raising awareness of english as a lingua franca in an 'internationalising' british...
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Rachel Wicaksono Centre for Languages and Linguistics
York St John University, UK
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Research is also beginning to show how bad some native speakers are at using English for international communication. It may be that elements of an [English as a lingua franca] syllabus could usefully be taught within a mother tongue curriculum. (Graddol, 2006 p. 87)
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multilingual communities have known [this] all along: language learning and language use succeed through performance strategies, situational resources, and social negotiations in fluid communicative contexts. Proficiency is therefore practice-based, adaptive and emergent…. The speakers are able to monitor each other’s language proficiency to determine mutually the appropriate grammar, lexical range and pragmatic conventions that would ensure intelligibility. (Canagarajah, 2007 pp. 923 - 925)
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O: What- what parts of ummm like your lessons (.) have you enjoyed (.) doing (.) with Rachel.
S: (2.0) Hmm?O: What parts of your ermmm ((LS)) (1.0)
foundation programme have you enjoyed doing with Rachel.
S: (.) We- I don’t have Rachel.O: Oh you do:n’t? oh right. So what- (1.0)
what lessons d- what lessons are you doin’?
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Contents page – the 5-stage activityBackground to ELF and our approach
to the analysis of classroom talkTranscribingNotation
http://www2.yorksj.ac.uk/EnquiryCommons/elf/elfsite/
index.htm
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Contents pageBackground to ELF and our approach
to the analysis of classroom talkTranscribingNotation
http://www2.yorksj.ac.uk/EnquiryCommons/elf/elfsite/
index.htm
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Back
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Contents pageBackground to ELF and our approach
to the analysis of classroom talkTranscribingNotation
http://www2.yorksj.ac.uk/EnquiryCommons/elf/elfsite/
index.htm
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Back
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Discussing transcriptions: raising awareness, directing attention, developing sensitivity and challenging assumptions.
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Brown, G. (2008). English - The world's language. 2008 speeches. Available online at: http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page14289.asp [last accessed 4/4/11]
Brutt-Griffler, J. (2002). World English: A study of its development. Clevedon, England: Multilingual Matters.
Canagarajah, S. (2007). Lingua franca English, multilingual communities, and language acquisition. Modern Language Journal, 91, 923-939.
Clark, H. H. (1997). Dogmas of understanding. Discourse Processes, 23, 567-598.Gardner, R. (2004). On delaying the answer: Question sequences extended after the question
in (eds) Second Language Conversations. R. Gardner & J. Wagner. London: Continuum.Gargesh, R. (2006). South Asian Englishes. In B. B. Kachru, Y. Kachru & C. L. Nelson (eds) The
handbook of world Englishes (Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics). Oxford: Blackwell.Graddol, D. (2006). English next. British Council Learning. Available online at :
http://www.britishcouncil.org/learning-research-english-next.pdf [last accessed 4/4/11]Gumperz, J. J. (1982). Discourse strategies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Hall, C. J. (2005). An introduction to language and linguistics: Breaking the language spell.
London: Continuum.Hall C. J., Smith, P.S, & Wicaksono, R. (2011). Mapping applied linguistics: A guide for
students and practitioners. London and New York: Routledge.Hinnenkamp, V. (1987). Foreigner talk, code switching and the concept of trouble. In K.
Knapp, W. Enniger, A. Knapp-Potthoff (eds) Analyzing intercultural communication. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Park, J. (2007). Co-construction of nonnative speaker identity in cross-cultural interaction. Applied Linguistics, 28/3, 339-360.
Phillipson, R, (1992). Linguistic imperialism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Wicaksono, R. (2009). English as a lingua franca: an online tutorial. Available online at:
http://www2.yorksj.ac.uk/enquirycommons/elf/ [last accessed on 5/4/11.Widdowson, H. G. (1994). The ownership of English. TESOL Quarterly, 28/2, 377-389.
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We’re all applied linguists now…
Mediating literacy educators’ deficit perspectives on bilingual students
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Applied linguistics as a tool for problem solving
El Paso and the U.S.-Mexico border as context for literacy teacher education
Mediating deficit perspectives through applied linguistics
Teachers’ voices of change
Implications/Next steps
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Literacy education in Texas, for students and teachers, has promoted dead ends about language and literacy:
The monolingual myth
Reading and writing as decoding and encoding sound (ignoring literacy as making meaning with texts)
Defining literacy narrowly: the written forms found in school
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Underperformance of Mexican American and Mexican immigrant youth (Rong & Preissle, 2009; Valenzuela, 2004)
Drop-out rates near 50% for border school districts
Texas ranks 37th of 50 U.S. states in education spending per child; 1st in number of children without health insurance (Deviney, 2011)
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Largest border “metroplex” in the world (Anderson & Gerber, 2008)
Poorer, more bilingual, fewer years of formal education completed than Texas and US averages
Drug violence pushing thousands of Juárez families into El Paso schools (Martínez, Alvarado, & Chávez, 2011)
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80% of students are Mexican origin
50% are English language learners
Teachers and students share similar linguistic and ethnic background (Spanish/English bilinguals, Mexican origin)
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Students are Mexican American and Mexican
born, women, mothers, working teachers
Most raised in bilingual homes but educated only in English
“Language Study for Literacy Educators” first and only course in applied linguistics
Data from 3 semesters; 70 graduate students
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What is language?
What is literacy?
What is (applied) linguistics?
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•“Any form of communication” including (“animal language”, “body language” and gestures
•Excludes written language and signed languages
•Taught and learned through imitation and explicit instruction
•The goal of language development is “academic language”
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•The reading and writing that are done at school: “the ability to read and write at the appropriate grade level.”
•State of Texas definitions: “read with fluency, rate, and clarity, with comprehension.”
•Glottographic: “our spoken language, in written form”
•Alphabetic: “…understanding words and letters….”
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Studying or knowing multiple languages
Related to reading education: “the study of
breaking down words into sounds”
how to learn a language
“I’ve heard of linguists, but I’m not sure what they do.”
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“I learned to speak Spanish first and I went to school in Mexico. When I was about to start 8th grade my parents brought me to the U.S. I started to learn English then, very slowly. I speak, read, and write Spanish and English. However, Spanish continues to be my dominant language. I feel ashamed that after living for so many years in the U.S. I still don’t speak like native speakers [of English].”
“Growing up in a family whose first language is Spanish was a challenge, especially at school. Not only was language a problem but also literacy. I really did not enjoy reading and writing because of my lack of knowledge. I avoided reading and writing as much as possible.”
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“Reading can be a difficult component of literacy due to many obstacles you can face such as a person’s background. Writing is another component that is difficult when dealing with the English language.”
“Nowadays, particularly in the United States, there is a lot of diversity and with that comes difficulties learning the English language.”
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If language and literacy on the border are proxies for race and ethnicity (Salomone, 2010) that serve as means of institutionalizing curriculum that segregates and marginalizes (Gutiérrez, Arshad & Henríquez, 2009),
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Language authority/ insecurity
Language variation/change
Language shift/loss
Language and literacy as simultaneously cognitive and sociocultural
Changing definitions of literacy
Writing systems and scripts
Differences in how literacy is used and treated in schools, homes, and other settings
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Learning to read is more than sound; it’s also about using experience to make sense of text
“Children’s experience, life, and upbringing help develop reading and writing proficiency. I learned that all kids come to school with a wealth of reading experiences.” “Children develop oral and written language before they enter the school system…. They have their own experiences that they use to make sense of what they read.”
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“Writing my family literacy event made me realize that literacy surrounds us. At a workshop we were asked who had read a book in the last month. Many did not raise their hands…they felt ashamed because they were not being literate. But many said that they read blogs, newspapers, magazines, etc. I was able to tell them that they are reading. Almost everything one does requires some form of literacy.”
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“More aware of how much we use oral and written language together in our everyday lives.”
“My understanding is broader; language and literacy are more complex than what I believed.”
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1. Applied linguistics courses to the core of literacy teacher education?
1. Follow students into their classrooms to observe how instructional practices do or don’t change as a result of exposure to applied linguistics knowledge
2. Create alternative learning opportunities for putting literacy educators in touch with other applied linguists. Unofficial, unregulated spaces where literacy education students & practitioners interact with others working on similar problems.
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Anderson, J.B., & Gerber, J. (2008). Fifty years of change on the U.S.-Mexico border: Growth, development, and quality of life. Austin: The University of Texas Press.
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Denham, K., & Lobeck, A, (eds.) (2010) Linguistics at school: Language awareness in primary and secondary
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teacher education and practice. Journal of Negro Education, 62, 459-474. Gutiérrez, K.D., Arshad, A., & Henríquez, C. (2009). Syncretism and hybridity: Schooling, language, and race and
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Martínez, G. (2006). Del dicho al hecho: Mexican Americans and language. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press.
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