Global Englishes in the Classroom
Today’s learners of English will face the challenge of having to communicate with speakers of English from a variety of backgrounds in their future. The smallest fraction of their prospective interlocutors will be native speakers of well-known standard varieties such as British and American English...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
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Wissenschaftliche Einrichtung Oberstufen-Kolleg der Universität Bielefeld
2020-05-01
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Series: | PraxisForschungLehrer*innenBildung |
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Online Access: | https://www.pflb-journal.de/index.php/pflb/article/view/3435 |
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author | Peter Schildhauer Marion Schulte Carolin Zehne |
author_facet | Peter Schildhauer Marion Schulte Carolin Zehne |
author_sort | Peter Schildhauer |
collection | DOAJ |
description |
Today’s learners of English will face the challenge of having to communicate with speakers of English from a variety of backgrounds in their future. The smallest fraction of their prospective interlocutors will be native speakers of well-known standard varieties such as British and American English. Researchers of different research paradigms have discussed the pedagogical implications of this diverse sociolinguistic reality, which we refer to by the term Global Englishes. The two strategies that are proposed frequently are a) to allow learners of English to encounter a variety of different Englishes in order to develop (listening) comprehension skills and b) to address pragmatic and interaction strategies that allow to deal with intercultural encounters and – in particular – communication barriers. Starting from this theoretical background, we first investigate one coursebook each for the intermediate and the advanced secondary school level in the German state North Rhine-Westphalia to find out to what extent current coursebooks provide Global Englishes material. We identify a trend to providing a considerable amount of material. However, even most recent ebooks rely on audio files despite the fact that they could include a higher amount of audio-visual material. We argue that in particular audio-visual material is well-suited for making students encounter Global Englishes in the classroom and move on to suggest TED-talks, advertisements and cinematic films as highly suitable sources of material. We illustrate our argument with examples and selected tasks for each category. We end the article by proposing specific activities that can be used to practice interaction strategies.
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first_indexed | 2024-03-11T10:19:03Z |
format | Article |
id | doaj.art-d13322a731b845dcb3c753041cad85f7 |
institution | Directory Open Access Journal |
issn | 2629-5628 |
language | deu |
last_indexed | 2024-03-11T10:19:03Z |
publishDate | 2020-05-01 |
publisher | Wissenschaftliche Einrichtung Oberstufen-Kolleg der Universität Bielefeld |
record_format | Article |
series | PraxisForschungLehrer*innenBildung |
spelling | doaj.art-d13322a731b845dcb3c753041cad85f72023-11-16T06:41:19ZdeuWissenschaftliche Einrichtung Oberstufen-Kolleg der Universität BielefeldPraxisForschungLehrer*innenBildung2629-56282020-05-012410.4119/pflb-3435Global Englishes in the ClassroomPeter Schildhauer0Marion Schulte1Carolin Zehne2Universität BielefeldUniversität BielefeldUniversität Bielefeld Today’s learners of English will face the challenge of having to communicate with speakers of English from a variety of backgrounds in their future. The smallest fraction of their prospective interlocutors will be native speakers of well-known standard varieties such as British and American English. Researchers of different research paradigms have discussed the pedagogical implications of this diverse sociolinguistic reality, which we refer to by the term Global Englishes. The two strategies that are proposed frequently are a) to allow learners of English to encounter a variety of different Englishes in order to develop (listening) comprehension skills and b) to address pragmatic and interaction strategies that allow to deal with intercultural encounters and – in particular – communication barriers. Starting from this theoretical background, we first investigate one coursebook each for the intermediate and the advanced secondary school level in the German state North Rhine-Westphalia to find out to what extent current coursebooks provide Global Englishes material. We identify a trend to providing a considerable amount of material. However, even most recent ebooks rely on audio files despite the fact that they could include a higher amount of audio-visual material. We argue that in particular audio-visual material is well-suited for making students encounter Global Englishes in the classroom and move on to suggest TED-talks, advertisements and cinematic films as highly suitable sources of material. We illustrate our argument with examples and selected tasks for each category. We end the article by proposing specific activities that can be used to practice interaction strategies. https://www.pflb-journal.de/index.php/pflb/article/view/3435Global EnglishesELFcoursebooksaudio-visual textstask-design |
spellingShingle | Peter Schildhauer Marion Schulte Carolin Zehne Global Englishes in the Classroom PraxisForschungLehrer*innenBildung Global Englishes ELF coursebooks audio-visual texts task-design |
title | Global Englishes in the Classroom |
title_full | Global Englishes in the Classroom |
title_fullStr | Global Englishes in the Classroom |
title_full_unstemmed | Global Englishes in the Classroom |
title_short | Global Englishes in the Classroom |
title_sort | global englishes in the classroom |
topic | Global Englishes ELF coursebooks audio-visual texts task-design |
url | https://www.pflb-journal.de/index.php/pflb/article/view/3435 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT peterschildhauer globalenglishesintheclassroom AT marionschulte globalenglishesintheclassroom AT carolinzehne globalenglishesintheclassroom |