Multinational Research Society Publisher

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At MRS Publisher, our mission is to advance the dissemination of high-quality, peer-reviewed research to a global audience, enabling unrestricted access to scholarly content. We strive to facilitate the free exchange of knowledge and foster academic collaboration, empowering researchers, educators, and practitioners across disciplines to contribute to the advancement of science and society. By providing open access to research outputs, we aim to enhance the visibility, impact, and accessibility of scholarly work while supporting a sustainable and equitable knowledge-sharing ecosystem.
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Our vision is to become a leading force in the global open-access publishing landscape, promoting transparency, inclusivity, and collaboration within the scientific community. We envision a future where all academic research is freely accessible, enabling innovation, accelerating discovery, and supporting evidence-based decision-making in policy, education, and practice. Through our commitment to open access, MRS Publisher seeks to break down barriers to knowledge and empower a diverse range of voices and perspectives in the pursuit of knowledge and societal progress.
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MRS Publisher is committed to promoting open access to all scholarly works published under our name. We firmly believe that providing open access to research articles, journals, and other scholarly materials increases the visibility and accessibility of research, maximizes the impact of scientific inquiry, and accelerates the exchange of knowledge across borders and disciplines.
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Latest Article
1. LIVED EXPERIENCES AND LINGUISTIC POSITIONING OF FILIPINO ENGLISH EDUCA...
1

Antonio V. Peñalosa Jr.*
University of Saint Anthony
46-64
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20536749

Filipino English Educators have become increasingly visible in the global English as a Foreign Language (EFL) industry due to the growing demand for online English instruction among international students. While previous studies have documented various aspects of Filipino English Educators experiences within the global EFL industry, the use of English has often appeared as part of broader discussions rather than as the primary phenomenon of inquiry. This study examined the phenomenon of using English in the Global Classroom through two analytically distinct yet complementary dimensions: lived experiences and linguistic positionings. Specifically, it sought to uncover the essence of the shared lived experiences of Filipino English Educators and identify the linguistic positionings constructed through classroom utterances. The study employed a qualitative multi-method research design utilizing Transcendental Phenomenology (Moustakas, 1994) and Positioning Analysis grounded in the Positioning Theory of Harré and Moghaddam (2003). Three Filipino English Educators participated in the study. Data were gathered through semi-structured interviews and classroom recording transcriptions. Interview data were analyzed using phenomenological procedures, while classroom recordings were analyzed through the positioning triangle of speech acts, positions, and storylines. The findings revealed that the essence of using English in the Global Classroom is a continuous process of adjustment, negotiation, adaptation, and heightened self-awareness within multilingual and multicultural online teaching environments, shaped by communicative flexibility, cultural responsiveness, institutional expectations, and professional identity negotiation while sustaining participation, communication, and professionalism in the Global Classroom. Furthermore, the linguistic positionings constructed by Filipino English Educators reflected their enactment as Language Models, Meaning Negotiators, Language Scaffolds, Instructional Authorities, and Confidence Builders during classroom interaction. Together, these findings demonstrate that using English in the Global Classroom is both internally experienced and externally enacted through discourse, interaction, and pedagogical practice. The study concludes that examining both lived experiences and linguistic positionings provides a more comprehensive understanding of the phenomenon of using English among Filipino English Educators in the Global Classroom, revealing how it is experienced, negotiated, and enacted within multilingual and multicultural online teaching environments.
2. Utilizing the Local Anthology in Fostering Literary Appreciation in Cr...
0

Gerlyn A. Paniterce*
Faculty, University of Saint Anthony, Senior High School Department
24-45
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20536351

This research, titled “Utilizing Local Anthology in Fostering Literary Appreciation in Creative Writing,” addresses the disconnect between abstract literary theory and the cultural reality of Grade 12 HUMSS students at the University of Saint Anthony. Grounded in Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy and Cognitive Poetics Model of Literary Resonance and Theory of Aesthetic Textual Engagement, the study investigates how integrating Rinconada folktales, such as can serve as cognitive hooks to enhance student engagement. Using descriptive-developmental design, the study assessed baseline literary appreciation, developed a supplementary material using the available local anthology and measured its subsequent impact on students' literary appreciation in Creative Writing. The study’s findings revealed that: 1) Before the intervention, students had high technical scores but a moderate overall appreciation level, struggling most with personal connection, 2) Students from the study faced difficulties in critical engagement because their textbooks contained foreign settings which created cultural distance and restricted their creative expression, 3) Student scores reached the "High Appreciation" level after they utilized the local anthology which resulted in improvements across all assessment areas, and 4) The "PAMANA" material received a "Very Satisfactory" expert evaluation although validators found only minor typographical errors which required correction. Furthermore, the research concludes that: 1) Students show strong understanding of literary techniques but they fail to connect with texts that originate from different cultures, 2) The use of foreign materials requires students to spend their mental energy which prevents Bicolano learners from establishing connections while they try to develop their creative abilities, 3) Local anthologies remove cognitive barriers which enable students to concentrate on advanced writing skills instead of needing to understand new writing contexts, and 4) The developed material functions as a professional tool which maintains cultural authenticity while it connects technical skills to cultural understanding. Based on these results, the following recommendations are formulated: 1) Educators’ classroom instructions should be replaced with methods that help students develop personal connections to their studies, 2) Teachers should use local folktales and community stories as their main teaching materials because these resources will help students develop better writing skills and create deeper understanding of their local heritage, 3) Future researchers should use this study's framework to develop localized materials for other Humanities and Social sciences subjects, and 4) The Senior High School Department should integrate this approved supplementary material into their official curriculum for contextualized learning.
3. SOCIO-PRAGMATIC ANALYSIS OF EVENT HOSTING: INPUTS FOR SUPPLEMENTARY MA...
0

Sheila Mae S. Diana*
University of Saint Anthony - School of Graduate Studies and Research
1-7
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20520631

This study explored the socio-pragmatic features evident in event-hosting discourse and examined how event hosts use language to manage interaction and achieve communication goals. Specifically, the research analyzed speech acts, politeness strategies, discourse markers, audience engagement, turn-taking, and role performance employed by professional and semi-professional event hosts in Camarines Sur, Philippines. The study utilized a qualitative research design through socio-pragmatic and conversational analysis. Data were collected through direct observation, audio-video recordings, semi-structured interviews, and collection of authentic hosting scripts and program flow materials. The findings show that hosts use Directive, Expressive, Assertive, Commissive and Declarative Speech Acts during the event to manage interaction effectively. Positive and negative politeness strategies were also consistently observed to maintain social harmony and professionalism during events. Common discourse markers such “and,” “so,” “lets,” “thank you,” “please,” “okay,”of course,” “now,” “ladies” and gentlemen,” and “alright” helped organize discourse and sustain audience attention. study further found that hosts used various interactional strategies such as code - switching, acknowledgement and recognition, directive - based audience engagement, energy checks, narrative transition, interactive questioning, humor, and game facilitation to sustain audience participation and interest. Turn-taking was observed through speaker selection, initiating participation, transition cues, feedback/closure, and collective turn - taking. In terms of role performance, hosts simultaneously functioned as facilitators, audience engagers, information givers, and entertainers to maintain both order and rapport through the event.Based on the findings, supplementary instructional materials were proposed to enhance learners’ socio-pragmatic awareness and public speaking skills.
4. Challenges and Opportunities in English Language Learning of Junior Hi...
2

Annabelle S. Cabañero* & Rafae...
Faculty, University of Saint Anthony Senior High School Department
13-23
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20520423

This study attempted to identify the challenges and opportunities of the Grade 9 students of Dautil Watkins National high School in English language learning. Specifically, the researcher sought to answer the following questions: (1) What are the challenges encountered by the students in English language learning? (2) What are learning opportunities faced by the students in English language learning? (3) What intervention may be proposed based on the findings of the study?. The study was premised on the following assumptions: (1)The Grade 9 students of Dautil Watkins National High School encounter identifiable linguistic, emotional, or environmental challenges that significantly affect their proficiency and progress in English language learning. (2) Despite any existing difficulties or the newly founded state of the institution, there are available learning opportunities, instructional strategies, or community supports within the school environment that can be leveraged to enhance language acquisition. (3) Gathered experiences and feedback from the participants will provide a reliable, valid, and practical basis for designing a localized intervention program capable of addressing reading and communication gaps. This study utilizes a qualitative research approach, specifically employing a case study design, to investigate the intersection of language learning challenges and opportunities among the Grade 9 Junior High School students of Dautil Watkins National High School. By adopting a case study framework, the research moves beyond simple grammatical analysis to examine language struggles as meaningful, bounded social events deeply rooted in the participants' specific cultural and linguistic reality. The study involves five key participants who are directly immersed in the school’s linguistic phenomenon. The participants were selected through criterion purposive sampling, which specifically targets individuals who meet a predetermined standard of experience namely, Grade 9 secondary learners currently experiencing documented "comprehension breakdowns" and reading literacy challenges. Data were gathered through a semi-structured interview tool, utilizing culturally sensitive, open-ended questions designed to uncover rich, descriptive narratives. This systematic procedure involved securing formal institutional approval and implementing a dual-method recording process of audio-taping and note-taking to accurately identify recurring patterns of communicative resilience and student coping mechanisms. After analyzing the data gathered, the study yielded the following findings: (1) The Grade 9 students encounter profound dual-natured learning difficulties consisting of physical/cognitive and emotional barriers. Structurally, learners face severe lack of vocabulary and syntactic confusion, struggling with sentence construction and word placement (e.g., placing determiners and prepositions like “the," "of," and "with"). Emotionally, these linguistic deficits trigger high performance anxiety, nervousness, and fear of peer ridicule during public classroom activities such as essay writing, oral reporting, and speaking in front of the class. Furthermore, these challenges are compounded outside the school environment by digital distractions such as excessive mobile screen time spent on TikTok and YouTube videos and a state of institutional containment where the native mother tongue (Buhinon) is exclusively spoken and English reading materials are absent at home. (2) Despite severe resource limitations in a developing school environment, the students encounter highly effective learning opportunities through collaborative scaffolding and self-regulated learning tools. Inside the classroom, interactive strategies such as group work, educational games, and peer interaction provide a safe, non-threatening space that lowers anxiety and allows students to negotiate meaning together. Oral reporting compels intensive vocabulary preparation, while direct, positive corrections from teachers optimize language retention. Outside the classroom, the school's provision of targeted reading programs and textbooks serves as a vital foundation. Additionally, students demonstrate deep academic resilience and intrinsic linguistic curiosity, proactively utilizing self-regulated strategies like dictionary searches on the internet, context clue repetition, and media-driven exposure (e.g., songs, television, and subtitles) to cope with text breakdowns (3) The participants explicitly request a balanced intervention model that targets vocabulary simplification, instructional modifications, pedagogical encouragement, and interactive remedial activities. Students express a strong desire for teachers to intentionally simplify advanced or “deep" vocabulary by anchoring lessons in relatable, everyday school contexts rather than abstract concepts. Affectively, learners articulate a critical need for emotional reassurance and positive reinforcement, requesting that teachers do not react with immediate anger when mistakes are made. To build confidence and oral fluency while avoiding performance boredom, students recommend that the school implement structured, non-intimidating interactive programs, specifically prioritizing active educational games, role-playing, small-group discussions, and remedial reading assistance. In the light of the foregoing findings, the following conclusions were drawn: (1) It is concluded that the English language learning challenges of the Grade 9 students are deeply tied to a lack of meaningful, structured language exposure outside of school hours, which triggers a high affective filter. Because the domestic setting is structurally contained by the native Buhinon tongue and digital spaces favor passive entertainment over text literacy, students lack the established cognitive schemas or baseline vocabulary blocks required to smoothly assimilate advanced high school instructions. When forced to produce language publicly without these tools, their emotional filters rise, resulting in performance anxiety, silent retreat, and defensive code-switching to manage psychological stress. (2) It is concluded that while isolated individual tasks induce high anxiety, socially mediated scaffolding and environmental interaction serve as powerful buffers that empower students to actively construct linguistic meaning. The students’ strong foundation of intrinsic motivation and grow-mindset resilience indicates that they do not reject English acquisition; rather, they rely on collaborative networks to achieve what they cannot do alone. True language opportunities thrive when the school’s community-driven ecosystem provides physical books and targeted reading frameworks, which seamlessly convert passive media habits into active self-regulated learning tools. (3) It is concluded that an effective, sustainable intervention program for a newly founded institution like Dautil Watkins National High School must balance structural language training with emotional optimization. Pedagogical practices cannot rely on rapid instruction or rigid penalties for errors. Instead, to transform documented challenges into real opportunities, any strategic framework must systematically dismantle learning anxiety by fostering an empathetic classroom climate while providing contextualized, clear reading inputs that match the actual developmental readiness of the secondary learners. Based on the above conclusions, the following recommendations were drawn: (1) English teachers should slow down the pace of their teaching and start each lesson with a quick vocabulary review. They should also provide simple sentence guides to help students practice word order before they write or speak. Schools and parents should work together to set up a daily reading routine at home to replace screen time with simple books or learning apps. (2) Schools should utilize more group work. Teachers should mix group tasks, peer tutoring, and educational games into daily lessons to reduce student anxiety. They should also enhance current reading programs and textbooks by adding videos and visual worksheets that match students’ learning preferences. (3) The school administration should implement "The Eco-Linguistic Scaffolding Program," a three-part school-wide intervention to boost student confidence and literacy. First, it features a reading and speaking clinic focused on step-by-step letter blending and school-based vocabulary. Second, it replaces traditional instruction with interactive methods like role-plays and language games. Finally, it mandates faculty workshops on positive reinforcement and supportive correction to reduce student anxiety and build oral confidence.