Applied Linguistics and ELT: Some Historical Perspectives



Similar documents
Unifying Epistemologies by Combining World, Description and Observer

Doctor of Education (EdD) in TESOL AVAILABLE IN EXETER AND DUBAI

MASTER S DEGREE IN EUROPEAN STUDIES

Programme Specification and Curriculum Map for MA TESOL

Foundations of the Montessori Method (3 credits)

Syllabus for the Master s Degree Program in English Language Teaching. Paper I: Introduction to Linguistics, ELT & Literary Theory

Creating an Objective-based Syllabus. Danielle Mihram, Director Center for Excellence in Teaching University of Southern California

Ph.D. in Educational Theory and Practice. Emphasis Areas

EVALUATION OF IMPORTANCE FOR RESEARCH IN EDUCATION

Critical Inquiry in Educational Research and Professional Practice

Oxford Dictionary of Current Idiomatic English

Analysing Qualitative Data

Measuring the Outcomes of Social Movements and Development NGOs: Towards a mechanism-based approach

Correlation between competency profile and course learning objectives for Full-time MBA

Philosophizing with children by using Socratic Methods

REGULATIONS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF EDUCATION (MEd)

Research into competency models in arts education

Revisiting Foreign Language Teaching and Testing in the Light of Cognitive Linguistics

Teacher Education Portfolio Guidelines and Rubric

Department Political Science School Loyola Schools. Course No. PoS 53 Course Title Qualitative Methods in the Social Sciences No.

PROJECT BASED INTRODUCTION TO LEARNING

MA in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) 2015/16

The information and application for completing the Coaching and Mentoring models application is available to you from several sources:

Teaching & Media: A Systematic Approach

Introducing Social Psychology

Running head: PERSONAL STATEMENT ON LEARNING AND INSTRUCTION 1. Personal Statement on Learning and Instruction. Jay A. Bostwick

Difficulties that Arab Students Face in Learning English and the Importance of the Writing Skill Acquisition Key Words:

The Facilitating Role of L1 in ESL Classes

THE BACHELOR S DEGREE IN SPANISH

NEVER STOP LEARNING FAMILY CHILD EARLY YEARS PRACTICE CHILDCARE- STUDIES DE DEVELOPMENT MASTER OF ARTS

Bachelor of Education Honours (120 NQF credits)

Assumptions of Instructional Systems Design

Postgraduate Studies MASTER S (2ND CYCLE) PROGRAM IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHING (ELT)

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEGREE. Educational Leadership Doctor of Philosophy Degree Major Course Requirements. EDU721 (3.

Department of. Curriculum, Foundations, and Reading. Curriculum, Foundations, and Reading. Degrees. Endorsement. Doctoral Degrees

International Semester Social Work. September 2016 January Faculty of Social Work and Education

Conley, D. T. (2005). College Knowledge: What it Really Takes for Students to Succeed and What We Can Do to Get Them Ready

Engineering for Employability: A transition into CDIO

The MetLife Survey of

Department: Political Science, Philosophy & Religion.

PS 321 ~ Introduction to Political Economy

ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES The roles and responsibilities expected of teachers at each classification level are specified in the Victorian Government

Using Your School Counselor to Impact Student Achievement. Gail M. Smith and Dr. Julie Hartline Georgia School Counselors Association

Job Design from an Alternative Perspective

PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION Programme Title. MA in TESOL. UCAS/JACS Code. School/Subject Area. Final Award

Chapter 2 Conceptualizing Scientific Inquiry

PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION MSc Developmental and Educational Psychology. Teaching Institutions: UCL Institute of Education

Faculty Board for Undergraduate Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences Translation from Swedish to English S Y L L A B U S

Learner Centered Education in Online Classes

Journal of Second Language Teaching and Research Volume One Issue One

Doctor of Education - Higher Education

Growing Tomorrow s Leaders Today Preparing Effective School Leaders in New York State

Best Practices for Designing and Implementing Communication Strategies: Presenters Notes

Rudy Hirschheim. E.J. Ourso College of Business Louisiana State University.

General Syllabus for Third Cycle Studies for the Degree of

Standards for the School Social Worker [23.140]

Financial Coaching: Understanding the Skills Needed to Become a Successful Coach

DIPLOMARBEIT. Titel der Diplomarbeit. Comparison of Grammar in Austrian and Spanish English Language Teaching Textbooks. Verfasser.

What is Grounded Theory? Dr Lynn Calman Research Fellow School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work

MASTER S DEGREE IN MEDIA STUDIES, ERASMUS MUNDUS MASTERS JOURNALISM AND MEDIA WITHIN GLOBALISATION: THE EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVE

College and Career Readiness Instructor Certification Course Catalog

CAREER MANAGEMENT. Unleash Capability Reduce Risk Gain Competitive Advantage

MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION: MODULE SUMMARIES. Foundation Certificate. Interpreting Visual Culture

Designing and Using Weighted Rubrics

Chapter 2 Quantitative, Qualitative, and Mixed Research

Bibliografía. Baker, C. (1992). Attitudes and language. Clevedon: Multilingual Matters.

Curriculum Vocational Teacher Education

1/9. Locke 1: Critique of Innate Ideas

The course is included in the CPD programme for teachers II.

FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHING AN INTERVIEW WITH NINA SPADA

CONSTRUCTIVIST LEARNING THEORY TO WEB-BASED COURSE DESIGN: AN INSTRUCTIONAL DESIGN APPROACH

Programme Specification (Postgraduate) Date amended: March 2012

The place of translation in Language Teaching. Radmila Popovic

International Journal of Asian Social Science, 2013, 3(12): International Journal of Asian Social Science

e-learning in Practice Developing the Leadership Learning Environment

ALTERNATIVE PAYMENT MODEL (APM) FRAMEWORK

Open universities and innovation in higher education. Alan Tait Professor of Distance Education and Development The Open University UK

Developing a Framework for Classroom Lesson Delivery to Improve English Teachers Performance in the Foundation Year Programme at a Saudi University

Developing Critical Thinking: Student Perspectives LILAC 10 Discussion Paper Dr Angus Nurse, University of Lincoln

EXHIBIT 4.1 Curriculum Components & Experiences that Address Diversity Proficiencies

E-Teacher Scholarship Program. Critical Thinking in the EFL (English as a Foreign Language) Curriculum

Course Guide Masters of Education Program (UOIT)

Office of the Superintendent of Schools MONTGOMERY COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS Rockville, Maryland. May 30, 2013

A Key to Classroom Management: Teacher Reflection

MA in Applied Theology. MA in Transformational Leadership. Prospectus

Programme Plan for Primary Teacher Education, Years 1-7

BA Psychology ( )

INTRODUCING LANGUAGE TEACHER COGNITION

School Principals. Leading the Way to Inclusive Schools: Implementation Steps For Moving Forward

University of Khartoum. Faculty of Arts. Department of English. MA in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) by Courses

La educación virtual como herramienta en la orientación educativa

1. Programme title and designation Applied Linguistics and English Language Teaching N/A. value equivalent. value

Looking Back at the New Knowledge Bases of EFL Teacher Education

Northwest University Online

A Principles-Based Approach for English Language Teaching Policies and Practices

STRATEGIC DESIGN MANAGEMENT FOR SUSTAINABILITY: PROCESS GOVERNS OUTCOME

A methodological proposal to analyse interactions in online collaborative learning environments

Czech Republic. Zakladni skola Praha 2, Londynska 34

How to Teach Serbian History Students about School Failure and Cultural Diversity

What is Organizational Communication?

Transcription:

Applied Linguistics and ELT: Some Historical Perspectives Richard Smith (R.C.Smith@warwick.ac.uk) University of Warwick, UK Plenary at the Centre for Applied Linguistics Research (CALR), Arab Open University Lebanon conference on Multiple perceptual frames on English language teaching and research, 22/3/11

Introduction My interpretation of the conference theme of multiple perceptual frames : allegiance to constructivism (vs. positivism)

Positivism vs Constructivism Ontology the nature of reality Epistemology the nature of knowledge Positivism There is a single, observable reality We can know the world as it really is Constructivism There are multiple realities Knowledge is socially and individually constituted

The central practical issue I shall keep in mind improvement of English language teaching Central question: how can / should we construe the relationship between applied linguistics and ELT? Adopting a historical approach to answer this question, I highlight different available perceptual frames, making reference to sources from the Warwick ELT Archive (www.warwick.ac.uk/go/elt_archive)

Plan - Some past conceptions - A current crisis in the relationship between applied linguistics and ELT? - Some further historical perspectives (indicating future possibilities)

1. Some past conceptions

1. Applied linguistics in the USA Michigan (1948 +) A climate of positivism / universalism / confident applicationism The early work of Raja T. Nasr

2. Applied linguistics in the UK Edinburgh (1957 +) Corder (1973): Linguist -> Applied Linguist (course designer) -> Teacher Widdowson (1979, 1980) linguistics applied vs. applied linguistics (as an autonomous, mediating, problem-oriented discipline)

I want to question the common assumption * + that a linguistic model of language must of necessity serve as the underlying frame of reference for language teaching (Widdowson 1979: 9)

The golden years of ELT-oriented applied linguistics in the UK (1970s-80s): Communicative Approach (syllabus design and principles of practice)

2. A current crisis in the relationship between applied linguistics and ELT?

1. A crisis of faith? Critiques of applied linguistics as interested knowledge (e.g. Pennycook 1989, 1994, Phillipson 1992) -> The up-side to this: As yet unfulfilled possibilities of building on local knowledge

*R+ather than trying to understand our practice according to some form of totalizing or universal discourse, we need to recognize the complexities of language teaching and its contexts, and strive to validate other, local forms of knowledge about language and teaching (Pennycook 1989: 613)

-> Unchecked commercial interests / danger of doors being reopened to linguistics applied? 2. A crisis of neglect? Applied linguistics, defined as the theoretical and empirical investigation of real-world problems in which language is a central issue (Brumfit 1997: 91) is no longer so centrally engaged with ELT.

They have tended to share a technical / universalist focus on linguistics / latterly, SLA as primary sources of insight Some related arguments against Widdowson s LA vs AL dichotomy: From a critical perspective both LA and AL (e.g. in the form of Communicative Approach) have been involved in similar hegemonic (centre-periphery and top-down) relations with ELT practice

However, at least in the past both LA and AL were (similarly) focused on and engaged with ELT practice more so than applied linguistics may now tend to be.

What does the British Council Directory of UK ELT Research (2005-2010) indicate? http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/elt-research - Background / aims - Great diversity but no unifying idea - International networks

3. Some further historical perspectives (indicating future possibilities) Reasons for an applied linguistics concerned with ELT: post-methodism ( principles vs. rampant commercialism / patented methods) Kumaravadivelu. Historical precedents: Prabhu, Stern, Mackey, Palmer, Sweet. Possible need for a rapprochement between LA and AL perspectives, with a united focus on ELT practice (cf. Palmer 1917, 1921, 1924)?

Continuing value of the (non-al/la) UK ELT tradition: expertise derived from principled eclecticism / practical experimentation in context (e.g. Palmer, Hornby, etc.) Cf. Nasr (1972)

Needs for collaborative research with teachers, and prioritizing their needs (cf. Palmer in Japan, and his advocacy of multiple lines of approach (1921, 1924))

Need to tap into desires for reform and perceptions of good teaching among nonnative speaker teachers in primary and secondary school education cf. roots of the UK ELT tradition (via Palmer) in the late 19 th century Reform Movement led by e.g. Vietor, Passy, and informed by academic, though pedagogically oriented phonetic descriptions (Sweet etc.)

At the same time, we need to recognize limitations of both the applied linguistics and the UK ELT traditions: - Dominant linguistics/language emphasis - Limited, technical orientation (vs. social / political / educational considerations) - Universalist / hegemonic tendencies

The key point, I think, is the need for teachers to keep their own counsel regarding what works and what does not work and to insist on an interpretation of events and ideas that includes, implicitly or explicitly, a validation of their own experiences in the classroom (Clarke 1994: 23)

An end-point / starting-point [Within teacher education / ELT research / applied linguistics]: recognize the importance of context, and work in a constructivist manner, collaboratively with teachers/learners, from the bottom up, on the basis of their priorities and their multiple perceptual frames, referring when this is appropriate to linguistic insights and insights from other disciplines.

See separate handout References