixes and suffixes. Descriptive method is used in this study.

     

    An Analytical Study of German Verb Prefix (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2015, vol.7, No.1)
    Abstract

    In this paper, German affixes, the German verbs through the addition of the prefixes and the distinctive system of German verb prefixes are also described. The verb prefix plays the distinct role in the German language. So prefix is very essential to be able to create the new verbs. Such normal and distinctive forms have been presented together with the example verbs taken from the German language. This paper focuses on only German verb prefixes.

     

    An Analytical Study of Some Mottos in German Language (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, Vol. 11, No. 2)
    Abstract

    Motto is very important in every field for a person, family or institution. When a plan is done, a motto should be created. If with a motto a man starts work, man can succeed in the work. Between mottos and slogans, there are differences. Motto warns to everyone. Mottos can encourage, remind and urge to everyone, what should do and shouldn’t do. Therefore, motto is essential for everyone in daily life. Many mottos are in every field but mottos from two fields are chosen to analyze in this study because education and health are very important roles for the development of the country. This paper presents to study the mottos from the point of view of linguistics and especially structure used in motto. The mottos are collected, analyzed and described to highlight the syntactic level. The paper is presented by descriptive method. The research aims to know the construction of mottos according to syntactic level, to know the mottos’ structure that are most common, how important is a motto in daily life in every field, to know how to create mottos and to give the message. The result of the paper shows four levels: word, phrase, clause and sentence. The Language learners can also classify the mottos’ structure according to their learned grammatical rules. The learners can also get knowledge about mottos and it can provide four skills, especially they can read the literature text, Newspaper, Journal well and can write essays about mottos and slogans, based on the result of this study.

    Keywords: mottos, syntax, syntactic level

     

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing Research

    • Research – Study of Construction of Mottos in German and Myanmar

  • Daw Yadanar Myint

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A – French (2004) – Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
    • M.A – French (2014) – Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
    • Postgraduate Diploma in English (2009) – Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    Participation in Committees of YUFL

    • French Department’s Board of Study

    Curriculum Project / Plan (teaching textbook)

    —

  • Book Publication

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Paper Publications

    A Brief Study of Well-Known Festival in France (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2016, December, Volume 7, No. 1, Page-45-50)

    Daw Yadanar Myint
    Abstract
    In this paper, a certain number of well-known festivals in France are presented along with their origins and purposes. Moreover, the changes that people make for the way to celebrate these festivals throughout different times are also discussed.

     

    Students’ Perception on Learning Business French subject; A needs analysis approach (By Daw Yadanar Myint) (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, May, Volume 11, No. 1, Page-122-128)
    Daw Yadanar Myint
    Abstract

    This paper examines the current teaching process of Business French subject in Mandalay University of Foreign Languages (MUFL). The study was dedicated 49 students from final-year French major of MUFL, and to analyze their perceptions on current situation of Business French learning how the subject could effective in one of the modules of French language. The result of questionnaires was evaluated by quantitative methods approaches. Based on data analysis of the questionnaires, it finds (1) the purpose of learning that students want to add a more specific focus to their Business French; (2) the practical exercise more than theoretical learning when study at the MUFL;(3) engaging the video clips, audio visual teaching materials should effective and communicative; (4) the students want to learn intercultural communicative competence and (5) the outcome of learning Business French to meet the students’ satisfaction. This study indicates the students’ perception on learning Business French with the improvement of business knowledge and communication skills by analysis the needs of students.

    Keywords: Business French, Needs analysis, Effectiveness and Communicative, Outcome of learning Business French

     

    Students’ Perception towards Prospective Online Learning: Implication for French Language Teaching during the Covid-19 Pandemic (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, December, Volume 11, No. 2, Page-280-288)
    Daw Yadanar Myint
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study was to identify the perception of students on online learning for French language during the COVID-19 pandemic through student survey. The survey was conducted by distributing an online questionnaire to students in French major at Mandalay University of Foreign Languages (MUFL). In this study, a self-administered questionnaire was developed and emailed to all students for data collection. All the academic years of B.A students in French major participated in the survey and a sample size calculated as 96. The result of questionnaire was evaluated by quantitative method approach that is easy to evaluate the perceptions of students. The study identified the demographic information of students, the student’s knowledge about online learning process, online learning for French language and future students’ perspectives on overall satisfaction of online learning. Overall, 53.1% of students are interested in online learning in French language. Thus, the overall results in this study indicated that the students’ perception was positive to online learning for French language. However, successful implementation of online learning will require the effective online teaching curriculum as well as good preparation in implementation of online learning.

    Key Words: Covid-19, Online Learning, Face-to-Face teaching, Students’ perceptions, French language

     

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing Research

    • The prayer bead having different numbers (DOC.EU, University of Bucharest (Universitatea din Bucuresti), Romania)
    • A Study of French Polysemous Words for Learning Context in Myanmar Language (Universities Research Journal)

  • Daw May Thwe Htun

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

     Linguistics, French Literature, Stylistics, History, Culture, Research,  Language Teaching and Learning

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Hsu Paing Swe

    Department of French

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Academic Background

    • 2005    Diploma in Global English, Yangon University
    • 2006    Bachelor of Arts in French, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • 2007    Diplôme d’Études en Langue Française (DELFB2), Institut Français de Birmanie
    • 2010    Diploma in Computer Science, Yangon University
    • 2011    Diploma in International Law, Yangon University
    • 2018    Master of Arts in French, Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    • 2020 Master in Theoretical and Experimental Linguistics, University of the Basque Country, Spain
  • Academic Activities

      • 2018 – 2020     :           Member, Committee for International Relations
      • 2021 – present :       Secretary, Senate Committee for Teaching and Learning Effectiveness
  • Research Title and Publication

    1. Su Paing Swe. (2017). A study of errors made by Fourth year BA French major students in News Translation. Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal, Vol.8(No.1), 47-56
    1. Su Paing Swe. (2019). Practical approaches to develop the communicative competence of French major students in Translation. Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal, Vol. 10 (No.1), 141-147

    Abstract of Paper Publications

    (1). A Study of Errors Made by Fourth Year BA French Major Students in News Translation (By Daw Su Paing Swe)

    (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal, Vol. 8, No. 1, December, 2017)

    Abstract

    This research paper deals with the errors made by Fourth year BA French major students from the academic year 2016-2017 and 2015-2016 in translating local and international news published in the local newspaper Myanma Alinn and French newspaper Le Monde from French to Burmese and from Myanmar to French. The research has been carried out with the analysis of data collected from the 4th year French major students of the two consecutive academic years and the research methods used are the quantitative and qualitative methods. As a result of this research, it is discovered that there are some common error types that most of the students usually make, and the errors made in local news and those in international news are different. By using the findings of this paper, new methods in teaching translation can be found.

    Keywords: News translation, translation errors, teaching translation

     

    (2). Practical Approaches to Develop the Communicative Competence of French Major Students in Translation (By Daw Su Paing Swe)

    (Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal, Vol. 10, No. 1, July, 2019)

    Abstract

    This research paper will examine the effectiveness of approaches practically used to teach translation in the classroom during two consecutive academic years among the 3rd and 4th year BA French Major students in YUFL. Its aim is to find out the suitable and effective methods for students to develop their communicative competence, which is the most fundamental competence of the translation profession. From this qualitative and quantitative research study, students’ most common problem in translation will be analyzed with the teacher’s different approaches and the appropriate teaching methods for translation will be discussed in order to prepare students as professional translators in the industry.

    Keywords: translation problem, communicative competence in translation, approaches for teaching translation

  • Publishing Books

    None

  • Conferences

  • Area of Interests

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Conducting Research

    Ongoing research

    1. Practical Solutions for Student’s Problems in Translation (French to Myanmar) (YUFL Peer-reviewed Journal, 2022)
    1. Effects of neighboring creaky tone on low tone of Burmese in post-lexical context (Proceedings of ConSOLE XXIX, 2021) 

    Educational Plan

    Participate in YUFL Upgrading Library 2025 Project (member)

  • Daw Htet Htet Myat

  • Position

    Associate Professor, French Department

  • Academic Background

    • DALF C2 (Diplôme Approfondi De Langue Française) (2009)
    • DALF C1 (Diplôme Approfondi De Langue Française) (2006)
    • DELF 2nd Degré (Diplôme d’Études En Langue Française) (2005)
    • DELF 1er Degré (Diplôme d’Études En Langue Française(2001)
    • Diplôme De Civilisation (Diploma of Civilization Course) (2008)
    • Attestation de réussite des cours de français du tourisme (2004)
    • Attestation de réussite du cours sur les Institutions françaises (Certificate of French Institutions Course) (2005)
    • Attestation de réussite des cours de français du niveau 5 ème année (2010)
    • Attestation( stage pédagogique de Français Langue Étrangère) (du 17 au 21 décembre 2007)
    • Attestation( stage pédagogique de Français Langue Étrangère) (du 22 au 26 juin,2009)
    • Sc.(Zoology) (1994)
    • Sc. (Zoology)(2001)
    • Dip in French (2000)
    • A(French)(2013)
    • Dip in Global English (2008)
    • Dip in Postgraduate English (2018)
  • Academic Activities

    • French Department’s Board of Study
  • Research Title and Publication

    None

  • Publishing Books

    None

  • Conferences

  • Area of Interests

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Conducting Research

    None

  • Dr Than Than Aye

    Associate Professor
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Myanmar) Q (1993) – University of
    • MA (Myanmar) (2002) – University of
    • Ph.D(Myanmar) (2008) – Yangon University
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • Technological University Lashio Journal of Research and Innovation Internal Review Committee. (2019-2020)

    မိမိပါဝင်ရေးသားပြုစုခဲ့သော ပညာရပ်ဆိုင်ရာ၊ သင်ကြားရေးဆိုင်ရာ၊ သင်ရိုးစာအုပ်များ၊ သို့မဟုတ် စီမံချက်များ။

    • မြန်မာစာပါရဂူကျမ်းအညွှန်း ( ရန်ကုန်တက္ကသိုလ်၊မြန်မာစာဌာန)
    • ဘာသာဗေဒဝေါဟာရအဘိဓာန် ( ရန်ကုန်တက္ကသိုလ်၊မြန်မာစာဌာန)
    • မြန်မာဗန်းစကားများ ( ရန်ကုန်တက္ကသိုလ်၊မြန်မာစာဌာန)
    • ရှေးဟောင်းမွန်ကျောက်စာ ( ရန်ကုန်တက္ကသိုလ်၊မြန်မာစာဌာန)
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Analogy in Myanmar Language (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Vol.VIII,No.7A,June 2010, Myanmar(Literature) and Myanmar (Language) ,Page(441-457))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract

    This paper looks at some of the key words in the Myanmar language.Study the analogySubmitted Simplicity is the expression in place of a word Whether It comes in the form Of an intimate word or phrase.Linguistically, there are reasons for language development.That Explain that the reasons include analogies in language It is.

    *Dr, Tutor, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University.

     

    The Pun Language (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Vol.X, No.8, March 2012, Myanmar (Language), Foreign(Language), English and Oriental Studies ,Page(103-119))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract

    In this paper, we will look at some of the most important concepts in the Myanmar languageIt is studied from an sematical point of view. MeaningIs a word that has more than one meaning or multiple meanings Yes. In anatomy, synonyms are used interchangeably It can be found in terms of plurals and plurals. Religion Not every new word is created, but the meaning of the words is already there It is widely used interchangeably with vocabulary. And religion It also reduces the burden of words. Definition in Linguistics Learning can help develop vocabulary.

    *Dr, Assistant Lecturer, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University

     

    Mistake Analogy in Myanmar language (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Vol.XIV, No.7, June 2016, Myanmar (Language), English (Language), Page(217-230))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract

    This paper or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-partyPublications This is a paper that examines the analogies that occur. In this study in place of one word, enter a word that is more closely related to another term it can be misinterpreted by using it. Therefore, Myanmar literature and Myanmar language; Contribute to the broad meaning of Myanmar customary terminology you can know.

    *Dr, Lecturer, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University

     

    Myanmar proverbs about men and women(JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE Vol.XVI, No.6B, December 2018, Myanmar (Language), Page(347-360))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract
    This paper is about Burmese proverbs about the nature of men and women This paper or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-party publications. There are many proverbs It is widely used in Myanmar society. In this way Learn the proverbs and sayings that differentiate between men and women by nature Found Based on these findings, a field of linguistics It is studied from a sociological point of view. Therefore, Myanmar By studying the proverbs that are prevalent in society, the Burmese language I think we can study development.

    *Dr, Lecture, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University

     

    Excessive meaning in Myanmar language (Kyaing Tong University Research Journal Vol.9, No.1, December,2018.page(8-13))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract
    This paper explores the concepts of transcendence in the Myanmar language Yes. Beyond the meaning of synonyms; Between two teeth For example Contains more than one word in black and white. Excessive meaning is language it is not a new creation but a widespread use of existing words Yes The meaning of the Myanmar language is due to the excessive use of meaning in the Myanmar language.You will be able to know and understand wealth.

    *Dr, Lecturer, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University

     

    Use humor in cartoons (Dagon University Commemoration of 25th Anniversary Silver Jubilee Research Journal Vol9, No.1, December 2018, page(48-54))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract
    This paper examines the humorous language used in cartoon language from a socioliguistics and semantics perspective it is a study of two. Language is the art of imagining literature Is a visual representation of Myanmar language based on cartoon language. This paper or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-party publications. There is a cartoon like thisHumorous words. Humans can be entertained by learning vocabulary , it is also an expression of intelligence.

    *Dr, Associate Professor, Department of Myanmar, Technological University Lashio

     

    Construction terminology and language (TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY LASHIO JOURNAL OF RESEARCH & INNOVATION, Vol 01, Issue 03, September 2020, page(176-181))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract
    Burmese literature and language in Myanmar is the mother tongue of all subjects.There is Construction is not a modern science. From the Bagan period, there was a pagoda. Construction terms from donations such as school building Uses found in linguistics, it is not just the basic form of language Meaning is also important.Therefore, construction in Myanmar language Learning vocabulary is the study of the mother tongue, Myanmar literature and Myanmar language The nature of words;The breadth of meanings; Review usage in general Submitted.

    *Dr, Associate Professor, Department of Myanmar, Technological University Lashio

     

    The Study of Ambiguity In Thingazar proverb (TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY (TOUNGGOO) Journal of Science and Engineering TUTJSE, 2020, Vol – 1, No-2, November, 2020, page(278-284))
    Than Than Aye*
    Abstract
    This paper or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-party publications. The proverb of the funeral is a sermon preached by the funeral director.This paper or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-party publications. The proverb of the abbotMany are written in the language of the language. These uses we also learned how to use black meanings in Like this, the funeral director Creating and using the language of ancient monks by studying the proverbs of the great. It is presented to know how to do and intelligence.

    *Dr, Associate Professor, Department of Myanmar, Technological University Lashio

     

  • Conducting Research

    • The accent of ancient plays (ရှေးပြဇာတ်များရှိလေသံ)
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Courses

  • Dr Kyin Thar Myint

    Professor
    Department Of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Hons) (Myanmar) 1994 – Yangon University
    • M.A (Myanmar) 1998 – Yangon University
    • Ph.D (Myanmar) 2007 – Yangon University
    • Dip in English 2011 – Yangon University
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    University Magazine Committee

    • Kyaing Tong University – (2011)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Language – (2013, 2014, 2015)
    • Tangon University – (2016, 2017)

    မိမိပါဝင်ရေးသား ပြုစုခဲ့သော ပညာရပ်ဆိုင်ရာ ၊ သင်ကြားရေးဆိုင်ရာ ၊ သင်ရိုးစာအုပ်များ (သို့မဟုတ်) စီမံချက်များ

    • တက္ကသိုလ်ဝင်တန်းဆင့် မြန်မာစာဂျာနယ် (၂၀၁၁ )
    • မြန်မာနိုင်ငံစာစစ်အဖွဲ့ တက္ကသိုလ် ဝင်တန်းအဆင့် စာစီစာကုံး စာအုပ် ( ၂၀၁၁ )
    • ရန်ကုန်နိုင်ငံခြား ဘာသာတက္ကသိုလ် (အခြေခံအဆင့်) အဖတ် PM- 112 A (၂၀၁၄-၂၀၁၅ )
    • ရန်ကုန်နိုင်ငံခြား ဘာသာတက္ကသိုလ် ( ကြားအဆင့် ) အဖတ် PM- 212 A (၂၀၁၄-၂၀၁၅ )

    မိမိဝါသနာအလျောက် ရေးသားပုံနှိပ် တည်းဖြတ်ခဲ့သော စာအုပ်၊ စာတန်းများ

    • မြန်မာစာ ပါရဂူဘွဲ့ရ ဆရာကြီး ဆရာမကြီးများ၏ ရွှေမြင်းမိုရ် စာစီစာကုံးများ (ဓူဝံစာပေ ၊ ၂၀၁၂ )
    • ကံ့ကော်ဝတ်ရည် မြန်မာစာစီစာကုံး ၁၀၀ (ကံ့ကော်ဝတ်ရည်စာပေ ၊၂၀၁၂ )
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Than Cho Poem of Shwe Gu Gyi pagoda by Venerable Manle Sayardaw ( Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science VoI.XVII,No.6A August 2019)
    Abstract

    This study is dissertation which presents Than Cho poems of Shwe Gu Gyi pagoda by Venerable Manle Sayardaw from the literature point of view. In doing so ,Shwe Gu Gyi pagoda Than Cho poems which are among the poems written by Venerable Manle Sayardaw are considered to be an observed one. In studying ,the research is divided into three parts.(1)The brief biography of Venerable Manle Sayardaw(2)The nature of Than Cho(3)The study of Than Cho poems of Shwe Gu Gyi Pagoda. This is to reveal the literature value of Than Cho poems. This study aims not only to know the writing style of Than Cho poems which is seen in the ancient literature but also to support the development of Myanmar literature and language effectiveness.

    Key Word – Than Cho, rhyme, rhyme comesponding word, term, word.

     

    Author Khin Khin Htoo”s the art of creation drama “Ku Kuu” (Yangon University of Distance Education Research Journal- Vol.10,No.1 December, 2019)
    Abstract

    In this paper , the creative skill of writing short story Ku Kuu composed by Khin Khin Htoo is presented from the point of view of Literature. Ku Kuu is marked as a subject for studying in the creative skill of writing a short story. In addition to the synopsis, the creative skill of writing a short story, the skill of creating (moulding ) the nature of the characters, the skill of creating background setting inserting skill of the author’s opinion are revealed through the short story. It is aim for the progress of Myanmar Literature and advancement of literature in forming novels.

    Key words – Creative skill, View, background,setting, character.

     

    Admonitory Lyric Poem of Venerable Leti Sayardaw (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science ) Vol.XVIII.No 6B. August 2020)
    Abstract

    This study is dissertation which presents admonitory Iyric poem of Venerable Leti Sayardaw from the literature point of view. In doing so, admonitory lyric poems which are among the poems written by Venerable Leti Sayardaw are considered to be an observed one. In studying the research divided into three parts.1.The brief biography of Venerable Leti Sayardaw.2.The poems of Venerable Leti Sayardaw.3The study of admonitory lyric poem. This is to reveal the literature value of Admonitory Lyric Poems which is seen in the ancient literature. This study aims not only to know the writing style of Admonitory Lyric poems which is seen in the ancient literature but also to support the development of Myanmar Literature and Language effectiveness.

    Key Word – Lyric poem, admonitory, remorse, the secular world, love letter
    (a letter written in sympathetic Vein )

     

    Style of the article “The Fire of Anxiety” by author Ju (Yangon University of Distance Education Research Journal Vol.11,No.1 December 2020)
    Abstract
    This study is a dissertation which presents article of “The Fire of Anxiety” by author Ju from the writing style point of view. In studying the research is divided to three parts.1.the nature of the article.2.the interdiction of article “The Fire of Anxiety”. 3. The written style of the article “The Fire of Anxiety”. This is to reveal the Literature value of writing style which is seen in the article. This study aim not only to know the writing style in the article but also to support the development of Myanmar Literature and Language effectiveness.

    Key Word – Writing style, tone, vocabulary, sentence, article

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research paper for Y.U.F L 60 minutes Talks.
    • Preparing research for writing style.
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses.
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses.
    • Planing for Myanmar Languages for online Teaching.
    • Discussion@ Planing for New Apply Myanmar Courses.

  • Dr. Khin Myo Aye

    Associate Professor
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Honours) (Myanmar), (2002) – University of Yangon
    • M.A (Myanmar) (2004) – University of Yangon
    • Diploma in English (2005) – University of Yangon
    • PhD (Myanmar) (2020) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • Capacity Building and Training of Trainer on Pedagogy (member) (2019) University Yangon of Distance Education
    • Research Committee (member) (2021) – Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    An Analysis of the use of Time Deixis Found in Myanmar Ancient Scripts (Volume 1) ((Yangon University of Distance Education Reserch Journal) Vol.11,No.1 December 2020)
    Khin Myo Aye*
    Abstract

    This paper analyzed the use of time deixis found in Myanmar ancient scripts (Volume 1). Time deixis includes words which indicate the recorded times of the speakers, the listeners and the objects in the scripts. In this paper, time deixis is classified into three: present, past and future.

    *Lecturer, Myanmar Department, Yangon University of Distance Education

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research paper for YUFL Research Journal (2022)
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Course

  • U Aung Myint Sein

    Assistant Professor
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Q) Myanmar (1997) – University of Yangon
    • M.A Myanmar (2003) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    —

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research for Ph.D thesis
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Courses

  • Dr Wai Wai Myint

    Professor & Head
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Myanmar) Q (1987) – University of Yangon
    • M.A (Myanmar) (1996) – University of Mawlamyine
    • Ph.D (Myanmar) (2010) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • Visiting Professor at Muban Chombuang Rajabhat University, Thailand (2017)
    • YUFL Administrative Board member (2021)
    • YUFL Academic Senate Committee member (2021)
    • YUFL Website Committee (member) (2021)
    • Committee for strategic Planning (Secretary) (2021)
    • Campus Planning & Maintenance Committee (member) (2021)
    • University Autonomy Implementation Roup (Management of Student Affairs) (member) (2019-2020)
    • YUFL Chater Committee (member) (2019-2020)
    • Autonomy Preparation Ethics and Integrity Control (Leader) (2019-2020)
    • YUFL Sport Committee (Chair) (2018-2020)
    • YUFL Scout (Chair) (2019-2020)
    • YUFL Akari Hostel (Warden)
    • University Magazine Committee (Bago University, Banmaw University, YUFL)
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Pali grammar usage and Myanmar prose style of Innwa era (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE (Vol.IX,No.7B) , 2011(June ), P(77-91))
    Wai Wai Myint*
    Abstract

    This paper presents a part of Innwa era prose writing style in the name of ‘Pali grammar usage and Myanmar prose style of Innwa era’. Myanmar Prose’s writing style is developed based on Pali literature and Buddha literature. Myanmar prose obtained its own writing form by translating the Pali language. In the development of Myanmar prose, Pali phrase did not include but Pali grammar usage included . So, this paper analysis the characteristics of the Pali literature’s prominent and the influence of Pali grammatical usage in the Innwa era due to the Pali proficient authors’ preferences.

    * Dr., Lecturer, Department of Myanmar, Pegu Degree College

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research paper for YUFL 60 minutes Talk (2021)
    • Preparing research for “Analysing Surface meaning & Deep meaning from Myanmar Language” (2021-2022)
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Courses

  • Dr Shwe Yi Myat Mon

    Lecturer
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Myanmar) Q (2009) – Dagon University
    • M.A (Myanmar) (2013) – Dagon University
    • MRes, (Myanmar) (2014) – Dagon University
    • Ph.D (Myanmar) (2019) – University of Yangon
    • Diploma in English (2019) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Morphological style from Nay Win Myin’s Short Stories (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE (Vol.XVI, No.6B) , 2018, P (415-435))
    Shwe Yi Myat Mon*
    Abstract

    This paper is a compilation of the morphological styles learned from Nay Win Myint’s short stories. In doing so, examines the level of morphological, which is a sub-level of linguistics,based on the style and language style of disciplines of linguistics. At the morphological level,exemplification of stories and demonstrative text are used to illustrated the identification of how word are formed and used.It is then screened to assess the peculiarities and values of the language style used to illustrates the author’s short stories.

    *Tutor, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

     

    Syntatic style from Nay Win Myin’s Short Stories (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE (Vol.XVIII,No.6D) , 2020, P (383-401))
    Shwe Yi Myat Mon*
    Abstract

    This paper is a study of Syntatic Style in Nay Win Myint’s Short Stories. In doing so, it is based on the method of Linguistic style. According to Linguistics, Syntatic is the most important role in that field. Thus, in this paper,the structure of the Syntatic structure is analyzed and presented.In order to its structure, how to use the simple and complex sentences is examined.Moreover,also assessed and analyzed about the author’s ability to use Syntatic structures, which improve the effectiveness of the short stories and the ability to convey the message to the readers.

    *Tutor, Department of Myanmar, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research paper for “Teaching Myanmar Language using songs Teaching Method”
    • Preparing research paper for “Sociolinguistic Point of View by Nay Win Myint’s ‘PaZinYinKwe’ Short Stories”
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Courses

  • Dr Htet Htet Sein Win

    Lecturer
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Hons) Myanmar (2006) – Dagon University
    • M.A Myanmar (2008) – Dagon University
    • Diploma in English (2018) – University of Yangon
    • Ph.D Myanmar (2019) – University of Yangon
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • Yangon University of Education, Magazine Committee, member (2012-2021)
    • Yangon University of Education, QA Committee, member(2020)
    • Yangon University of Foreign Languages, IQA Committee, Departmental Focal Person (2021)
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Characteristics of Postpositions (Yangon University of Education Research Journal , (2020) Vol-10, No-2,Page-139)
    Htet Htet Sein Win*
    Abstract

    This paper is analyzed about significant of postpositions in Myanmar Language by modern Linguistics. Postpositions can be used not only written language but also spoken language. By using these particles, can be found the speaker’s emphasis and attitude. Analysis of postpositions, studying of Myanmar grammar and identifying the features of Myanmar language.

    *Lecturer, Dr, Myanmar Department, Yangon University of Education.

     

    Postposition and Context (JOURNAL OF THE MYANMAR ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCE (2020) Vol.XVIII, No.6D, Page-317-326.)
    Htet Htet Sein Win*
    Abstract

    In myanmar language, there have the particles that can be described speaker’s attitude, emotions and emphasis. These particles are called Postpositions. I analyse these particles from pragmatics point of view. Postposition are the particles that indicate diverse meanings in the varied of situational context. The realistic situation in event, postposition can be described the speaker’s emotions. Furthermore, this paper presents, the one word of postposition can be described different meanings in different situations.

    *Lecturer, Dr, Myanmar Department, Yangon University of Education.

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research for “Aspect in Myanmar Language”
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Course

  • Daw Tin Moe

    Lecturer
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Myanmar) Q (2003) – University of Meiktila
    • M.A (Myanmar) (2006-2007) – University of Meiktila
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • University of Meiktila, Magazine Committee, member(2019-2020)
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    —

  • Conducting Research

    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar Courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Course

  • Daw Pa Pa Win

    Associate Professor
    Department of Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    —

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Hons) ( Myanmar) (1996) – University of Mawlamyine
    • M.A ( Myanmar) (1999) – University of Mawlamyine
  • Working Experience

    —

  • Academic Activities

    • I developed about Myanmar Traditional(tea pickles) in the subject Aspects of Myanmar (AM.1002) of first year curriculum.
  • Conference Presentations

    —

  • Research Papers

    Analysis of slice short stories from khin khin Htoo’s Fancy Hlue Yin Kyawt short stories (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science (vol. xvl, No. 6A ), 2018 August, Page (473-498))
    Pa Pa Win
    Abstract

    Bries presentation of short stories study by Pa Pa Win. It waw studied of Hlue Yin Kyawt’s short stories written by Khin Khin Htoo. This paper is presented life after description studying Hlue Yin Kyawt short stories by author Khin Khin Htoo. Three of them were chosen to compare with characteristics of short story. The author expressed her fulings upon the real life events. I believe that her readers could het view of life through aesthetic feeling.

     

    Analysis of role character creation from Khin Khin Htoo’s Bobbin Yet Kon Lunn Short Stories (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science (vol. xv11, No. 6A ), 2019 August, Page (263-287))
    Khin Pa Pa Win
    Abstract

    Observation of creation of actors characteristics from Yet Kam Lunn short stories by Khin Khin Htoo by Pa Pa Win. Brief presentation, it was presented from three of Yet Kam Lunn short stories by author Khin Khin Htoo. It was studied to compare the characteristics of creation of actors significant characteristics, dead characters, live characters, logical characters.

     

    The connection between the colloquial expression and the story in the short story (Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science (Vol. XVIII, No.6B), 2020 August, (Page 53-68))
    Pa Pa Win
    Abstract

    Connection between spoken words and plots presented by Pa Pa Win. Brief in this paper spoken words and plots connection are presented from anatomy and crossing heart by Min Lu, Woman and Woman short story by Thu Kha, it has pointed out that how spoken words moved and be alive.

     

  • Conducting Research

    • Preparing research for Ph.D thesis under the topic of short stories
    • Reviewing the Curriculum Development for Myanmar courses
    • Reviewing the Assessment for Myanmar Courses
    • Planning for Myanmar Language from Online Teaching
    • Discussion & Planning for New Apply Myanmar Courses

  • Daw Zin Mu Mu Thin

    Assistant Lecturer
    Korean Department
    M.A (Korean Language and Culture Education as a Foreign Language, Korea University)
    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Syntax and Culture

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Korean, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
    • M.A (Korean Language and Literature, Korea University, Korea)
    • Certificate of Korean Language Teacher (Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Republic of Korea)
    • 2021 Korean Teachers On-Line Training (Education Minister, the Ministry of Education in Korea)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor in Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2.2.2015~ 1.3.2019)
    • Assistant Lecture in Yangon University of Foreign Languages (1.3.2019~ 1.12.2021)
    • Lecture in Yangon University of Foreign Languages (1.12.2021~ up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Conference Presentations

    • A Comparative Study of Interjections in Korean and Myanmar Language (2nd Myanmar-Korean Language Education Conference, MUFL, Mandalay, Maynmar, 2017-Dec)
  • Research Papers

    A Comparative Study of Personal Pronouns in Korean and Myanmar Language (23rd, International Conference on Korean Studies, 2017, Proceedings, Korea University, 261-275)
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to analyze the similarities and differences of personal pronoun usages between Korean and Myanmar. As a result, ‘저’is used for all 1st person pronoun in Korean but in Myanmar, the usage is different according to gender, ‘kyun daw’ is used for male and ‘kyun ma’ is used for female. But in 2nd person pronoun, it’s a little complicate in both two languages. And then in 3rd person pronoun, the usage in Myanmar is simpler than in Korean.

  • Conducting Research

    • Study of errors in the usages of Korean grammar by Myanmar Students

  • Dr. Thanda Kyaw

    Associate Professor
    Ph.D (Korean Language Education, Seoul National University)
    Korean Department
    [email protected]

  • Area of Interests

    Korean Language Education & Korean Grammar(micro)

  • Academic Background

    • B.A (Geography, Yangon University)
    • M.A (Korean language, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar)
    • Ph.D (Korean Language Education , Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea)
    • Diploma in Korean (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    • Diploma in Global English (Yangon University)
    • ASEAN Korean Language Program (KOICA)(Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea)
    • Training Program for Korean Language Teachers (KOICA) (Hankuk University of Foreign Studes, Seoul, Korea)
  • Working Experience

    • Tutor, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (1999-2002)
    • Tutor, Mandalay University of Foreign Languages (2002-2004)
    • Tutor, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2004-2006)
    • Assistance Lecturer, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2006-2011)
    • Lecturer, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2011-2018 December)
    • Associate Professor, Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2018 December-up to now)
  • Academic Activities

    —

  • Attendance to Conferences

    • Multilingual contrast between Korean and Myanmar. (Focusing on “Tada” ), ( Korean Language Association – Kyung Hee University,2016)
    • A comparison analysis against the complex structure of Korean and Myanmar (Focusing on cause and reason) (Re- examination Education and Research on Korean Language and Literature in Southeast Asia Journal 2017, Vol.1, No.1)
    • The present state of the Korean education in Yangon University of Foreign Languages and Development (Academic Conference of the Korean Language Education Association Journal 2018, Vol. 2018. No.1)
  • Research Papers

    A Study on some Korean folk tales that are similar to Myanmar folk tales(YUFL Research Journal- 2005)
    Abstract

    This study aims to understand between Myanmar and Korean languages, and it is describes Korean folk tales similar to Myanmar folk tales. Through the traditional Korean folk tales similar to Myanmar’s folk tales, we can understand the society, traditional customs, ways of thinking, and culture of Korean and contribute to studying Korean language. In this paper, it was presented from the perspective of literature, culture, and language.

     

    A Comparative Study of Complex Sentence in Myanmar and Korean (Focus on conjunction of reason) (Universities Research Journal 2014, Vol.6, No.6)
    Abstract

    This paper studies a comparative of complex sentence in Myanmar and Korean. The comparative method is applied to analyze the syntactic features in Korean and Myanmar. It is aimed to improcve the understanding of using the conjection of reason, especially in the noun restriction, verb restiction and the tense form in both of Myanmar and Korean. It is found that the subject of the sentences joied with conjunction of reason is distinctly different in “သဖြင့်(tha pyint)” in Myanmar which showed that the subject of the first clause is completely different from the subject of the second clause. And there is no difference in the restriction of verbs attached to the conjunction of reason, the conjunction of both Myanmar and Korean can match with all type of verb, action or descriptive verb. In the case of tense form, there is a few differences in both language. The past tense form of Korean verb cannot directly attached to the conjunction, and the future tense form in second clause cannot be used while using conjunction of “သောကြောင့်” in Myanmar.

     

    Study on Korean Language Education for Myanmar Learners (Focusing on place and time(-에/-에서) (Korean Cultural Association . Vol. 2019. No.1 )
    Abstract

    The purpose of this paper is to determine similarities and differences of Myanmar particle (/wi.ba’/) and Korean particle (에/에서) through contrastive analysis study. It is conducted to suggest effective way of teaching Korean particle ‘에/에서’ as examining the cause of errors in using Korean particle of Myanmar Korean learners. There exists intrinsic differences between Myanmar particle (/wi.ba’/) and Korean particle(에/에서). The study was conducted as follows. First, as utilizing prior studies it was examined the similarities and differences of particle of each language. Then according to the survey, error analysis was implemented. Finally, the methodology of effective and practical teaching of Korean particle(에/에서) to Myanmar Korean learners was then suggested.

     

    A Study on the Education Methods for Myanmar Korean Learners (Focusing on post positional particle) (Korean Language Education Association Journal, Vol. 2019. No.1)
    Abstract
    The purpose of this study is contrast and analyze the use of the meaning of the post positional particle, and the corresponding survey of Myanmar during the level survey that indicates the grammatical relationship of the Korean Language. Also, the purpose of the study was to find out the cause of errors in the use of post positional particle conducted by Myanmar Korean language learners. First, we presented the concept and classification of the post positional partical in Korean and Myanmar, that corresponds to the Korean language. Finally, we analyzed how Myanmar learners are aware of the various semantic function of the post positional partical.

     

    A Study on the Education Methods for Myanmar Korean Learners (Focus on -(에,에서,(으)로)- (Southeast Asian Journal 2020, Vol.30, No. 1)
    Abstract
    The purpose of this study is to determine similarities and differences of Myanmar preposition and Korean preposition through contrastive analysis study. It is connected to suggest effective way of teaching Korean preposition as examining the cause of errors in using Korean preposition of Myanmar Korean learners. The study was conducted as follows. First, as utilizing prior studies it was examined the similarities and differences of preposition of each language. And then, it also analyzed the reasons for the use error of preposition, in which Myanmar Korean learners have difficulty using the preposition in learning Korean. Finally, based on the results from the previous analysis, an effective survey education plan for the error-prone preposition that Myanmar learners find difficult is proposed.

     

    A contrast study on Korean and Myanmar language based on Congnitive Linguistics (Focusing on space of postpositional particle), (Korean Literature Society, Vol. 2021. No.1)
    Abstract
    This study is to contrast space of postpositional particle in Korean and Myanmar based on cognitive linguistics. First, the postpositional particles system of Korean and Myanmar presented in grammar book was briefly presented. Next, based on previous studies, the interpretation of the meaning of the space of postpositional particle “-ey, -eyse, -ro” described in Korean dictionaries was referenced, and the meaning of the space of postpositional particle in Korean and Myanmar was examined through specific examples. Next, the similarities and differences space of postpositional particle in both languages were revealed. As a result, by comparing space of postpositional particle in Korean and Myanmar were similar in meaning in many ways, but in terms of form, space of postpositional particle in Korean showed that one form had two or more meanings. On the other hand, space of postpositional particle in Myanmar language showed that one semantic function can be used in various forms. Through the results in this paper, it is expected that the characteristics space of postpositional particle in Korean, with various functions will be revealed in detail based on cognitive linguistics in the future.

     

  • Conducting Research

    —

​​​​ Dr.Thin Thin Hlaing

Associate Professor

Ph.D

Department of Chinese

[email protected]

Dr.Thin Thin Hlaing  was graduated BA. Chinese from Yangon University of Foreign Languages studied on July 2003.

She also graduated MA.Chinese from Beijing Language and Culture University on July 2015.

In July 2018, she was graduated Ph.D Chinese at Beijing Language and Culture University.

She was first appointed as a tutor at the Department of Chinese in YUFL on 7-2-2005.

She was promoted to Assistant Lecture on 25-2-2013 and promoted to Lecturer on 1-12-2016.

She was promoted to Associate Professor on 2-12-2019.

(I)MA.Chinese and PhD.Chinese Thesis

Thesis Title University Year
MA Thesis  “Study on the Comparison of Chinese and Myanmar ‘WEAR’ Verbs” Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China 2015
PhD. Thesis  “The Research of the Myanmar Language Policy”

 

Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China 2018

(II)International Publication Paper

No. Research Title Journal Vol & page
1. Myanmar Costume Culture 缅甸服饰文化

https://wenku.baidu.com/view/e0997d5d50d380eb6294dd88d0d233d4b04e3f13.html

 

https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/g8o4dtrtnX0cA-qMVSlwIw

Meiwen Hanfeng

Specially Published

Journal

《美文》汉风专刊

 

2017, March Vol.3, page (109-112)

 

 

 

 

 

(III) International Collaboration Projects

No. Project Title About Time
1. Graduate Fund Project of Beijing Language and Culture University Teaching Chinese as a Second Language Teaching at YUFL (Research Paper) 2016-2017

(BLCU)

2. The Construction of Language Resources Database of China’s Neighboring Countries

 

Myanmar and Chinese Vocabulary Lists 2016-2017

(4-6months) (BLCU)

3. The Construction of Language Resources Database of China’s Neighboring Countries

 

Myanmar and Chinese Language Policy 2019-2020

(BLCU)

(IV) Translation and Supplementation of Chinese Language Speaking Textbook into Myanmar Language

No. Book Name Translate Language Time
1. 《汉语900句》Everyday Chinese  Authentic Language for Real-life Communication

 

Myanmar Language 2014(Beijing)

(V) Seminar and Chinese Teachers’ Training

No. Seminar and Training Place Time
1. Seminar on Education Informatization for Developing Countries in 2019 Zhejiang normal University, Jihua,  China 20.11.2019-10.12.2019
2. Chinese Teachers’ Training Yunan University, Yunan, China 10.4.2019-24.4.2019
3. Chinese Teachers’ Training Yunan University, Yunan, China (online training) 25.11.2021-30.11.2021

(IV) Participation in YUFL’s Committee

No. Name
1. Radio UFLY Vice Chairman
2. Budgeting and Procurement  Secretary
3. Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics  Secretary

​Daw Han Nwe Swe

Assistance Lecturer

M.A

Sociolinguistics, Literature, Philology

(+959) 095343727

[email protected]

Daw Han Nwe Swe started working as a tutor in March 2013 and was promoted as an assistant lecturer in 2020. At present, she is working as the Assistant Lecturer of Chinese Department at Yangon University of Foreign Languages. She got her first BA (Chinese) degree in 2012 and got her MA (Chinese) in 2019 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages. Now, she is studying for a PhD at the Northeast Normal University in China.

Interest : Philology, Social Linguistic, Chinese Literature.
Fields of Research : Chinese Philology.

Research

U Tin Ko Ko Zin

Lecturer

M.A

Culture, Lexicology

[email protected]

University Avenue, Kamaryut Township., Yangon Chinese Dept, First Floor, Oriental Hall

Educational Background

  • Sc (Phys) Hons in 1994 from Yangon University.
  • Diploma in Chinese in 1996 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.
  • MA (Chinese) in 2013 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages.

Experiences  

  • 2002-2010 –  Tutor , Chinese Department,  Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • 2010-2014 –  Assistant Lecturer, Chinese Department  ,Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • 2014-Today- Lecturer, Chinese Department , Yangon University of Foreign Languages

Tranings

Chinese Course Training (Yunnan Normal University) in 2003

​​Daw Khin Maw Soe

Lecturer

 

Chinese Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

[email protected]

Education Background

– B.A(Myanmar)in 1987 from Yangon University

– Diploma in Chinese(Distinction) in 1995 from Institute of Foreign Languages(IFL)

– Certificate (Teachers’ vocational studies) in 2002 from Beijing Language and Culture

University

– Certificate (Advanced Chinese Courses) in 2006 from Southwest University

– Post Graduate Diploma of English in 2012 from Mandalay University of Foreign Languages

– M.A(Chinese) in 2013 from Mandalay University of Foreign Languages

– Certificate (Teacher of Chinese as A Foreign Language Training Program) in 2019 from

Yunnan University

Trainings and Foreign Experiences

– Chinese Language Training (One Year Regular) (Beijing Language and Culture University) in

2001

– Advanced Chinese Language Training (Two Year) (Southwest University) in 2004

– “Seminar on Chinese Language and Culture for Education Officials from Developing

Countries”, Beijing Chinese Language and Culture College, the People’s Republic of China

(8.5.2012 to30.7.2012)

– Chinese Course Training, (Yunnan University) the People’s Republic of China (10.4.2019 to

24.4.2019)

Working Experiences

– Office Staff (15.2.1988 – 8.6.1997) Ministry of Industry (I)

– Tutor (9.6.1997 – 20.4.2000)   Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Assistant Lecturer (21.4.2000 – 10.8.2002) Mandalay University of Foreign Languages

– Assistant Lecturer /Head /Hall tutor (11.8.2002 – 4.2.2004) Mandalay University of Foreign

Languages

– Assistant Lecturer (9.2.2004- 26.10.2004)   Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer (26.10.2004 -15.2.2008)   Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer /Head (16.2.2008 – 18.2.2010)   Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer /Head /Hall tutor (22.2.2010 – 30.6.2014) Mandalay University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer (4.7.2014 – 26.12.2014)   Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer (1.1.2015 – 22.12.2015) Department of Language (Chinese Language) Defence

Services Academy

– Lecturer (28.12.2015 – 29.4.2016) Yangon University of Foreign Languages

– Lecturer (1.5.2016 – 31.3.2017) Department of Language (Chinese Language) Defence

Services Academy

– Lecturer (2004to at present) Yangon University of Foreign Languages

Research

A Comparative Study on Chinese Prepositions and Myanmar Prepositions

Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Research Journal, Vol.10, No .1, Myanmar, 2019.

Abstract

This paper studies modern Chinese prepositions and Myanmar prepositions as the research objects. It mainly focuses definition, classification, grammatical characteristics and similarities and differences between modern Chinese prepositions and Myanmar prepositions. In the course of the study, the similarities and differences between the two are found to help Myanmar students to be able to use the Chinese prepositions correctly. It also provides reference for teaching Chinese language to Myanmar students and teaching Myanmar language to Chinese students.

Email – khinmaw.soe @yufl.edu.mm

Phone   +95-9-5057631

Interest     Teaching, Culture

Fields of Research:   Culture and Grammar

Daw Aye Aye Mar

Associate Professor

M.A

Linguistics, Literature

[email protected]

+95 9- 2012539

16, Aung San Thuriya Hla Thaung Street, 47, Quarter, North Dagon, Yangon.

Academic Background

  • MA (Chinese), (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
  • Third Year, Ph.D. (Thesis), (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

      – Dip in Chinese (Institute of Foreign Languages) Yangon, Myanmar

– Dip in Chinese (Yunnan University) Yunnan, China

– Dip in English (Post Graduate Diploma in English) (Mandalay University of Foreign Languages) Mandalay, Myanmar

–  Certificate (Modern Chinese Course at South-West University, China, from September 1, 2004 to July 1, 2006 .)

Work Experience

  • Associate Professor, Department of Chinese (2021- now), Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Associate Professor, Department of Chinese (2019-2021), Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
  • Lecturer, Department of Chinese (2010-2019), Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Lecturer, Head of Chinese Department (2006-2010), Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
  • Assistance Lecturer, Head of Chinese Department (2004-2006), Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
  • Assistance Lecturer, Department of Chinese (2002-2004), Yangon University of Foreign Languages
  • Assistance Lecturer, Department of Chinese (2000-2002), Mandalay University of Foreign Languages
  • Tutor, Department of Chinese (1997-2000), Yangon University of Foreign Languages 

Resarch Conference

For Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science(MAAS), 19th  Resarch Conference (October,   2019)

“ A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF VEHICLE OF METAPHOR IN   MYANMAR  LANGUAGE AND CHINESE LANGUAGE ”

Paper and Publications           

  1. “ A Comparative Study of the Usage of Myanmar and Chinese Classifiers” 

Abstract 

The important classifiers have been used in Myanmar since Bagan Dynasty and they wear found the earliest in Yin Dynasty (BC-1324- AD 1066) in Chinese ,and classifiers were frequency recognized only at Nan-Bei Dynasty (AD 386-581). The classifiers are found out to be based on the quality and type of nouns.

Key Words – Usage of Classifiers, Shape of Nouns, Quality of Nouns, Type of Nouns

  1. “ မြန်မာနှင့် တရုတ်နှစ်ဘာသာစကားရှိ မျိုးပြစကားလုံးများကို နှိုင်းယှဉ်လေ့လာခြင်း” 

Abstract

               ဤစာတမ်းသည် မြန်မာနှင့်တရုတ်နှစ်ဘာသာစကားရှိ မျိုးပြစကားလုံးများ အကြောင်းကို လေ့လာသိရှိနိုင်ရန်နှင့် ဆီလျော်မှန်ကန်စွာ  အသုံးပြုနိုင်ရန်  ရည်ရွယ်ပါသည်။  ဤစာတမ်းတွင် ပထမပိုင်း အဖြစ် မြန်မာ-တရုတ် နှစ်ဘာသာအတွင်းရှိ   မျိုးပြစကားလုံးများ (Classifiers) ၏  အမျိုးအစား ခွဲခြားပုံကို လေ့လာတင်ပြထားပြီး၊  ဒုတိယပိုင်းအဖြစ် မြန်မာနှင့်တရုတ်နှစ်ဘာသာရှိ အပြုအမူပမာဏများ (Quantifiers) ကွဲပြားခြားနားမှုကို လေ့လာတင်ပြထားပြီး၊      တတိယပိုင်းအဖြစ်  မြန်မာနှင့်တရုတ်နှစ်ဘာသာရှိ ပမာဏပြနာမဝိသေသန  (Numerical Classifier)  ကိန်းဂဏန်းနှင့် မျိုးပြစကားလုံးများ အသုံးပြုပုံကို နှိုင်းယှဉ်လေ့လာတင်ပြထားပါသည်။

သော့ချက် ဝေါဟာရများ။  မျိုးပြစကားလုံးများ (Classifiers)၊ အပြုအမူပမာဏများ၊ စံစကားလုံး၊  ကိန်းဂဏန်းမျိုးပြစကားလုံး  (Numerical Classifier)

  1. “A Study on Homophonic Culture in the Chinese Language”

 Abstract

Homophony is a kind of rhetoric that is widely used in archaic and modern Chinese language. The use of homophony represents cultural significance as well as its impact on national characteristics and the richness of the language. This paper studies the association between homophony and the usage of Chinese cultural expressions and techniques, and form of language based on linguistic theory. The findings of the study indicate that the use of homophony is related to Chinese culture. They could reflect the social customs and etiquette and the type or shape of homophony can reflect the ideology of Chinese people. Library research is used to collect data and descriptive research is used to describe the findings. It is recommended that research on Chinese culture should be done more extensively from different aspects of the language.

Keywords:      Homophony, homophonic culture, rhetoric, phenomena 

Duty for other Ministry

  • Interpreter, for 27th SEA Game (2013), Chef Demission (Sports Ministers of South East Asian Nations), mayor office, Sports Village, Sports Ministry, Naypyidaw.
  • Interpreter, for Emporiums, Myanmar Treasure Corporation, Ministry of Mining. (1999,2000, 2001)

 

​​Dr. Hla Hla Kyi

Professor

Ph.D

Linguistics, Literature

[email protected]

  1. Academic Background
  • Diploma in Chinese (Yangon University of Foreign Languages) in 1999
  • MSc (Chem.) (Yangon University) in 1999
  • MA (Chinese) (Beijing Language and Culture University)   in 2009
  • D (Chinese) (Yangon University of Foreign Languages) in 2016

    Trainings

  • Chinese Language Training (Yunnan Normal University)  in  2002
  • Chinese Language Training (Yunnan  University)   in 2003
  • Advanced Chinese Language Training (Yunnan Normal University)  in  2016
  1. Secretary of Students Assessment Committee
  2. Printed Articles
  • A Grammatical Study of Formation of the Chinese Grammatical Pattern

“ai (爱) x  bu(不)x”

(YUFL Research Journal, 2010 December, Vol.2, No.1) 

   Abstract

This paper presents the formation of the Chinese Grammatical Pattern  “ai (爱)x bu(不)x” ,one of the pattern of grammar usage ,which is commonly used      by Chinese people ,there by helping Myanmar Students learning Chinese as an foreign language to learn it better by clearly understanding the formation of   “ai (爱)x bu(不)x”.

  • Biography

    Daw San San Nu  (Associate Professor)

    Department of Japanese, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

  • Education Background

    (1)Educational Background

    MA (Japanese)                                 (2015)     Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Diploma in Global English            (2009)      University of Yangon (CHRD)

    Diploma in Japanese                      (1998)      Yangon University of Foreign Languages

    Diploma in Accountancy                (1994)     Myanmar Accountancy Council

    BSc (Q) Mathematics                      (1985)     Yangon University (Corresponding)

    (2) Contributions in Activity of YUFL

    Member of Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics (YUFL)

     

  • Research Title and Publication

    Research Project

    A Study of the Collaborative Strategic Reading in Teaching Reading to Third Year BA Japanese Students at YUFL(2015,May)

    Publication of Research Papers

    • A Comparative Study on Japanese and Myanmar Everyday Expressions by words that should be known by Scholars for Japanese Language (2010,Dec  MUFL Research Journal, Vol 2,No 1,Pg 143~156)
    • A Study on the Testing Methods of Japanese Language Proficiency by Classroom Activities (2012,March , Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts and Sciences, Vol X, No 8 , Pg 225~236)
    • A Study of “Peer Reading” Method in Teaching to improve the Students’ Reading Skills (2016,Aug, Universities Research Journal, Vol 8,No 6,Pg 191~210)

    A Comparative Study on Japanese and Myanmar Everyday                          

    Expressions by Words that should be known by Scholars for                                

    Japanese Language

    San San Nu

    Abstract

    In this paper, Japanese everyday expressions by words in connection with social rules of conduct are presented after being studied. Attitude, customs, traditions and social conducts of a certain nationality can be learnt through their everyday expressions. It is aimed at being able to possess convenient social dealings with Japanese people in their social environment, fully understanding their everyday expressions in the community. 

    A Study on the Testing Methods of Japanese Languages                    

    Proficiency by Classroom Activities

    San San Nu

    Abstract

    This is a monograph presented with a view to be able to create a lively classroom with students happy in communication with the aid of classroom activities in the process of language teaching and language learning. Students’ achievement of the grammatical structures and syntax which have already been taught is tested by letting them engage in the communicative classroom activities. Such activities enable the students to study traditions and cultures of Japanese along with its language. This monograph presents some ways and means of organizing classroom activities by using grammatical structures for Japanese language at the basic level.

    A Study of ‘Peer Reading’ Method in Teaching to Improve the Students’ Reading Skills

    San San Nu

    Abstract

    In today Language Teaching field, developing the abilities of the students as the members of society plays a crucial role. With the aim of improving students’ own ability, a wide variety of teaching methods are practically used in Japanese language teaching in Myanmar. The purpose of this study is to improve the reading ability of students by making them to study on their own during the reading lessons. In relation to this, the benefits of ‘ Peer Reading ‘ have been well-noted before. Peer Reading is a practical activity of Peer Learning and in which students can learn the reading deeply through discussion. Therefore, this study analyzed whether the inclusion of Peer Reading in teaching improved the students’ reading ability. In this study, students are practically assessed the Third-Year students of Japanese using Peer Reading. The finding shows the distinct benefit that can only be given by the method of ‘Peer Reading’. The opinion survey of the students on the use of ‘Peer Reading’ clearly shows the benefiting results. And, the following study is aimed to do the analysis of using in-turn discussion and ‘Jigsaw Reading’ in teaching reading to improve.

  • Publishing Books

     Japanese for life in Japan (elementary 1, A2) (Translate to Myanmar Language)

  • Trainings

  • Conferences

  • Area of Interests

  • Conducting Research

    A Study on the Structure of repeated words (Tatamigo) in Japanese Language

    (Departmental Research)

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Biography

    Dr. Phyu Phyu Thinn

    Phyu Phyu Thinn studied English at Yangon University (Hlaing Campus) and Dagon University. After finishing the first degree, she was appointed as a tutor at Myeik University in 2002. In 2004, she earned a bachelor’s degree in Computing and Information System from London Metropolitan University.  In 2005, she got her M.A (TEFL) degree from Yangon University of Education.  She obtained her Ph.D. (English) in 2019.

  • Education Background

    Academic Background

    2000    B.A (English) Q (Dagon University)

    2004    B.Sc. (Computing and Information System) (London Metropolitan University)

    2005    M.A. (TEFL) (Yangon University of Education)

    2019    Ph.D. (English) (Mandalay University)

  • Research Title and Publication

    Published Research

    1. A Lexical Analysis of Advertisements from Newsweek Magazine, Military Institute of Nursing and Paramedical Sciences, Bulletin, 2018, December, Vol 6, No.2, pg .15

    2. A Comparative Study of English and Myanmar Proverbs from Cultural Point of View, International Journal of Social, Politics & Humanities ISSN: 2797-3735, Volume 3, Issue 1, page 146 – 153

    • A Lexical Analysis of Advertisements from Newsweek Magazine

    Abstract: Language, a powerful tool, can influence over people and their behaviour especially in the fields of advertising and marketing. The choice of language plays an important role in drawing the attention of the target customers. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to explore the lexical analysis of advertisements from Newsweek magazines published in 7-28 Jan, 2008. The focus of the study is on three lexical features: nouns, pronouns and adjectives. The result reveals that abstract nouns, personal pronouns, descriptive adjectives are used abundantly to catch the readers’ attention.

    Key words: advertisements, nouns, pronouns, adjectives.

    • A Comparative Study of English and Myanmar Proverbs from Cultural Point of View

    Abstract: Proverbs are a part of a language and closely integrated with the society and culture. It is generally acknowledged that language and culture are inseparable and mutually influenced. Therefore, it is important for a language learner to learn proverbs to understand or appreciate it. This paper aims to compare these proverbs from cultural point of view. The objectives of the paper are to examine the English and Myanmar proverbs whether they have similar meanings or not, to find out whether or not they have different uses of mages to convey similar underlying meaning and vice versa, and to analyse how the different cultural backgrounds affect the uses of images in both proverbs. The data were collected from “Proverbs: English Language Toolbox” by Kirkpatrick (2009), “Common English Proverbs” by Johnson (1960), Myanmar Proverbs” by Dr. Hla Pe (1962), and “Myanmar Proverbs” by Myanmar Language Commission (1990). A hundred English proverbs were randomly collected and first, they were compared with Myanmar proverbs to find out whether or not they have similar underlying meanings. Secondly, those equivalent proverbs were identified to find out whether or not they have different uses of images to convey similar underlying meaning and vice versa. The findings indicated that there were fifty-two English and Myanmar proverbs that have similar underlying meanings. Out of 52 proverbs, seven were assumed to be the proverbs that are borrowings or imports. Nineteen out of the remaining 45 were said to have similar underlying meanings with different images. Such being the case, there were altogether 26 proverbs that do not have the significant uses of images. It was observed that there were three English and Myanmar proverbs which have different meanings with similar uses of images. A further study can be carried out, comparing more proverbs from the English and Myanmar languages.

    Keywords: Proverbs, Language, Culture

  • Working Experiences

  • Publishing Books

  • Trainings

  • Conferences

  • Area of Interests

    Her research interests are in the areas of Intercultural Communication, Political Discourse Analysis, and Corpus-based research. Her recent work has focused on cross-cultural comparison of metaphor use in political speeches.

  • Conducting Research

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Biography

    Dr. Hnin Aye Khine Swe
    Professor
    Department of History
    Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    09 757571732

     

  • Education Background

    Academic Degree Obtained

    BA(Hons), 1995, University of Yangon

    MA, 2000, University of Yangon

    Title, Peasant Uprising in Myanmar (1930-32), Re-examination of Saya San’s Leadership

    Ph.D, 2007, University of Yangon

    Title, The History of Sittway( Akyab ) District  during the colonial Period. (1826-1885)   

     

     Institutions I have serviced

    University of Yangon (1997-2004)

    Myeik University (2004-2006)

    East Yangon University (2006-2014)

    Taungoo University (2014-2019)

    University of Yangon (2019- 2020)

    Myeik University (December,2020- September 2021)

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (September 2021- present)

  • Working Experiences

  • Research Title and Publication

    1. Publication Research Papers1.Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Assistant Lecture, “The Administration of SittwayDistrict”, Myeik University Research Journal, Vol.1, No.1, December, 2009.
      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Dr, “The Role of Sein Bay Dar in the Field of Myanmar

      Saing Waing”, Myanmar Historical Research Journal, No.26, June, 2014.

      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Dr. ” The Founding of Second Myanmar Empire by King

      Bayinnaung (1551-1581)” Taungoo University Research Journal, Vol.10.

      No.1. July, 2019.

      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Dr. ” The History of Man Phaya in Sale Township and the

      Art of Yun-de in Myanmar” Myanmar Historical Research Journal, No.3, 2019.

      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Dr. “Conservation of Yangon’s Colonial Heritage”

      University of Research Journal, Vol.9, No.1 2018-19

      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe, Dr “ Air Transportation in Myanmar ( 1934-2007)”

      Myeik University Research Journal, Vol 12, No.1 , 2021

        Book

      1. Hnin Aye Khine Swe , Dr. “jrefrmh”avh?jrefrmh,Ofaus;rI?jrefrmrIokwya’om“. ( Myanmar Custom, Myanmar Culture, and Knowledge )    &efukefjrdKU? pmayavmu? 2018 ckESpf

       

      MRES Thesis Supervisions 

      Aung San Oo (MRes-Hist 1) The Prominent Pariyatti Learning Centers in Shwe Kyin Township and Nyaunglaybin Township (1956-2008), March. 2015

      Chit Maung Maung ( MRes- Hist 1) The Prominent Kankalay Tawya Shwekyin Pariyatti

      Learning Center In Oktwin Township (1910-2014), 2016

       

      MA Thesis Supervision

      Chit Maung Maung (2. Mahar Tha-1) The Prominent Payiyatti Learning Center in Taungoo

      Township (1980-2014), March. 2015

      PH.D Dissertation Supervision

      Tin Mar San ( 2 Pa Tha -3) The Socio-Economic History of Chaungzon Township

      (still processing)

      Research Fields

      Political, Social and Cultural History.

  • Publishing Books

  • Conferences

  • Trainings

  • Area of Interests

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Conducting Research

  • Biography

    Dr. Win Mar Hlaing
    Professor / Head
    Department of International relations
    [email protected]

  • Education Background

    PhD (International Relations) from Yangon University
  • Area of Interests

    Security
  • Conferences

  • Research Title and Publication

    1. Academic Committees: Senate Committee on International Relations
    2. Research papers in the field of international Relations
      1. Relations between Myanmar and the Republic of Korea (1994-2004)
      2. Security Challenges in Northeast Asia: Future Prospects
      3. China’s Foreign Trade Policy towards Myanmar (After 1988)
      4. Economic Development of Vietnam: Integrating into Global Economy since 1997
      5. Development Cooperation between Myanmar and Singapore
      6. Myanmar-Singapore Relations since 1997
      7. Humanitarian Situations in Myanmar in the Context of Politics since 2011
      1. Current Academic Activities
        1. Curriculum review for the International Relations Modules
        2. Assessment Review for International Relations Modules
        3. Writing Strategic Objectives and  operation plans  with SWOT analysis at Department Level
        4. Preparations for Blended Learning
        5. Studying Current international affairs
        6. Preparation for opening new Courses ( International Security Studies  for BA Program): Drawing Curriculum,  credit Units, Writing Learning Outcomes for new Program)
        7. Other academic activities outside the University  ( Evaluating Master and PhD thesis  in  the field International Relations)
      1. Abstract for Research papers as follows:

       Humanitarian Situations in Myanmar in the Context of Politics since 2011

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract

      There have been improved situations in Myanmar receiving humanitarian assistance in addressing humanitarian issues under new government.  In 2011, there were around 100,000 people of Internal Displaced persons (IDPs) in Kachin and Shan State in Myanmar because of the armed conflict between government forces and Kachin Independence Army 9 KIA). Many IDPs have been in refugee camps in government controlled areas and KIA Controlled Areas. Many local and international agencies are operating humanitarian assistance despite difficulties and challenges in the beginning. Mai barriers for local agencies are financial support, technical support, and training for camp management. International agencies also had difficulties because of general insecurity, road damages and concerns about jeopardizing relations with the government at the juncture of Myanmar political development. However, in 2014, according to UNOCHA basic humanitarian needs were met and there were improved situations. Now, the government has been trying to make a nation- wide ceasefire agreement with all ethnic groups and it is within reach. It was seen that Government‘s unprecedented move towards accepting federalism repeatedly demanded by ethnic groups.

      • Professor, Dr. Department of International Relations, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

       

      Myanmar- Singapore Relations since 1997

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract 

      Diplomatic relations between Myanmar and Singapore were established at ambassadorial level on 12 August 1966. With the improvement of relations, the two countries decided to appoint ambassador at both capitals. Exchange of visits have also taken place between the two countries and have increased to strengthen the economic interaction. During the period from 1997 to 2009 these visits are mostly to attend the ASEAN meetings in Singapore on a regional visit. Other visits were the bilateral visit discussing the matter of trade, investment, service, and industrial sectors at the Prime Minister and Ministerial level. Singapore and Myanmar enjoy good bilateral relations. Singapore expressed her positive attitude on Myanmar’s democratizing process. There are no trade agreements between Myanmar and Singapore. However, there have been normalized trade relations between them.  Myanmar also faced trade deficit in favor of Singapore.  During the period from the year 2005-2006 to 2010- 2011, the total trade volume has also increased from US Dollar 823.23 million in 2005- 2006 US Dollar 2102.03 million in 2010- 2011.  During 2003- 2011 period the investment volume of Singapore in Myanmar was increased, but not much significant.  There was also slightly increase of permitted enterprises, investing in Myanmar.  Offers of scholarship and humanitarian assistance from Singapore have also involved in the relations and still need to be much focused in their relations.  It is found that the relations have more covered economics than politics.  Despite sound and close relations existed there will be much room for economic and environmental cooperation under the new government of Myanmar.

      • Professor, Dr. Department of International Relations, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

      Development Cooperation between Myanmar and Singapore

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract 

      Myanmar accorded recognition to the new Republic of Singapore on 14th August 196.  Myanmar’s relations with Singapore in social, political and economic sphere have been dated back to many years ago. Myanmar and Singapore gained mutual understanding and friendship base on their discussion during the visits and in turn could sign MoU and agreements. Singapore also showed her political will and her positive attitude on Myanmar’s Democratization process. It also launched   “Initiative for ASEAN Integration “(IAI) which encompasses a variety of human resources development   programme. Under this programme, skillful trainers   from Singapore have been sent to Myanmar to provide capacity building for the staff.  The Government of Singapore provided assistance to human resources development of Myanmar.  In the basic education, student exchange programme, education study programme and seminars are being conducted according to bilateral agreement. Singapore was one of the countries offering assistance to Myanmar following Cyclone Nargis in 2008. Singapore contributed an initial US $ 200,000 in humanitarian aid, followed by a commitment of another US $ 5 million for various humanitarian projects. Foreign Minister of Singapore, Mr Yei said that Singapore will continue to support Myanmar’s capacity building efforts, particularly in human resource development.  It is found that increasing development cooperation has been based on bilateral agreement and cooperation programme. It is also sure that future cooperation will be increasingly continued in human resource development and humanitarian assistance.

      • Professor, Dr. Department of International Relations, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

      China’s Foreign Trade Policy towards Myanmar (After 1998)

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract

       China has required a peaceful and stable international environment by strengthening       contacts and cooperation with other countries. It also adopted diplomacy in trade and sought a free market expansion with the neighbouring states. Development of western province – Yunan and Sichun is “important for China’s economic interests. Chinese policy makers introduced “strings and pearls strategy towards South Asian neighbours including Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar. China’s demand for energy for its province’s development also contributed to its trade with Myanmar was also a good impact of Chinese foreign trade policy. Despite the trade performance between Myanmar and China was an unbalanced nature always in favour of China, increasing trend of trade volume from 1988 to 2010 indicates the complementary nature of bilateral trade. It is found that China has pursued the strategy of export- led growth and strategy of strings of pearls policy towards Southeast Asia including Myanmar.  Myanmar has been a strategic point for China to access Indian Ocean. China’s desire to make cross border trade with Myanmar for the development of Yunan, has also much impact on socio- economic life of Myanmar’s People.  Development of cross border trade has also been effectiveness of China’s foreign trade policy.  

      • Professor, Dr. Department of International Relations, Yangon University of Foreign Languages

       Security Challenges in North East Asia; Future Prospects

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract

      The Security Situations in Northeast Asia has changed abruptly decade by decade since the end of the War War II. Despite normalization    between Beijing and Moscow in 1989 and close consultations over North Korea since the North – South  Summit in  2000, the aim of  Sino- Russian  strategic  challenge  is North  Korea’ s nuclear crisis. Even if the nuclear crisis is brought under control, North Korea belligerence is unlikely to an end.  Thus, the North Korea missile and nuclear issue s may not be resolve as long as regime’s policy could not change. This causes a challenge   not only to South Korea but also   to other countries like China, Japan and the US in managing the crisis. China’s uprising and its domestic structural change is very much in the areas of economy and of the growing nationalist sense of its leadership.  Taiwan issue   may not only   cause   a war between China and the US but also another    Cold War in the region. The expansion of Japan’s military forces is also a challenge in the region. The rising nationalism could have an alarming consequences like militarized, assertive ad nuclear armed Japan.  Japan’s military increase may go beyond the bilateral framework of the US in its search     for bigger role in Asia and the world in the coming decades. A new framework for northeast Asian security should be created by reviewing the legacy of six decades of changes in the region’s great power relations.  The objective of this paper is to explore the future situations of Northeast Asian security by using analytical approach based on some historical and recent developments in the region. 

      Relations between Myanmar and the republic of Korea (1994- 2004)

      Win Mar Hlaing*

      Abstract 

      Bilateral relations between Myanmar and the republic of Korea have long traditions.  The ties between the two countries have strengthened expanded in all spheres since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1975.  Since then the exchange of visits have taken place between the two countries. Moreover, the trade relations between Myanmar and the republic of Korea ( ROK) have been carried out in the shape of  Myanmar exporting natural resources based products to   ROK and  ROK exporting  industrial products  to Myanmar,. Investors from ROK became very active with the opening of Myanmar economy. The Korean development assistance program reached a turning point in the late 1980s and early 1990s in terms of international cooperation program.  The assistance of loans, grants, and gifts from ROK played as important part in Myanmar’s economy and has been strengthening the economic intercourses between the two countries.  Substantial interaction between Myanmar and ROK under cultural relations from 1995 to 2004 includes religious, education and health sector. As ROK and Myanmar achieved their complementary relationship, the future prospects for cooperation should lie in a variety of areas such as political and security cooperation, exchange of media, people, and the environmental cooperation.

  • Publishing Books

  • Trainings

    1. IR 3011: Introduction to International Relations
    2. DIR II: Elements of International Relations
    3. DIR IV: Current Issues in International Relations
    4. DSCP 113: China’s Foreign Policy and Foreign Relations
    5. DCSP 123 : China’s Role in the Global Economy
    6. DCSP 213: China Security Outlook and Security Challenges
  • Working Experiences

  • Conducting Research

  • Email

    [email protected]

  • Dr. Thandar Linn

  • Academic Background

    –    BA (Korean Language, Yangon University of Foreign Languages)

    –    MA (Korean Language & literature, Yonsei University, Seoul)

    –    Ph.D (Korean Language & literature, Yonsei University, Seoul)

    –    Diploma in Global English (Yangon University)

    _    Training and Development Program for Korean Language and Culture Experts (KOICA) (Hallym University, Seoul, Korea)

    Academic Activities

    –    Member of Committee for Research Project Management and Research Ethics (2021.01~up to now)

    –    Member of Effective Teaching and Learning Committee (2019.12~2021.01.-)

    –    Member of Governance and Organization (2020)

    –    Member of Academic Activities Management Committee (AAMC)(2019)

    –    Secretary of Accreditation Working Committee

  • Trainings

  • Conferences

    –    7th AKS International Interdisciplinary Webinar on “Emerging Trends in Korean

          Studies in India and South Asia” (Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi)

  • Papers and Publications

    –  A Study on Korean Culture Education with Fairy Tales for Myanmarese (Southeast Asian Journal  2017, Volume- 26, No-3)

    Abstract:

          This study aims to help Korean culture education for Myanmar people through fairy tales. Korean culture education is essential for fluency of Korean language and adaptation to Korean society and culture to foreign students and workers. In the study, eight fairy tales consisting of four Korean fairy tales and four Myanmar fairy tales are selected as research materials. Through the analysis of Korean and Myanmar fairy tales, cultural elements and identities were identified and compared with the materials from the both countries. The analysis has been processed in the respect of character and contents of the materials. The fairy tales were analyzed by one-to-one correspondence, such as myanmar ‘Devotion(성의)’ vs. ‘An Old Man Planting Dreams(꿈을 심는 노인)’and then they were sorted according to cultural and identificational elements. Even though two countries have a few cultural and historical interchanges and are far away from each other, the traditional fairy tales between Myanmar and Korea showed high similarities in the view of cultural elements, values, and identities. In the fairy tales there are many common aspects and similarities in cultures such as tendency of regarding agricultural society as important, the hierarchy according to ages, the filial duty, family relationship, and the community solidarity. I believe those similarities in Myanmar and Korean cultures could be a desirable norm for Myanmarese to study Korean language and to adjust to Korean society. 

    – A Study on the Motivation for Selection of Korean Language Major by International 

       Students and Their Satisfaction about their Major (Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society 2017, Volume-18, No 7)

    Abstract

          The Korean language major is being activated in line with the increasing number of international students who are studying in South Korea. Therefore, the motivation for selecting a university major varies according to the background, environment, and values of each student. Thus, it is meaningful to examine the motivation of international students to select their major and their satisfaction on the major. In this study, 173 international students living in Seoul were surveyed and the data were analyzed using SPSS 21.0 and AMOS 23.0 to demonstrate the structural relationship between their motivation for selecting the major and their satisfaction about the major. From analysis result, their motivation for selecting a Korean language major were classified into internal and external motivations, and their major satisfaction was classified into perception satisfaction, relationship satisfaction, subject satisfaction, and general satisfaction. Regarding the motivations to select a Korean language major, the level of external motivation was very high, and among the major satisfaction, the level of general satisfaction was the highest. Furthermore, the external and internal motives had significant positive effects on all the categories of major satisfaction, including the perception satisfaction, relationship satisfaction, subject satisfaction, and general satisfaction. This study suggests effective methods to improve the satisfaction of international students about the Korean language major such as the provision of information about and opportunities for employment using their major and the provision of a high quality. 

    – A Study on Research trends about Myanmarese Korean Language Learners (The Journal of Learner-Centered Curriculum and Instruction (JLCCI) 2019, Volume- 19, No-15)

    Abstract

          The purpose of this study is to analyze the trend of research related to Myanmarese who studies Korean language. This study collected researches related to Myanmarese Korean Language Learners as research material, and these materials are collected through Research Information Sharing Service (RISS) by imputing keywords ‘Myanmar language’, ‘Myanmarese Korean language’, ‘Myanmarese Korean Language Leaner’, ‘Burmese language’, ‘Burmese Korean language’, and ‘Burmese Korean Language Leaner’. From February 2019 to July 2019, the analysis was conducted and the data were collected. Through this process, 61 researches were collected as research material. These materials were analyzed under the criteria that consist of year of publication, publication types, and field of study, subject, language, and research method. This study illustrated that the amounts of researches has been a steep rise in 2012 because of political issues and the conditions of the market economy in myanmar, and this trends has been lasting for about 8 years. The Contrastive Analysis and Comparative Studies were mostly detected in research material. There were few Doctoral thesis in data of the study. This paper ushers in understanding for the trends and implications of the studies related Myanmarese who studies Korean language. And this study introduces the insufficient part of the researches. 

    – A Study on Korean Cultural Educational Teaching Korean Language by Researching 

      Fairy Tale ‘The Sun and The Moon’ (Universities Research Journal  2019, Vol. 12, No. 9)

    Abstract

    The purpose of this study is to build a teaching materials based on fairy tales. For the purpose of the study, it is substantiated that the relevance between language and culture by investigating researches of linguistic and cultural anthropology. Through this process, it corroborates that cultural Education is needed for teaching foreign language. And also it is proved that fairy tales is good for materials of cultural educations. The fairy tale ‘The Sun and The Moon’ is selected as research materials in this study, and qualitative research designed is applied in this research. By researching under the procedures, Teaching materials and syllabus is yielded as the result of the study, and this is based on learner-centered educations. And the characteristic of language is also reflected to the materials that derived from the research. This study and results yielded proffer to promoting Korean language learner’s attention and interest. And the level of difficulty of lecture can be easily adjusted so this could cover from beginners to advanced learner. Also, Korean language learners could be exposed to four activities of language – Listening, Reading, Writing, and Speaking – on balance. Eventually, these effects of the study could strengthens Korean language learner’s language skills and their interest in studying Korean language. 

    – A study of suggestion for corpus research through analyzing trends of theses of 

       corpus published in South Korea (YUFL Research Journal 2020, Volume- 11, No-1)

    Abstract

          The purpose of study focused on presenting suggestions for corpus research. Corpus is promising field and many corporates and academic field is entering and researching this area. In contrast, there is hard to find activities of corpus in Myanmar. Therefore, the study researching previous studies dealt with corpus can be a signpost and catalyst for myanmarese corporates and academic to enhancing activities and researches of corpus. This research begins with this awareness above. For this reason, this paper analyzed theses of corpus published in South Korea over decade (from 2010 to 2019), and theses is selected via website RISS controlled to authorities of South Korea government. 79 theses is obtained as sample data, and this sample data is analyzed by categories. Through the process, this paper suggests three suggestions. First, Corpus is not a sanctuary for linguistics and specific language. Second, Collaboration between language and other academic field is not only already becoming a reality, but also essential for developing the field of corpus. And Third, Government and organizations that can runs a lot of capital is essential for developing academic field of corpus. 

    – A study of concept comparison of tense between Myanmar and Korean language  

       (narasarang 2020.11, Volume- 129, No-)

    Abstract

    This study aims to analyze and compare the tense of Korean and Myanmar language. For the study, Data were collected and analyzed from Standard Korean Language Dictionary(표준국어대사전), Grammar for Foreigners 1: Structure(외국인을 위한 한국어 문법 1-체계 편), Encyclopedia of Korean Culture(한국민족문화대백과사전), Yonsei Korean Dictionary(연세 한국어 사전), Yonsei Korean(연세 한국어) 1-1, 1-2, 2-1, 2-2, 3-1, 3-2, 4-1, 4-2, 5-1, 5-2, 6-1, 6-2, Myanmar Grammar(미얀마 문법). The findings show that there is similar structural point of tense between Korean and Myanmar language – past, present, and future – but differences are found. In Korean language, one more than tense can be confirmed in some expressions thus these cannot be clearly categorized as past, present, or future. In the case of Myanmar, it is only possible to understand the tense when considering not only the grammatical expressions of the tense, but also the meaning of the vocabulary and the overall context. Some grammatical expressions of tense in Korean language contain tense and aspect, but grammatical expressions of tense in Myanmar language mainly deals with tense itself. Based on these findings, this paper lets people who are related to Korean and Myanmar language know the concept and differences of tense of Korean and Myanmar language.

  • Publishing Books

  • Conducting Research

  • Biography

    Dr. Wah Wah Nwe Oo     

    Professor and Head

    Department of Philosophy

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages

     

  • Education

    Ph.D. Philosophy (2018)  University of Mandalay(The Analytical Study of Journalism Ethics in Myanmar Cultural Context)

    M.A. Philosophy (2007) University of East Yangon

    B.A. Honours (2004) Dagon University

  • Working Experiences

    Professor, Head

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2021- present)

    Professor,

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2020-2021)

    Associate Professor,

    Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2019-2020)

    Lecturer,

    Yangon University of Distance Education (2016- 2019)

    Assistant Lecturer, University of Taunggyi, (2014- 2016)

    Assistant Lecturer, University of Mandalay, (2013- 2014)

    Assistant Lecturer, University of Taunggyi, (2013- 2013)

    Tutor, University of Taunggyi, (2012- 2013)

    Tutor, University of East Yangon, (2011- 2012)

    Tutor, Mohnyin Degree College, (2010- 2011)

    Tutor, University of East Yangon, (2005- 2010)

  • Research Title and Publication

    Field of Research-                   Ethics, Philosophy of Culture

    Published Research–

    1. A Study of Kantian Ethics: Applied in Cases of Myanmar Journalism, Yangon University of Distance Education Research Journal, 2017 December, Vol.8, No.1.

    (Abstract– Journalism Ethics is a field of applied ethics and study of moral principles and judgments and of good practices as applied to the journalists. The traditional ethical theories can be contributed to journalism and they can be applied provide journalists to make tough choices. Categorical imperative of Kantian consists of a principle from a sense of duty. For Kant, any action can only be justified if it is performed for reasons of duty. The research problem is “why should be used Kantian ethics in cases of journalism with the reference of Myanmar?” This paper will be contributed that the journalists can be applied the Kantian ethics in their reporting. Categorical imperative of Kantian ethics is applicable to current cases. For Kant, a good motive or a good will is central. The morally responsible person will act out of duty even in contrast to their character and the will of obligation based on reason. It can be applied to the cases of journalism in Myanmar. As for example, the article about Latpadaung Copper Mine and the story of two housemaids at Ava Tailor Shop being exploited and abused. It is studied that Kantian ethics can be used as applied ethics of journalism from the above article.)

    Keywords: Journalism ethics, applied ethics, Kantian ethics

    1. The Ethical Dilemmas of Journalism Ethics in Myanmar Society, Yangon University of Distance Education Research Journal, 2018 December, Vol.9, No.1.

    (Abstract– The main objective of this paper is to point out that the fundamental ethical concepts and norms can be applied in the ethical issues of journalism. In undertaking this study some ethical concepts and norms applying ethical dilemmas and will also be taken into the issues of journalism. The research question of this paper is that “Why the fundamental ethical concepts and norms could be taken in the journalism issues?” The tentative solution is that the ethical concepts and norms are practicing to use as guidelines for having a good effort. In this paper, the descriptive and evaluative methods and the principle of causality will be used. The contribution of this paper is to express that applying ethical concepts and norms can lead to news reporting in journalism that is ethically and in accordance with traditions and culture.)

    Keywords: fundamental ethical concepts, ethical norms, journalism ethics

    1. The Role of Journalism Ethics in Myanmar Society, Universities Research Journal, 2018 August, Vol.10, No. 7.

    (Abstract– This paper intends to find an ethical principle for journalism ethics. This principle should be coherent with traditional moral values in Myanmar society. The research problem of this paper is how an ethical principle of journalism should be formulated in Myanmar Society. In this paper, descriptive and evaluative methods are used. It can be founded that the ethical principle of freedom for truth will support to resolving of human difficulties and conflicts for the journalists.)

    Keywords: Journalism ethics, ethical principle, traditional moral values, Freedom for Truth.

    1. A Study of the Ethical Practices in Journalism from the Perspective of the Buddha’s Teachings, Myanmar Academy of Art and Science Research Journal, 2019 August, Vol.17, No.7 (Best Paper Award Winning Paper in Philosophy, 2018)

    (Abstract– The main objective of this paper is to point out that it is possible to apply the ethical norms of Myanmar culture in providing ethical guidelines for the development of journalism in Myanmar. In undertaking this study some Western ethical views concerning journalism will also be taken into account. With the development of the freedom of press in Myanmar, journalism has encountered many challenges. The research question of this paper is to provide evidence that; the ethical norms of Myanmar Buddhist culture should be taken into consideration in developing journalism ethics in Myanmar. The tentative solution would consist of clarifying what the principal ethical norms of Myanmar Buddhist culture are and the way in which they can be applied to ethical journalism. In this paper, the descriptive and evaluative methods and the principle of deduction will be used. The contribution of this paper is to promote understanding that Myanmar has a rich ethical heritage that can be applied to many affairs of human life including, the development of a “journalism” that has integrity.)

    Keywords: journalism ethics, ethical norms, ethical practices, ethical foundations, Myanmar Buddhist Culture.

    1. A Study of Eastern Culture from the Philosophical Perspective, Yangon University of Foreign Languages Research Journal 2020, Vol. 11, No. 2

    (Abstract- In the world philosophies the Eastern has investigated everything in their aesthetic component on the other hand the Western has investigated these things in their theoretic component. The main objective of this paper is intended to study on Eastern culture from the philosophical Perspective. Most of the Easterners emphasized on man than on his natural world and one of the characteristics of Eastern culture is fundamentally religious in character. The research problem of this paper is “why the Easterners’ ways of thinking seems to emphasize on the human concern in aesthetic component?” The solution of this paper is that Easterner’s ways of thinking generally based on emotional sense than rational sense. Hence they place emphasis on knowledge by intuition and on contemplation of everything in their aesthetic immediacy. This research paper will contribute to promote understanding that people can put into practice reconciliation of the philosophical perspective of the East and the West in order to achieve a comprehensive integration. As a consequence we enable to establish mutual understanding and good communication among different cultures.)

    Keywords: culture, philosophy of culture, ways of thinking, the aesthetic component.

  • Area of Interests

    Ethics, Philosophy of Culture, Political Philosophy.

  • Email

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

  • Conducting Research

  • Biography

    Professor Dr. San San Aye 

    Professor & Head 

    Philosophy Department

    San San Aye is a Professor of Philosophy Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages,
    Myanmar at present time. She obtained B.A (1985), B.A (Hons) (1986),MA (1994),
    MRes (2001) and PhD (2007) from University of Yangon, Myanmar.

  • Education

    PhD ( Philosophy Department)
  • Area of Interests

  • Biography

  • Education

    PhD (Oriental Studies Department)
  • Area of Interests

  • Biography

    Khin Thidar

    Professor, Head of Department,

    Department of History, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Yangon, Myanmar 

    Khin Thidar is a Professor of History Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar at present time. She obtained B.A (Hons) (1993), MA (1997) and PhD (2003) from University of Yangon, Myanmar. Her teaching career began at Mawlamyine University in 1995. Her teaching subjects are relevant with the courses on Myanmar Art and Architecture, History of Buddhism in Myanmar and Southeast Asian History. She had done several researches works on social history of Myanmar, religious studies of Myanmar and art history of Myanmar especially in Buddhist art. Her research papers have been published in Research Journals such as Journal of the Myanmar Academy of Arts & Science, Myanmar Historical Research Journal, Journals of Department of SEAsian Studies published by University of Malaya and Suvannabhumi published by Institute for Southeast Asian Studies, Pusan University of Foreign Studies, Republic of Korea. In 2003, She received the Prime Minister’s Honourable Award in Myanmar. In 2006, she received Outstanding Woman of the Year of Myeik Region, Southern Myanmar for her research project on analytical study of Buddha images and pagodas in Myeik region. Her research paper concerning the Cetiya of the late 18th Century and early 19th century of Myanmar won the Best Paper Award in Arts at Magway University in 2013 and her research paper on Monasteries with Sculptures of Magway Region also won the Best Paper Award in Arts in 2014. Dr Khin Thidar had participated and presented research papers at the International Conferences which were held in Thailand, Korea, Japan and China. Most of her research articles are related with the Buddhist Art and Architecture of Myanmar. Her research book “Theravāda Buddha Sāsana in Myanmar (1752-1819)” has been published in May 2017 by Lambert Academic Publishing, Saarbrucken, Germany. At Central European University in winter 2017, she had done a research on “Reconsidering King Badon’s Exertions on Buddhism in Myanmar in the late 18th and early 19th Century”.

  • Education

    EDUCATION:     

    PhD, June 2003

    University of Yangon, Yangon, Myanmar

    Dissertation: “History of Theravāda   Buddhism in Early Konbaung Period”

     

    M.A., September 1997

    University of Yangon, Yangon, Myanmar

    Thesis: “Myanmar Relations with her Eastern Neighbours during Early Konbaung Period”

    Passed with credit

     

    B.A. (Hons:) (History), August 1993

    University of Yangon, Yangon, Myanmar

    Passed with Second Class, First Division

     

     

  • Area of Interests

    I am a text block.

  • Daw Soe Soe Yee

  • Biography

    Soe Soe Yee is a Associate Professor and Head of Russian Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar at present time. She got B.Sc. (Maths) in 1982 and Diploma in Russian in 1988 and M.A (Russian) in 2013 from University of Foreign Languages. She has a keen interest in Teaching Methodology and Linguistics.

  • Educational Background

    – M.A (Russian)

  • Experiences

     

    Year University 🎓
    1992 – 2000 Tutor, (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    2000 – 2004 Assistant Lecturer, (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    2004 – 2018 Lecturer & Head of Department, (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
    2018 – present Associate Professor & Head of Department, (Yangon University of Foreign Languages)
  • Research Title and Publication

    – Russian Language in Yangon University of Foreign Languages
    (International Regional Conference “Teaching of the Russian Language in the Southeast Asian Countries”)

    In October of 2018, a research paper under the title of “Existing Pedagogical situation of Producing Russian Language Specialists and Professionals of Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar” was presented at the International Conference on Russian Language in Hochiminh Pedagogical Institute in Hochiminh city, Vietnam.

    (The International conference on the Russian Language)

    A Study of Pronunciation Mistakes of First Year Russian Specialization Students and Ways to Correct the Mistakes (Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Research Journal) Vol.4, No.1, December, 2012

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Wah Wah Htay

  • Position

    Associate Professor & Head 

  • Education

    M.A

  • Biography

    Wah Wah Htay is an Associate Professor at the Department of French and also taking the responsibility of Head of Italian Department at the Yangon University of Foreign Languages, YUFL. She obtained Master of Science (Chemistry) in 1998 at Yangon University, Master of Arts (French) in 2012, Diploma in Global English in 2009, Diploma in Italian in 2018 at YUFL and Certificate of Italian Language C1 level at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy.

    She started working as a demonstrator at the department of Chemistry, YU, in 1997. In 2001, she transferred to YUFL and started working as a tutor at the department of French. She was promoted to assistant lecturer in 2005, to lecturer in 2010 and to associate professor in 2018.

    As for training courses in abroad, she had a chance to participate in the one month Teachers Training Course at“Alliance Française de Paris”, France in 2006 and in the 10 months course of “Italian Language, Culture and Literature at the Sapienza University of Rome, Italy.

    She did departmental researches on teaching and learning French as a foreign language. Her research on Comparison of Slangs in French and Myanmar Languages was selected in University Research Journal.Shewas taking part in seminars (research paper reading) monthly. Moreover, she participated in the journal of “Food and Culture” – History Society Communication by Giovanna Motta (Volume-2), by writing a research paper about “Mappaetnogastronomica del Myanmar” with Professor Giordano Merlico, during her studies at Sapienza University.Now, sheis training the students to participate in language activities

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Me Me Tin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    -M.sc (Zoology, YU)
    -Dip in Thai Language (YUFL)
    -M.A (Thai Language, Naresuan University)

  • Area of Interests

    Cultural Heritage, Tourism

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Hnin Lei Yee Aung

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    MA

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Zin Zin Nwe

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    MA

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Thu Rein Wint Wint Han

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • U Tha Toe Aung

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    MA

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr.Me Me Win Mya

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Thiri Zaw

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr.Theint Theint Oo

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr.Nay Zar Lin

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr.Win Min Aung

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D, Dip in English

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr.Lwin Ni Ni Khine

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D, Dip in English

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw War War Khine

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr. Saw Kay Thwe

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr. Hla Ka Nyar Yin

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Mya Mya Than

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Phyu Phyu Khaing

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

    M.A

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr. Wai Wai Myint

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr Tin Tin Htwe

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Dr. Wai Wai Myint

  • Position

    Professor

  • Education

    Ph.D

  • Area of Interests

    Literature, Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Hnin Nu Yee

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Su Win Lae

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Khin Khin Htet

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

    BA (Korean)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • —-

  • Dr. Myat Thida Oo

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    Ph.D (Kyung Hee University)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Swe Swe Aung

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

    MA(Kyung-Hee Universtiy)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Zin Min Phyoe

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interest

    —-

  • —-

  • Dr. Thandar Lin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    Ph.D (Yonsei University, Korea)

  • Area of Interest

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Aye Aye Thin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interest

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Shwe Zin Aye

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interest

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Tin Moe Aye

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interest

    —-

  • —-

  • Daw Nilar Tin

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    MA (Korean)

  • Area of Interests

    —-

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Myo Myo Htike

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching, Literature

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Hsaung Thazin Lin

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Research in Interpretation, Listening & Speaking Skills, Applied Linguistics and Literary Studies

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Myint Myat Soe

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching & doing research

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Mya Shwe Wah Phyo

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching, Linguistics, Stylistics

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Win Lae Khin Mon

  • Position

    Tutor

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching, Linguistics, Literature

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Khin Phyu Phyu Lin

  • Position

    Assistant Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Research in Interpretation, Listening & Speaking Skills, Applied Linguistics and Literary Studies

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Khin Theingi Tun

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language teaching, French Culture, French Civilization, Tourism, Research & Presentation

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Ni Ni Oo

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Translating the foreign novels to Myanmar version; Research in Science Education; Writing the novels.

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Hnin Hnin Nwe

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Language Teaching and learning, Literature, History, culture, Linguistics, Stylistics, Research

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Sanda Soe Tin

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Learning, Pedagogical Research, Literature, Linguistics

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Phyu Phyu Khin

  • Position

    Lecturer

  • Education

  • Area of Interests

    Research in  Writing Skills, Speaking Skills and French Literary Studies

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Mie Mie Pyone

  • Position

    Associate Professor

  • Education

    M.A

  • Area of Interests

    Language teaching, Literature and Research

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Than Than Win

  • Educational Background

    M.A

  • Area of Interest

    Inernational Education of Chinese Language

  • [email protected]

  • Daw Than Than Win

  • Academic degree

    • A (TEFL). Yangon Institute of Education, Myanmar, Coursework, 1997/1999
    • Diploma in ELT, Yangon University, Myanmar, 1993/1994
    • A (English), Yangon University, Myanmar, 1978/1982
  • Business career

    • Tutor, Yangon University, Myanmar, 1994/1995
    • Tutor, Sittwe Degree College, Myanmar, 1995/1996
    • Tutor, Workers’ College, Myanmar, 1956/2003
    • Assistant Lecturer, Workers’ College, Myanmar, 2003
    • Assistant Lecturer, University of Forestry, Yezin, Naypyitaw, Myanmar, 2003/2006
    • Lecturer, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, 2006/2019
    • Associate Professor, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, 2019/12 – up till now
  • Additional post

    • Information and scholarship officer, Myanmar National Commission for UNESCO, 2007 – up till now
  • Papers

    • Developing Speaking Skills at the Intermediate Level, Than Than Win, YUFL Research Journal Vol. 7, 2015
    • Teaching Prepositions to First Year English Specialization Students through Context-based Approach, Than Than Win, YUFL Research Journal Vol. 10, No.2, 2019
    • An Analysis of Errors in Writing by Post-graduate Diploma Students, Than Than Win, YUFL Research Journal Vol. 10, No.2, 2020
  • Presentations

    • Workshop on Professional Skills Development of Faculty Members at Universities of Foreign Languages in Myanmar, Than Than Win , ELT Conference 2014 ; Empowering and Inspiring ELT Teachers: Practical applications for the Classrooms , Oral Presentation
    • Discourse Analysis on Myawaddy TV Interviews, Than Than Win , The 19th Research Conference of Myanmar Academy of Arts and Science , 2019 , Oral Presentation
  • [email protected]

Daw Ohn Mar Maw

Lecturer

Academic Degree

  • 1986, Yangon University, Myanmar, English Graduated

  • 1993, Yangon Institute of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, Diploma in Japanese, Faculty of State Middle School of South Okkalapa, Yangon

  • 1997, Yangon University, Myanmar, Diploma in English Language Teaching, Faculty of Dagon University, Yangon

  • 2001, Dagon University, Yangon, MA (English), Faculty of Dagon University, Yangon

Academic Degree

Master’s Degree in English, Dagon University, Yangon

Class Charge

  • Fourth Year English Specialization (2018)

  • Diploma in English Full Time (2019)

Business career

  • Primary Assistant Teacher, State Middle School of South Okkalapa, Yangon, 1988/11-1997/11

Academic Society Membership

  • A Study of 7 Audio Scripts in Business Result (Intermediate) with an Action Game of Listening Practice, 2020, Lecturer, English Department, YUFL Research Journal 2020, Vol 11, No. 1

Academic Society Membership

  • Supporting Learning Committee (Mentoring), Yangon University of Foreign Languages

[email protected]

U Sai Sithu Win

Assistant Lecturer

Area of Interests

Literature and Linguistics

[email protected]

Daw Thandar Myint Thu Soe

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Literature, Linguistics and Translation Studies

[email protected]

Daw Sein U Swe

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Sociolinguistics and Translation Studies

[email protected]

Daw Tsu Thondayi Nwe

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Culture and Literature, Pedagogy and Assessment design

[email protected]/a>

Daw Mya Kay Khine

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Literature and Linguistics

[email protected]

Daw Wai Mar Myint

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Linguistics, Pedagogy, Business studies

[email protected]

Daw Cherry Soe Lwin

Lecturer

Area of Interests

Litrerature, Culture, Translation Studies

[email protected]

Daw Phyu Thida

Associated Professor

Area of Interests

Literature and Linguistics

[email protected]

  • Biography

    Thang Khan Dim is a Associate Professor and Head of Department of German, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar at present time. She obtained B.Sc. (Zoo.) (1992), MSc (Zoo) (1999) from University of Yangon and MA (German), 2014 from Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar.

  • Education

    MA (German), May 2014, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar
    Thesis: “eine Analyse über typische Fehler bei der Bildung und der Umformung von Partizipialkonstruktionen und Partizipialsätzen von BA III Deutschstudenten an YUFL”   M.Sc (Zoo), 1999, University of Yangon
    Thesis: “Anatomy of Aetomylaeus maculatus (Gray, 1834)”
    Diploma in German, 1996, Institute of Foreign Languages (Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar),
    B.Sc (Zoo), 1992, University of Yangon, Myanmar

  • Area of Interests

    Curriculum Design and Development
  • EXPERIENCE

    Tutor                                        : Institute of Foreign Languages (Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar) (1997 –2000)
    Assistant Lecturer : Mandalay University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar (2000 –2002)
    Assistant Lecturer & Lecturer  : Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, (2000 –2006)
    Lecturer (Head) : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2006 –2010)
    Lecturer : Mandalay and Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2010 –2017)
    Lecturer (Head) : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2017 –2018)
    Associate Professor (Head) : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2017- at present)

Daw Htet Htet Win

B.A(Thai)

Tutor

Teaching & Learning, Sociolinguistics, Literature and Culture Studies, Social Science, Research

[email protected]

Daw Phyu Yati Thin

Tutor

B.A(Thai)

Teaching & Learning, Tourism, Literature Culture and History, Social Sciences, Research

[email protected]

Daw Shun Lae Win

Assistant Lecturer

M.A(Thai)

Teaching Thai as a foreign Language, History Culture and Literature, Research

[email protected]

Daw Than Thar Su

Assistant Lecturer

M.A(Folklore Studies)

Teaching & Learning, Research, Culture & Sociology, Psychology

[email protected]

Daw Ohnmar Aung

Associate Professor

B.A(Hons)(Myanmar),

M.A(Myanmar),

MEd(Educational Technology and Communications),

Dip in Global English,

Dip in Thai

Literature History and Culture

[email protected]

  • Biography

    Su Su Khin is a Associate Professor and Head of Department of Thai, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar at present time. She obtained M.Sc (Zoology) (1994) from University of Yangon and MA (Thai), 2015 from Narasuan University, Thailand. Now she is attending the PhD program in Lampang Rajabhat University, Thailand.
  • Education

    • MA (Thai),  May 2015, Narasuan University, Thailand. Thesis: “eine Analyse über typische Fehler bei der Bildung und der Umformung von Partizipialkonstruktionen und Partizipialsätzen von BA III Deutschstudenten an YUFL”
    • M.Sc (Zoology), 1994, University of Yangon Thesis: “Babesia Infection in Cattle”
    • Diploma in Thai, 1999, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar.
  • Experience

    Tutor  : (Yangon University, Hlaing Campus ) (1991 –1999)
    Assistant Lecturer    : Bago Degree College, (1999 –2000)
    Assistant Lecturer : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2000 –2004)
    Lecturer : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2004 –2018)
    Associate Professor (Head)  : Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2018- at present)
  • [email protected]

Daw Thet Su Mon

Assistant Lecturer

B.A(Thai)

Teaching & Learning, literature & Culture, IT, Social Science Research

[email protected]

Daw May Thaw Han

Assistant Lecturer

B.sc(Zoology),

Diploma in Thai

Teaching & Learning, Analytical Skill Research, Culture history, Psychology, social sciences

[email protected]

Name

Daw Hsu Myat Sandar

Education

  • BA (EPP: English for Professional Purposes), Yangon University (2007 – 2010)
  • Diploma in ELT (English Language Teaching), Yangon University (2011 – 2012)
  • MA (EFL: English as a Foreign Language), Yangon University of Foreign Languages (2012 – 2014)
  • Advanced Specialist Certificate (I) in Teaching Listening and Speaking Skills (SEAMEO, RELC, Singapore) (2019)

Areas of Interest

Psycholinguistics, Language Teaching

Work Experience

Current Assistant Lecturer, Department of English, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar
2015 – 2019 Tutor, Department of English, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar

Function

2020 – Present  Programme Officer, Myanmar National Commission for UNESCO

E-Mail Address

[email protected]

Name

Daw Khine Lwin Zar

Position

Assistant Lecturer

Business Career

  • Tutor, English Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, 2015-2019

  • Assistant Lecturer, English Department, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, 2019-Present

Academic Degree

  • MA (EFL), Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, 2012-2014

  • Diploma in English, Yangon University of Foreign Languages, Myanmar, 2010-2011

  • BA (English), East Yangon University, Myanmar, 2004-2007

Additional Post

Student Assessment Committee, Committee Member, (2020-Present)

Class Charge [အတန်းပိုင်]

Fourth Year (Section B)

Social Contributions

  • Liaison Officer, Malaysia Expo (Small and Medium Enterprises), 2014

  • Participant Youth, The International Youth Development Exchange Program (INDEX 2017)

E-Mail Address

[email protected]

Daw Soe Soe Than

Lecturer

Japanese Grammar

[email protected]

Daw San San Nu

Associated Professor

M.A (Japanese)

Reading

[email protected]

Daw May Tin

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Vocabulary

[email protected]

Daw Win Win Thant

Associated Professor

M.A (Japanese)

Literature

[email protected]

Daw Hnin Hnin Nwe

Lecturer

[email protected]

Name

Daw Myat Thu Aung

Post

Assistant Lecturer

Education

B.A (Japanese)

Area of interest

Translation

E-Mail

[email protected]

Daw Naw Phoo Pwint Thi

Assistant Lecturer

Applied Linguistics and Language Teaching

[email protected]

Daw May Myat Hmuu Aung

Tutor

Linguistics, Methodology and Language Skills

[email protected]

Daw Myat Thida Theint

Tutor

Linguistics, Methodology, Language Skills

[email protected]

Daw Yin Nilar Soe

Tutor

Language Skills, Linguistics and Literature

[email protected]

Daw Mya Ei Ei

Tutor

Language Teaching, Literature, Linguistics

[email protected]

Daw Hnin Oo Wai Hlan

Tutor

Language Skills, Methodology and Linguistics

[email protected]

Daw Win Le’Phyu Phyu

Assistant Lecturer

Language Teaching  and  Applied Linguistics

[email protected]

Daw Aye Sandar Tun

Assistant Lecturer

Computer Assisted Language Learning, Learning Strategies, Critical Thinking Skills

[email protected]

Daw Hla Myat Thu

Assistant Lecturer

Linguistics and Language Teaching

[email protected]

Daw Hnin Lae` Yee

Assistant Lecturer

Linguistics and Language Teaching

[email protected]

Daw Htway Htway Aung

Assistant Lecturer

Language Skills

[email protected]

U Aung Myo Hein

Lecturer

Language Teaching and Language Assessment

[email protected]

Daw Thandar Su Su Lwin

Lecturer

Language Teaching

[email protected]

Daw Thida Nyunt Phay

Lecturer

Language Teaching, Literature &Language Skills

[email protected]

Daw Nan Win Yu Maung

Lecturer

Language Teaching and Psycholinguistics

[email protected]

Dr. Su Khine Oo

Lecturer

Linguisitcs and Language Teaching

[email protected]

Dr Lwin Lwin Hla Pe

Lecturer

Applied Linguistics

[email protected]

U Myo Lwin

Lecturer

Language Teaching, Literature

[email protected]

Daw Aye Aye Soe

Lecturer

Language Teaching, Literature &Language Skills

[email protected]

Daw Saw Su Latt

Assistant Lecturer

B.A (Japanese)

Japanese Culture, Reading, Teaching Methodology

[email protected]

Daw Hnin Htet Htet Phway

Assistant Lecturer

B.A (Japanese)

Teaching Methodology, Japanese Grammar

[email protected]

Daw Phoo Pwint Phyu

Assistant Lecturer

 M.A (Japanese Language Education)

Second Language Acquisition, Peer Learning, Peer Listening, Listening Strategy

[email protected]

Daw Aye Phyu Nyein

Assistant Lecturer

B.A (Japanese)

Second Language Acquisition, Japanese Language Education, Listening, Listening Strategy

[email protected]

Daw Yin Moe Thet

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese Language & culture)

Second Language Acquisition, Japanese Language Education

[email protected]

Daw Moe Yu Nwe

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Culture, Japanese Grammar, Listening

[email protected]

Daw Wai Wai

Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Japanese Grammar, Japanese Culture and History

[email protected]

Daw Nan Myat Saw

Lecturer

M.A (International Media and Communication)

Second Language Acquisition

[email protected]

Daw Zin Mar Ohn

Visiting Lecturer

M.A (Japanese)

Business Japanese

[email protected]

Daw Saw Eaindar Nwe

Associate Professor

M.A (Japanese Language Education)

(Teaching Methodology)

[email protected]

Daw Chit Chit Myint

Associate Professor & Head

M.A (Japanese)

(Teaching Methodology), Scaffolding of Language Learning, Enhancing of Active Learning

[email protected]

Dr. Khin Hnin Yee

Associate Professor

Ph.D

Teaching Methodology, Socioinguistics, Literature, Culture

[email protected]

​Daw Aye Aye Min

Lecturer 

M.A

Lexicology

[email protected]

​Dr. Than Than Yee

Associate Professor

Ph.D

Linguistics, Culture, Literature

[email protected]

Daw Phyu Phyu Win

Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture

[email protected]

​Dr. Htet Thu Thu Tun

Lecturer

Ph.D

Teaching Methodology, Culture, Literature

[email protected]

​Dr. Mya Mya Win

Lecturer

Ph.D

Teaching Methodology,Culture, Chinese Philology

[email protected]

Daw Zin Mon Aye

Lecturer

M.A

Lexicology, Culture , Linguistics

[email protected]


Daw Phu Pwint Ko Ko

Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture , Linguistics

[email protected]

​Daw Kyi Phyu

Assistance Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Linguistics, Culture,
Translation, Lexicology

[email protected]

Daw Suu Mon Kyi

Assistance Lecturer

M.A

Teaching Methodology, Culture, Linguistics, Lexicology

[email protected]

​Dr. Kay Khaing Myint

Professor

Ph.D

Comparative Linguistics, Applied Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Semantics, Pragmatics, Stylistics

​Daw Suu Myat Wai Zin


Lecturer

M.A

Chinese Philology, Culture, Teaching Methodology,
Chinese Etymology

[email protected]