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Global Trends: Challenges and opportunities

Global Trends: Challenges and opportunities. Christian Duncumb British Council. http://www.britishcouncil.org/learning-research-englishnext.htm. A world in transition. Society Demography Economy Communications Languages. The educational revolution. Changing needs of society

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Global Trends: Challenges and opportunities

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  1. Global Trends: Challenges and opportunities Christian Duncumb British Council

  2. http://www.britishcouncil.org/learning-research-englishnext.htmhttp://www.britishcouncil.org/learning-research-englishnext.htm

  3. A world in transition • Society • Demography • Economy • Communications • Languages

  4. The educational revolution • Changing needs of society • Changing basic skills • Changing nature of knowledge • Social cohesion

  5. Higher Education • Globalisation of universities • International student mobility • Transnational education

  6. Global change The growth of English

  7. Which model? • What variety of English is regarded as authoritative? • Which language skills are most important? (Reading? Speaking? Interpreting?) • What is regarded as a suitable level of proficiency? • How and where will the language be used? • What is the motive for learning? • At what age should learning begin? • What is the learning environment (classroom only? Family? Media? Community?) • What are the appropriate content and materials for the learner? • What will be the assessment criteria? What kind of exams? Graddol 2006: 82

  8. A post-method world? • “There is no single way of teaching English, • no single way of learning it, • no single motive for doing so, • no single syllabus or textbook, • no single way of assessing proficiency and, indeed, • no single variety of English which provides the target of learning” • Graddol 2006: 82

  9. Global trends • But, there are some clear trends which have evolved and are emerging: • English for Young Learners (EYL) • Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) • English as a Lingua Franca (ELF)

  10. EYL • Age at which children start with English is lowering and being introduced with greater compulsion • Idea that it is easier for young children to learn languages • It gives students longer to learn English over their school careers. Critical mass? • Provides a potential transition to CLIL at secondary school and English medium learning later

  11. EYL dangers • Needs specialist teachers who understand child development and are good at English. There can be a lack of such teachers • Expansion must be met with corresponding changes elsewhere in the curriculum • Will result in a very mixed abilities entering secondary school • Children need to be motivated for 10 years or more • Failure at the early stage might have profound implications later • So, “the expansion in TEYL signals a potentially major shift in ELT that needs to be taken seriously” (Cameron 2003: 106)

  12. CLIL • CLIL is different – focus on both content and language learning. • Not the same as English medium education • Combining language and content can help give more space to language to achieve ‘critical mass’ • Can be seen as the ultimate communicative methodology and fits in with global trends • Growth has dangers

  13. But….. • Relies on basic language skills having been learned, usually at Primary level • Requires different skills of teachers • Changes the working relationships in schools • Difficult to implement unless the subject teachers have enough language. • Dangers if not done effectively. Students may end up not learning content and language • Potentially excluding

  14. ELF • Fewer global interactions in English now involve a native speaker. • New target models – the fluent bilingual speaker • Search for a lingua franca core

  15. ELF • The ‘th’ sounds as in ‘thin’ and ‘this’ • The contrast between long and short vowel sounds • Weak forms such as the words ‘to’, ‘of’ and ‘from’ • Articles • Idiomatic expressions

  16. ELF • Change in materials and syllabus content • Change in expectations – intelligibility not native-speaker accuracy • The death of the native-speaker?

  17. The English escalator • Increase in English-medium university courses • School-leavers need higher English proficiency • English increasingly used to teach curriculum at secondary school • English introduced earlier and earlier at Primary school

  18. Expected proficiency increases A1 (IELTS 2.0) A2 (IELTS 3.0) B1 (IELTS 4.0) B2 (IELTS 5.5) C1 (IELTS 6.5) C2 (IELTS 7.0)

  19. Some possible long-term implications of trends • Teachers working with ever younger learners • The recent growth of English medium-courses at Universities will move down to secondary school. • Increasing use of CLIL at secondary school • Ultimately English teachers may ‘lose’ their subject • English is increasingly seen as a basic skill • Increasing irrelevance of native speakers and the doom of monolingualism • There are dangers in not keeping up but also dangers in not implementing effectively

  20. “ The key to understanding the impact of global English probably lies in how well and how strategically its implementation is managed in each country. There is scope for great success but also for great disaster.” • Graddol 2006: 120

  21. For Russia? • What variety of English is regarded as authoritative? • Which language skills are most important? (Reading? Speaking? Interpreting?) • What is regarded as a suitable level of proficiency? • How and where will the language be used? • Is the motive for learning largely ‘instrumental’ or also ‘integrative’? • At what age should learning begin? • What is the learning environment (classroom only? Family? Media? Community?) • What are the appropriate content and materials for the learner? • What will be the assessment criteria? What kind of exams? Graddol 2006: 82

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