Multinational Research Society Publisher

Mission and Vision
Our Mission
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.
Our Vision
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.
Open Access Policy
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.
Indexing
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Latest Article
1. SOCIOLINGUISTIC COMPETENCE OF CALL CENTER AGENTS IN THE PHILIPPINES: I...
1

Ma. Whelsa N. Tabuete* & Rafae...
University of Saint Anthony
65-74
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20626273

In the rapidly growing Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) industry in the Philippines, effective communication plays a vital role in ensuring quality customer service and maintaining customer satisfaction. Call center agents are expected not only to possess grammatical and linguistic competence but also to demonstrate sociolinguistic competence, which involves the appropriate use of language according to social and cultural contexts. Despite the importance of communication in the BPO sector, challenges such as language barriers, cultural misunderstandings, code-switching, and inappropriate communication styles continue to affect customer interactions and service outcomes. This study aimed to determine the level of sociolinguistic competence of selected call center agents in the Philippines and examine its impact on customer satisfaction. Specifically, the study focused on language appropriateness, cultural sensitivity, conversational strategies, and pragmatic competence in customer interactions. Furthermore, it sought to identify whether a significant relationship exists between sociolinguistic competence and customer satisfaction. The study employed a quantitative descriptive research design. Data were gathered through interview and structured survey questionnaires administered to selected call center agents from BPO companies in the Philippines. The study found that selected call center agents possess a high level of sociolinguistic competence in terms of appropriateness of language use, code-switching and style shifting, cultural sensitivity, and pragmatic competence. They are capable of adjusting their language, tone, vocabulary, and communication style based on the customer‟s background, emotional state, and level of understanding while maintaining professionalism and respect. The findings also showed positive customer communication outcomes, as customers frequently expressed gratitude, became calmer after clear explanations, used positive language, followed instructions, acknowledged issue resolution, and gave high satisfaction ratings. This indicates that effective communication behavior among call center agents significantly contributes to customer satisfaction, successful service interactions, and overall service quality. The study concludes that selected call center agents demonstrate a high level of sociolinguistic competence in language use, code-switching, cultural sensitivity, and pragmatic competence, which enables them to communicate effectively and professionally with diverse customers. Their ability to adapt language, show empathy, and handle customer concerns appropriately contributes to positive customer communication outcomes such as gratitude, cooperation, issue resolution, and high satisfaction ratings. While company scripts provide structure and consistency, flexibility, personalization, and strong communication skills remain essential in building customer trust and satisfaction. Therefore, a training module titled "Enhancing Sociolinguistic Competence for Effective Customer Communication in the Call Center Industry" can be utilized by call center companies and training institutions to strengthen agents' communication skills.
2. FROM CRISIS TO REFORM: GOVERNANCE, CORRUPTION, AND DEMOCRATIC TRANSFOR...
2

Dr. John Motsamai Modise*
Tshwane University of Technology
1-19
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20566239

The purpose of this study is to critically examine the governance crisis, corruption dynamics, and democratic transformation challenges within the South African Police Service (SAPS) in the context of post-1994 reforms. It further analyses the implications of the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry (2025–2026) alongside other oversight mechanisms, including the Zondo Commission (2022), the National Development Plan (NDP 2030), and the National Anti-Corruption Strategy (2019–2030), in assessing the effectiveness of policing reform in South Africa. Despite extensive post-apartheid reforms aimed at transforming SAPS into a professional, accountable, and community-oriented institution, systemic corruption, political interference, and weak internal governance mechanisms continue to undermine institutional legitimacy, operational effectiveness, and public trust. The central problem is that SAPS has not successfully institutionalised democratic accountability and ethical governance, resulting in sustained corruption, vulnerability to organised criminal infiltration, and declining public confidence, as evidenced by findings from the Madlanga Commission, Zondo Commission, and IPID oversight reports. This study adopts a qualitative systematic document analysis approach. It draws on triangulated secondary data sources, including government policy frameworks (e.g., NDP 2030 and NACS), official commission reports (Zondo Commission and Madlanga Commission), Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID) annual reports, and credible international governance indices such as the World Bank Governance Indicators and Transparency International reports. The data were systematically analysed through thematic content analysis focusing on governance, corruption patterns, institutional accountability, and reform effectiveness within SAPS. The study reveals that corruption within SAPS is systemic rather than incidental, characterised by entrenched networks of misconduct, procurement irregularities, and infiltration by organised criminal groups. Oversight institutions such as IPID and parliamentary mechanisms face limitations in enforcement capacity, resulting in weak accountability outcomes. The findings further indicate a persistent gap between policy frameworks and implementation, where reform strategies such as the NDP 2030 and National Anti-Corruption Strategy have not fully translated into operational effectiveness. The Madlanga Commission reinforces these concerns by exposing prima facie evidence of governance failures, political interference, and compromised policing integrity. International comparative data further confirm that weakened rule of law and institutional corruption significantly erode public trust and legitimacy in law enforcement institutions. The study concludes that the South African Police Service is experiencing a deep-seated governance and legitimacy crisis driven by systemic corruption, weak institutional accountability, and implementation failures in reform policies. While comprehensive policy frameworks exist, their impact is undermined by structural weaknesses in leadership, oversight coordination, and ethical enforcement. The Madlanga Commission highlights the urgency of transitioning from policy reform to enforceable institutional transformation, requiring strengthened oversight mechanisms, depoliticisation of policing structures, and enhanced integrity systems. Without decisive reform, SAPS risks continued erosion of public trust and democratic legitimacy, thereby undermining the broader criminal justice system and democratic consolidation in South Africa.
3. HISTORY OF PEDAGOGY: HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS OF CONSTRUCTIVIST PEDAGOGY
2

Dr. Avi Abner*
Burgas State University "Prof. Dr. Assen Zlatarov", Republic of Bulgaria
37-40
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20566241

The historical development of constructivist pedagogy is closely connected with broader changes in philosophical and educational thought concerning the nature of knowledge and learning. Over time, the understanding gradually emerged that learning is not limited to the passive reception of information, but involves the learner’s own activity, experience, and interpretation of the world. Certain philosophical and pedagogical ideas compatible with later constructivist interpretations can already be identified in ancient philosophy and medieval thought. The views of Plato and Aristotle may be regarded as important historical preconditions for later learner-centered and constructivist-oriented educational theories. Increasing attention was directed toward experience, observation, personal development, and the learner’s participation in the educational process. Particular importance for the later development of constructivism belongs to Dewey, Piaget, and Vygotsky, whose theories provided a more systematic explanation of learning as an active and socially mediated process. Their ideas played a major role in changing traditional views of education and in establishing new understandings of the relationship between teaching, experience, and cognition. Viewed in historical perspective, constructivist pedagogy appears as the result of a long process of philosophical and pedagogical development rather than a directly continuous tradition originating in Antiquity. The evolution of these ideas reflects broader changes in the understanding of knowledge, the learner, and the purpose of education itself.
4. LIVED EXPERIENCES AND LINGUISTIC POSITIONING OF FILIPINO ENGLISH EDUCA...
4

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.