Title: English in a changing world
1English in a changing world
2English in a changing world
3Contents
- 1 Changing English in a Changing WorldAn
Overview - 2 English in the Past
- 3 The Spread of English Beyond Britain
- 4 Socal varieties of English
- 5 Trade Within and Across Language Barriers
- 6 Changing English since the Sencond World War
- 7 Emerging "New Englishes" A Focus for Debate
- 8 English in a Shrinking World
4Unit One
Unit One
- Changing Eglish in a Changing World An Overview
5At the end of this unit,you should be able to do
the following things,or do them better than you
can now
- explain why languages change as people change
- recognise and describe examples of change
- understand some of the special English vocabulary
used in talking about language - explain what is meant by varieties of English
6Unit One Changing English in a Changing World
An Overview
- Difficult Points
- Differences among languages, dialects, and
accents
7Activity 1 Language Change and Language Use
8Task 1
- 1. Languages change with time
- 2. The number of languages in the world is
4000-5000 - 3. No one can give a more exact number because
(a) the number depends on what counts as a
dialect and what counts as a language (b) some
languages have disappeared, and we know nothing
about them - 4. When we speak of languages as living or dead,
we use a metaphor (??).
9Task 2
- Finding out How Language Changes in the Life of
an Individual Person - Idiolect your own individual language
10Task 3
- Analysing the Meaning of Living and Dead
Language - Tim doesnt like learning Latin because
- 1 there is too much homework to do
- 2 it is hard to remember all the new vocabulary
- 3 there are no speakers of Latin to talk to
- 4 there seem to be no interesting things to read
in Latin
11Summary
- 1. All the languages we know about change with
time. - 2. There are, at present, between 4000 and 5000
languages in use in the world. - 3. Just how many languages, depends what counts
as a language and what counts as a variety or
dialect. - 4. Your individual language changes with age too.
- 5. Older people usually dislike the changes they
notice. - 6. We need to be careful about talking about
language as if it were a living thing. - Historical variation the variation of a
language over time
12- Activity 2 Variation in English Different Places
13Task 1
- Regional variation varieties of English in
different places
14Task 2
- Standard English written English
- Received Pronunciation RP, BBC English
- Network English Educated American English
- Not all varieties of English are equally
important, or important in the same way.
15Task 3
- Learners want to learn to read and to write
Standard English for international use. They want
to speak and understand English that approximates
to Educated British or to Educated American
English. Very few of them want to sound like
native speakers, but they do want to sound like
competent users of an international language.
16Summary
- 1. There are different varieties of English that
is spoken and understood in different parts of
the world. These are regional varieties or
regional dialects. - 2. Both native speakers and second language users
of English find some of these hard to understand.
The English of writing Standard English is
similar throughout the English speaking world. - 3. Two varieties Educated British and Educated
American English are widely taught and learned.
They are used and understood wherever English is
in use. - 4. There is no single Authority for the use of
English.
17- Activity 3
- Observing Vocabulary Change in English
18Task 1
- Developing Awareness of New Vocabulary
- Change in language matches change in peoples
lives.
19Task 2
- Where do new words come from?
- 1. Pronouncing the initial (??) letters of
several words, which form the word acronym
(??????,??TOEFL). - 2. English borrows words from other languages.
- 3. Old words are used with new meanings.
20Task 3
- Undersdanding borrowing between Languages
21Summary
- 1. By studying texts you can observe change in
English as it happens. - 2. New words are invented, or borrowed to match
new meanings. Or old words are used with new
meanings. - 3. Words in use are dropped when they are no
longer needed. - 4. The rate of change in language is uneven.
- 5. As people grow older, they notice change and
they often dont like it. In fact the rate of
change is not so fast that people living at the
same time fail to understand each other.
22- Activity 4
- Languages and Dialects in the United Kingdom
23Task 1
- Comparing Scale and Distance in the British Isles
and China
24Task 2
- Languages used in Britain
- English all over the kingdom, about 55 million
people use it all the time - Welsh still used in Wales
- Gaelic used in Scotland and Ireland
- Some other languages like Polish and Indian
subcontinent - Bilingual, bi-dialectal
25Task 3
- A language is the major means of human
communication There are usually reckoned to be
about 5000 languages in use in the world. Only
some of these have a writing system. - A dialect is a variety of a language but there
is no sure way to tell a different language from
a different dialect. - The term accent has to do only with the sounds of
speech.
26Summary
- 1. Compared with China, England is a small
country. - 2. Communications are good, and it is usually
possible to reach every part of it quickly. - 3. You might expect to find that the same
language is spoken in a very similar way in
different parts but you would be wrong.
27- 4. There are many different languages spoken by
minorities in the United Kingdom. - 5. English is spoken in different parts in very
different ways that is, there are many regional
dialects. - 6. Regional dialects generally are not so well
respected as the Standard English you have
studied. - 7. Most native speakers can understand several
dialects and have difficulty with others.
28- Activity 5
- Experiencing Some Regional Varieties of English
29Task 1
- Introduction to a Rather Different Sort of
Activity
30Task 2
- Studying the same Text First in Standard English
and Then in Four Regional Varieties
31Task 3
- Listening to regional varieties
32Task 4
- Investigating some Practical Applications of
This Activity
33Summary
- 1. Only some speakers in each of these places
speaks in this way all the time. Some can speak
in this way when they want to and quite
differently when they choose. They are
bi-dialectal. - 2. The speakers who use only the accents you
heard tend to be the older and the less well
educated people in the community. - 3. This Activity should show you that the English
you study is only one variety among many but it
is a uniquely important one.
34Unit 2 English in the past
- Key Points
- Identify the place of English among other related
languages - Identify Standard English among other varieties
- Understand and explain what is meant by
structural differences among languages - Understand and explain how users of English as a
second language can use knowledge abut English - Difficult Points
- English differs at different times
- Language families
- Bi-dialectal
35UNIT 2English in the Past
- This uint tells something about the past history
of English .Just as English is different in
different places so it varies at different
times.There are historical dialects just as there
are regional dialects.Language is shaped by
the experiences of the people who use it and
changes with their changing needs.we shall start
with a look at the English of some past timesand
then move further back in time to see how English
came to be spoken ni the United Kingdom,and how
it is nearly related to some languages and only
distantly related,or not related at all,to
others.this sort of study may seem at first sight
a long way removed from everyday concerns,But it
is closely connected with a pressing problemfor
all students and teathers of languagesWhy is it
that languageare so much harder for some learners
than they seem to be for others?
36The English Language And Its History
- How has history been responsible for
- the distribution and the change of the English
language throughout the U.K.? - What do you know?
37Historic Origins Of English
38The Angles Saxons And Jutes
39(No Transcript)
40Some confusing concepts
- Scandinavian invasions
- Germanic invasion
- Germanic group (branch)
- Viking
41English Language Style And Variation 13th To
18th Centuries
- How can we tell, by comparing these four
language examples of the 13th to the 18th
centuries, that the English language has altered
over this period? - In pairs (using these examples) list ways in
which the English language seems to have changed
over this 500 year period. (15 minutes)
42Language Families
- Unit 2 Activity 2 Task 1 (pp 64-66)
- The Indo-European family (the Aryan family)
- The Sino-Tibetan family
43The Indo-European family
- English, Spanish, French, German, Russian,
Portuguese, Hindi, German, Bengali - Latin, Greek, Persian, Sanskrit
44The Indo-European family
- The Celtic Branch
- The Germanic Branch
- The Latin Branch
- The Slavic Branch
- The Baltic Branch
- The Hellenic Branch
- The Illyric Branch
45The English Language And the Romans
- Unit 2 Activity 2 Tasks 1-2 (pp64-67)
- What are some of the Latin root forms that Tim
and Mrs Robinson discussed? - What English words do you know that have these
roots?
46What Do These Words Mean?
- proficient progress subtitle subscriber
- anticlockwise antisocial antenna antenatal
- transit transparent intervene interracial
47The Conquest of Britain and Change on English
when who where from
BC 1st C - AD 5th C Romans Mediterranean
AD 5th C.AD- 8th 9th C Scandinavians-Angles, Saxons, Jutes North West Europe
AD 11th C Norman French Normandy
48Examples of English Change
- door, gate, portal, entrance, exit,
- cottage, hut, cabin, palace, mansion, villa
- go up, rise, ascend, mount, climb
49- English has a rich store of vocabulary that
originates in Ancient Greek and Latin and, more
recently, in French. Greek gives English words
like politics, telephone, ecology and drama,
while Latin is rEnglish has a rich store of
vocabulary that originates in Ancient Greek and
Latin and, more recently, in French. Greek gives
English words like politics, telephone, ecology
and drama, while Latin is responsible for
agriculture, family, order and ambulance. Words
derived from French include disease, patrol, riot
and basket. As a member of the Germanic family of
languages, English clearly has numerous words of
Germanic origin, examples being house, honey,
half and hair. - esponsible for agriculture, family, order and
ambulance. Words derived from French include
disease, patrol, riot and basket. As a member of
the Germanic family of languages, English clearly
has numerous words of Germanic origin, examples
being house, honey, half and hair.
50Standard English Where did it start?
- Unit 2 Activity 3 Tasks 1-3 (pp74-82)
- How and where did SE originate?
- Why was the 15th century responsible for the
rapid spread of the English language?
51An important concept
- Standard English is written English.
- It has a grammatical system
- It has a formal lexicon (vocabulary)
- It is used internationally
- It changes slowly
- It has prestige
52Some Definitions
- Unit 2 Activity 3 Task 4 (pp79-83)
- First printing press
- Bi-dialectal means
- Bilingual means
53Some Definitions
- First printing press set up in 1475 by William
Caxton - Bi-dialectal means having two dialects
- Bilingual means having two languages
54The English Lexicon
- Unit 2 Activity 4 Tasks 1-4(pp84-92)
- How large is English vocabulary?
- What is the difference between a receptive and
productive vocabulary? - What is the difference between a synonym and an
antonym? - Class Discussion (10 minutes)
55The English Lexicon
- Some put the number as low as 50,000 and other as
high as 250,000 words. - Receptive vocabulary is the words you use for
listening and reading. Productive vocabulary is
the words you use for speaking and writing. - A synonym is a word which means the same as
another word. The antonym of a word is another
word which means the opposite.
56Received Pronunciation What Is It?
- Unit 2 Activity 5 Tasks 1-3 (pp92-98)
- What is RP and how did it originate?
- Explain the difference between RP and SE.
- Comparing RP and SE, how might these change
over time? - Small group discussions (10 minutes
57Received Pronunciation A Definition
- Received Pronunciation is a widely accepted
English speaking accent which has prestige and is
used as a model of good spoken English throughout
the world. - BBC English
- Educated English (post 19th century)
58Teaching And Learning Unit 2 Activity 5
Tasks 4 (pp98-99)
59Review
- Today we have
- In Unit 1
- Seen how language changes over time
- Understood how and why language varies by region
- Understood what is Standard English
- Differentiated between dialects and accents
60- In Unit 2
- Reviewed and under-stood the historic origins of
the English language - Examined some words and their Latin origins
- Compared understood the difference between SE
and RP - Established what our motivations are as learners
of English
61Unit 3 The Spread of English Beyond Britain
- At the end of This Unit you should be able to
do---or do better---the following - give examples of national and international
languages - explain how it happened that English came to be
widely used as a second language and some of the
different ways in which it is used - understand the advantages of invented
languagesfor international use and some of the
reasons for their failure - explain the uses of this information to teathers
and students of English
62Unit Three The Spread of English Beyond Britain
- Difficult Points
- ? The international role of standard English
- ? English and education in India
- ?The beginnings of Australia as a penal
- ? English as a global language for an
information age
63- Activity 1
- National Boundaries and National Attitudes
64- . Some distinctions between languages of
different kinds. - 1. Regional languages languages used only in a
restricted area. - 2. National languages languages used within
national boundaries. - 3. International languages languages used
outside national boundaries. - 4. Global languages languages used for
communication world wide.
65Task 1
- Language attitude how people feel about a
language - English is one of several international
languages. Because there are only superficial
differences in its written system worldwide, it
is thus possible for it to have become the global
language. There are very many languages in the
world but English is predominant. How does this
happen? It is necessary to look back into the
history
66Task 2
- . Standard English works on writing.
67Task 3
- A language is not just an intellectual and
rational matter, it is also an emotional issue. - The Spanish Government tried to stamp out Basque
between the years 1937 and the 1950s. They
stopped its use in Education. Inscriptions were
removed. Books in Basque were burnt. - The two languages named in the bill before
Parliament were Hindi and English. The crowd were
demonstrating against the use of English.
68Summary
- 1. English is one of several international
languages, but it is the only language used
worldwide, in places where there were never
colonial settlements. - 2. The fact that Standard English varies only in
superficial ways in different places makes its
global use possible. - 3. Governments sometimes try to bring about
language change deliberately. There is often
angry resistance. - 4. The reason for this is that people often feel
a strong emotional bond with the language they
learned as their mother tongue.
69- Activity 2English in the New World
70Task 1
- Try to know the history of American.Pay attention
to the spcial words ,such as New England,
Mayflower, Puritan, Pilgrim Fathers.
71- 1584 Sir Walter Raleigh sailed for the New World
- 1585 Sir Raleighs 2nd expedition to the New
World - 1590 The "Lost Colony" found abandoned
- 1620 English Puritan settlers left Plymouth in
the Mayflower for
the New World - 1775 The American War of Independence started
- 1783 End of the War. USA set up
- 1790 1st census held in the USA. About 90 of
the population are British descendants
72Task 2
- Try to know why American became melting pot.
- English is the official language of USA.
- 1. It is difficult for the first generation
newcomers to America to learning a new language
because they had to do other things at the same
time, such as finding a job and finding a home. - 2. Their children have advantage in learning
English quickly and well because their children
went to schools where lessons were in English.
73Task 3
- There are some differences of spelling in words
between British and American English. Both are
regarded as correct and acceptable.
74Task 4
- Pay attention to the words and phrases often
used.such as automobile and car,sidewalk and
pavement?
75Summary
- 1. Between the early 17th century and the 18th
century, the USA became the second English
speaking nation, and is in the 20th century much
more powerful and influential than the United
Kingdom. - 2. The English language had a special role in
making a large population, from different parts
of the world, into a single nation. - 3. Although British English and American English
are in some ways different, speakers of British
English and American English understand without
difficulty. This is also true of second language
users who have learned from British and American
teachers. - 4. A more formal way of saying this is to say
that British and American English are mutually
intelligible.
76- Activity 3 English Extends Across the World
77Task 1
- The Commonwealth of Nations the colonies and
the possessions that belonged to the British
Empire. - Try to understand the colonial history of the UK
78Europe Asia Africa North South America Australia
United Kingdom Ireland India, Malaysia, Borneo, New Guinea, Hong Kong Kenya, Rhodesia, South Africa Canada USA Australia, New Zealand
79Task 2
- The imperial past does explain why English has
spread worldwide.
80Task 3 Task 4
- ????????????,??????????
- ????East India Company, Persian, Sanskrit, the
Committee of Public Instruction, aborigine, penal
colony
81Summary
- 1. The establishment of colonies and empire
spread the use of English worldwide between the
sixteenth century, and the first half of the
twentieth century. - 2. Every one of them began with exploration, but
the circumstances in which colonies were settled
were very different. - 3. English remains very important in India after
independence but as a second language learned
for a variety of purpose, including international
purposes.
82- Activity 4
- After EmpireEnglish in Todays world
83Task 1
- 1. Numbers of populations are the basis for the
numbers of users of English. - 2. In the late 16th and early 17th century, when
English was a national, but not an international
language, the numbers are estimated at 5-7
million. - 3. By the middle of the twentieth century, they
were estimated at 250-350 million. - 4. By the 1980s the estimates are between 700
and 1400 million. - 5. The numbers seem to be increasing.
- 6. The total number of users of varieties of
English is still much smaller than the total
number of users of varieties of Chinese.
84Task 2
- Inner Circle English is used as the mother
tongue, like Britain, North America, Australia,
New Zealand, South Africa, etc. - Outer Circle English is widely taught in
schools, like India, Hong Kong, Singapore, etc. - Expanding Circle English for international use,
like China.
85Task 3
- There are some other usages of English, like
listening to and enjoying pop music watching
English language films international use of
e-mail reading writing for an international
readership, etc.
86Task 4
- Information Age means an explosion of
information.
87Summary
- 1. The number of users of a language is
important, but who the users are, and what they
do with English, is just as important. - 2. The label Information Age is often given to
the end of this century. - 3. It means (1) that much more information is
available than ever before (2) that information
can be stored and transferred in ways never
possible before. - 4. The most important language for communicative
use at the time of these developments is English.
Computer developments have reinforced the global
importance of English.
88- Activity 5
- Alternatives to English
89Task 1
- Estimating the Disadvantages of English as a
Global Language from the Learners Standpoint.
90Task 2
91Task 3
- Esperanto one of the most famous and successful
invented languages.
92Task 4
- Considering What an Ideal Language for Global Use
Would Be Like
93Task 5
- 1. A revised version of Esperanto, published ten
years after Esperanto, was called Ido. - 2. A still simpler version of Ido called Novial
was published in 1928. - 3. A revised and simplified version of Latin,
published in 1903 was called Interlingua. - 4. All these artificial languages were based on
Western European languages. - Basic English a simplified version of English,
which was designed and published in 1930 by C. K.
Ogden. - Nuclear English a different sort of
simplification of English, which was created by
Professor Randolph Quirk.
94Summary
- 1. The world of the late 20th century needs an
international language. - 2. English is not ideally suited to international
use. - 3. No natural language can be politically and
culturally neutral. An artificial language can
be. - 4. Artificial languages can be designed to be
easily and quickly learned. They too have serious
drawbacks and so do simplified versions of
natural languages. - 5. Although interest in Basic English is not high
at present, a simplified version of English,
perhaps Nuclear English offers promise for the
future.
95Unit 4 Social Varieties of English
- At the end of this unit,you should be able to do
the following things,or do them better than you
can now - recognize what are statements about
language,personal tastes or judgements about
society and social differences - know what is meant by social or educational
variation in English accents - recognize what different varieties you and other
users controlhow you increase their number and
range,and howthe fact that the users can do this
drives change
96Unit Four Social varieties of English
- Difficult Points
- Understanding the differences in use between
initial and later stages of learning - Contrasting spoken and written accounts of the
some event - English variations in formality
97- Activity 1
- Differences of Prestige and Preference among
Languages
98Task 1
- The idea of equality or parity among languages is
important, and it needs to be carefully
understood. No languages that we know about are
underdeveloped or primitive. Languages change
with time, as the needs of their users change,
but change does not mean evolutionary progress.
Languages and dialects are valued differently and
used differently for historical, political,
economic and cultural reasons.
99Task 2
- We use language as our main means of
communication. Languages are like tools they
are made by human beings and used for human
purposes. Languages change is like the process of
biological evolution, and English is like a
developed, complex animal, belonging to our own
world.
100Task 3
- The view that English is better suited than other
languages for global use is mistaken. Historical
and economical developments have made English an
international language The idea that is better
than other languages is a mistake arising from
the use of metaphor.
101Task 4
- Languages are equal.
- Can we say that English is widely used because it
is better fits in the international circumstances
than other languages? It seems irrational to
conclude so. The spread of it, as we covered
before, was absolutely caused by political,
economic and cultural factors instead of
linguistic reasons.
102Summary
- 1. The idea of equality or parity among languages
is important, and it needs to be carefully
understood. - 2. No languages that we know about, are
undeveloped or primitive. - 3. Languages change with time, as the needs of
their users change, but change does not mean
evolutionary progress. - 4. Languages and dialects are valued differently
and used differently for historical, political,
economic and cultural reasons.
103- Activity 2
- Social and Educational Varieties
104Task 1
- Pay attention to the varieties of English in time
and regions.
105Task 2
- There is also social or educational variation of
English. It could provide social information
about the user.
106Task 3
- Applying This Knowledge to Practical Learning
Problems
107Task 4
- Reading Two Stories about Changed Language and
Changed Life
108Summary
- 1. It is possible to learn to read the English of
a past time. The further back in the past the
more difficult it is and the longer it takes. - 2. Most people dont find learning to use another
variety very easy, but some are very good at it. - 3. A social variety is the sort of English use
which is associated with a part of society, that
is with rich or poor, well or poorly educated. - 4. Social and regional varieties are connected.
You can tell what region someone who uses the
English of the poorer and the less well-educated
comes from. The way the better-off use English
tells you little or nothing about where that
person was born.
109- Activity 3
- An Expanding Range of Language Uses
110Task 1
- Recalling the Varieties of English within Your
Own Experience
111Task 2
- There are 2 distinct stages in the study of a
language. However, the stages are not clearly
marked sometimes. The 1st stage is the study of
sound system and grammar system of a language
while the 2nd is enlarging ones vocabulary
steadily. The formal learning will make the
learners able to read and write. They get
familiar with a variety, or the standard version
of the language. The process is similar be it
their mother tongue or a 2nd or additional
language.
112Task 3
- Listing the Uses English Has for Advanced Users
113Task 4
- However, when learning English, we may notice
that there do exist differences between speech
and writing. Usually, spoken English takes longer
time than written English to say the same thing.
There would be pauses, repetitions, hesitations,
etc. in a speech. But, as a rule, the writers try
to say things in a brief, clear and coherent way.
Also, there are different ways of expressing
meanings on different occasions, such as formal
and informal. (e.g. p.196)
114Task 5
- Core vocabulary the first vocabulary to learn
115Summary
- 1.English differs with the user, and also with
the different uses that speakers have for
English. - 2.Learning about these differences belong to a
2nd stage of learning --- for native speakers and
for users of English as an additional language. - 3.Spoken English differs from written English.
The topic, or subject, makes a difference to the
way that English is used. English is used in
different circumstances with different degrees of
formality. - 4.We have named 3 different ways in which English
differs with use. They are similar to the
regional and historical and social varieties we
looked at earlier. They are however different in
that they vary with use. They are available to
all practised and experienced users. Or, user
variation use variation.
116- Activity 4
- Use Variation and the International User of
English
117Task 1
- English for the international users standard
English
118Task 2
- International users of English do not need to
worry if they hesitate quite often in producing
spoken English. - Good writers write for groups of readers, which
helps you write clearly and tells you when
something you read is well written.
119Task 3
- Spoken English is thought about and exchanged by
people who can hear each other and (usually) see
each other, so users show know - 1. it is the work of two or more speakers who are
also listeners. - 2. they can remind each other, interrupt each
other, ask and answer questions. - 3. they need not keep to a single point. They can
ramble away and come back to it. - 4. they can hesitate as they think what to say
and how to say it. - 5. they can leave things out if everyone knows
about them. - 6. they can use words including slang that are
known to those talking but may not be known to
everyone.
120- Writers and readers of English need to remember
- 1. Written English is (usually) the work of just
one person for many readers. - 2. Writers know something, but not much, about
their readers. - 3. Written English may be read a long time after
it is written, so readers cant interrupt the
writer. - 4. Writers have to think about what readers need
to know and say all of it. - 5. Writers have to arrange what they say in the
best order that is the easiest for the reader
to understand. - 6. Writers have to be careful not to delay or
puzzle or annoy readers. That is why they avoid
slang and any other ways of using English
vocabulary that readers have learned not to
expect in writing. - 7. Language changes in this as in other respects.
Present day writing is generally nearer speech
than it was in the past.
121Task 4
- 1. English varies with the topic or subject that
is spoken about or written about. This is true of
academic subjects and of others, not usually
studied in schools and universities. - 2. This is partly a matter of the special
vocabulary that students learn as part of
learning about the subject. - 3. It is partly a matter of style and that
means avoiding words and phrases which are
acceptable only within the family, or among close
friends, or in light-hearted contexts. - 4. Style has to be consistent not uneven.
Competent writers and speakers avoid mixing some
words that are suitable for serious contexts and
those that are not.
122The differences between spoken and written English
- Spoken Written
- 1. The work between 2 or more people who are both
speakers listeners. - 2. There is reminding, interrupting, hesitation,
asking and answering questions in the process. - 3. Not keep to a single point and things known to
the speakers may be left out. - 4. Slang or words known to people involved in the
talk may be used
123- 1. The work of one person for many readers.
- 2. May be read a long time after it is written.
- 3. No interruption between the writer the
readers. - 4. About what the writer thinks the readers need
to know and say all about it. - 5. Arranged in best order for readers to
comprehend. - 6. Is put clearly to avoid confusion or
puzzlement on the readers side. - 7. Is changing as in other respects, and
generally nearer speech than it was before
124Unit 5 Trade Within and Across Language Barriers
- When you have completed the Activities of this
Unit you should be able to - Define what is meant by pidgin,creloe,and lingua
franca and give examples - Understand what is meant by creativity or
inventiveness in language - Recognize the importance of faxed English to
international trade proceedings - Use this information in discussions of the
present position of English as the major language
of international business
125Unit Five Trade within and Across Language
Barriers
- Difficult Points
- Differences among varieties, pidgins, creoles
- How English is used in some areas of
international trade - Differences between the practice and the teaching
of business English
126- Activity 1Markets Trade,and Language
127Task 1
- Barter exchange of goods for goods
- The most effective and convenient means of
communication is a language understood and used
by both buyer and seller.
128Task 2
- The components of a trade deal (transaction) 1.
commodity 2. a currency 3. seller 4. buyer 5.
market 6. a means of communication.
129Task 3
- Pay attention to the difference in negotiation or
bargaining between China and Britain. The most
commonly used language of international trade
between Asia and other parts of the world is
English.
130Summary
- 1. Trading is a fundamental human activity,
necessary to all except the most undeveloped
societies. - 2. Trade deals, large or small, have similar
components. - 3. Communication is essential to all trade deals.
The most satisfactory means of communication is a
language equally well known to the buyer and the
seller. - 4. It is possible to arrange to do some deals
with minimal language, but hardly possible to do
without it altogether. - 5. English is currently the most commonly used
language of international deals between Asian and
other countries. This situation may change in the
future.
131- Activity 2Communicating Somehow across Language
Barriers
132Task 1
- Examining Situations Where Survival Depends on
Trade
133Task 2
- Lingua Franca makeshift languages
- ??????,??????????????????,???????????????????(???)
,?????????????,????????????,????????????????,?????
?????????
134Task 3
- Pidgin a makeshift language used only for
purposes of trade.
135Summary
- 1. Pidgins are languages for a very narrow range
of purposes those that have to do with coastal
trade. - 2. Pidgins develop wherever traders want to do
business (a) with people with whom they do not
share a common language and (b) where there is no
lingua franca for them to use. - 3. Most pidgins are mixtures of Asian or African
languages and those of major European trading
nations Spain and Portugal, Holland, France and
Germany, and Britain. - 4. In general the sound and grammatical systems
of a pidgin are those of the language used
locally The vocabulary is supplied by the
voyagers.
136- 5. Pidgins were not as a rule written down they
changed rapidly, they were quickly learned by
those who needed them, and when trading stopped
they were discarded and soon forgotten. There
must have been many pidgins of which we have no
record. - 6. They are makeshift languages, and evidence of
human inventiveness. - 7. They have very low prestige. Users of the
language that provides the vocabulary hear them
as fumbling attempts to speak as they do! People
of every race tend to think of foreigners as
childish, and the use of pidgins tends to
strengthen or reinforce, that idea.
137- Activity 3New Languages in the Making
138Task 1
- Creole a pidgin is unstable, and when people
make use of it they extend the number of
functions it can have, so the pidgin rapidly
become a language, and the resulting language is
called Creole, a French-based or Portuguese-based
or English-based Creole. The process is called
creolisation. - Macanese a Creole established in Macau.
139Task 2
- Pay attention to P.232
- The young black women learned something very like
a pidgin, but they taught their babies a Creole,
and now Black English is no longer a Creole. It
is a variety of English with some creolised
features. It has low prestige.
140Task 3
- A pidgin could not be a national language, but a
Creole could, because it is a language. Tok Pisin
is the official language of Papua New Guinea.
141Task 4
- Summarizing the Defferent among
Varieties,Pidgins,Creoles
142Summary
- 1. Differences between a pidgin and a Creole. A
pidgin, but not a Creole, has only some of the
functions of language. - 2. Ways in which pidgins and Creoles are similar.
Pidgins and Creoles are both mixed languages
usually mixtures of languages belonging to
different families. - 3. What is meant by saying that English has some
creolised features? Some varieties of English
include some but not all the features of a Creole.
143- 4. Why do speakers of varieties of English that
have creolised features sometimes have
difficulties in an English-using educational
system? Their difficulties arise from the
differences between their mother tongues and the
Standard English used in schools. (You can add
that some teachers see the creolised features as
simply careless mistakes.) - 5. Give an example of a Creole currently used as
a national language. Tok Pisin is a Creole, with
English and German vocabulary, currently in use
as a national language.
144- Activity 4English in Contemporary International
Trade
145Task 1
- Examining Stable and Changed Aspects of Trade
Practice
146Task 2
- Modern international trade involves international
banking, national and international regulation
and bilingual merchandisers with access to fax
machines in addition.
147Task 3
- The practice and the teaching of Business English
are different.
148- Activity 5Faxed English for International
Business
149Task 1
- Advantages of faxed messages
- 1. They are fast
- 2. They can be sent at any time
- 3. There is a written record
- 4. They are easy to write and easy to read
- 5. Drawings and diagrams can be faxed.
150Task 2
- Pay attention to the differences between Faxed
English and Standard English
151Task 3
- Faxed Business English depends on much shared
knowledge between the sender and receiver of the
message. It can be shorter than the same meanings
in Standard English. It makes much use of
abbreviations. Headings signal changes of topic.
Not a word is wasted. Nobody thinks this
shortness and directness is rude or abrupt.
Errors which a teacher would correct are just
ignored.
152Summary
- 1. Faxed English is a major means of
communication in international business. - 2. At present it is learned on the job, rather
than deliberately taught. - 3. It works well for several reasons
- 1). Users are highly motivated to make it work.
Their livelihoods depend on it. - 2). Users have what is needed detailed
knowledge of the context, which increases as they
gain experience. - 3). Users for whom English is an additional
language find it easy to use because mistakes are
expected and ignored, not criticized. It is
informal. Nobody expects or wants polite
indirectness. Headings show changes of subject,
and abbreviations make it brief.
153Unit 6 Changing English in the Second World War
- At the end of this unit,you should be able to do
the following things,or do them better than you
can now - explain what is meant by saying that English is
currently the language of science---even though
much science is done using other languages - recognize and describe a range of styles of
English that are used for the purposes outlined
above
154Unit Six Changing English since the Second
World War
- Difficult Points
- How English serves the purposes of science
- How TV promotes the global use of English
- Discovering the dominant role of English in
information storage, retrieval, and exchange
155- Activity 1English as the Language of
International Science
156Task 1
- Science and technology cannot do without symbolic
systems. Languages are symbolic systems.
157Task 2
- Major scientific and technological achievement is
the achievement of an English speaking nation
the U.S.
158Task 3
- English is suitable to a great variety of
scientific and technological purposes - 1. It has a vast vocabulary and all sorts of ways
of extending that vocabulary to meet changing
needs. - 2. It lets you write in a very impersonal way,
because it can be detached and unemotional. - 3. It is accessible, that is, you can learn
English through education.
159Summary
- Why science needs an international language
- 1. Science has developed very fast in the last
half century. - 2. By the mid-century English was already
established as an international language. - 3. Its position no longer depended on Britains
imperial power and was able to survive its
decline.
160- What Scientific English is like
- 1. It is difficult for the ordinary user of
English. - 2. Writers assume large areas of shared knowledge
- 3. The style is remote and impersonal.
- 4. The topics of the sentences are very often
abstract. - 5. The passive voice is used very frequently.
- 6. The style makes readers feel they are looked
down on by the writer. - 7. The writer feels he is treating his readers as
colleagues and equals.
161- Activity 2Uses of English in International
Transport
162Task 1
- The most important contribution that English
makes to international air safety is in reducing
ambiguity.
163Task 2
- Shared mother tongue and shared culture and
knowledge reduce misunderstandings, but do not
prevent them.
164Task 3
- English is used as an international language in
international air travel.
165Task 4
- The language of Air Traffic Control is a variety
out of the working practices of the people
engaged in it. All statements, and all directions
are short, direct, and clear. The vocabulary in
use is narrow. The English is a very much reduced
and stereotyped English.
166- The English of International Air Traffic Control
- 1. The language of International Air Control is
English. - 2. It is used by all ground control staff and
flight crew. - 3. It is used in all parts of the world.
- 4. It is twentieth century English It is
Standard English. - 5. It is spoken English and speakers know what
they say will be recorded. - 6. It is the English of a special area of
knowledge. - 7. It is formal, but not polite or indirect.
- 8. It is brief, clear and direct.
167- Other varieties designed to avoid ambiguity
- Sea-speak a special restricted variety of
English used internationally in ship-to-shore
communication. - Jargon the selection of language that people
who have a common interest in machines and
techniques use. - Argot the special language of thieves.
- Slang the language used by young people to keep
out the old.
168Summary
- 1.In everyday English, mistakes and
misunderstandings happen all the time. They dont
usually matter. - 2. Misunderstandings are very dangerous in the
air. - 3. The language of Air Traffic Control is
designed to avoid any misunderstanding and
ambiguity. - 4. It is brief, direct, and can be learned
quickly. - 5. Sea-speak and Police-speak are similar.
Jargon, argot and slang are also designed by and
for very special groups of users.
169- Activity 3Applications of Technology to
Entertainment
170Task 1
- Understanding the Contribution of Technology to
More Enjoyable Leisure for More People
171Task 2
- Television promotes English as a global language
in two ways informal exposure to English and
formal education on TV.
172Task 3
- Edutainment education and entertainment
together.
173Summary
- 1. Television became generally available after
the Second World War. - 2. Many people thought television would make the
quality of peoples lives poorer, but it soon
became hugely popular activity. - 3. It is available now in the developed and
developing world, and in some very remote places. - 4. It tends to break down the barriers between
races and cultures. - 5. Everything that makes television varied,
absorbing and fun, makes it a good means for
people to learn.
174- Activity 4Developments in Information Technology
Reinforce the International Role of English
175Task 1
- 1. The end of the 20th century is often called
the age of rapid communications or the age of
information technology. - 2. IT has already many applications to everyday
life, and their number increases all the time. - 3. Very few people foresaw present developments
twenty years ago. - 4. One effect of the development of IT has been
to reinforce and extend the position of English
as an international language. - Know the history of computer
176Task 2
- There are some everyday, non-specialist uses of
the computer.
177Task 3
- 85 of the worlds e-mail is exchanged in
English. - 1. IT lets you store, retrieve, and transfer
information. - 2. Such collections are called database.
- 3. It makes possible very much larger collections
and much quicker retrieval of items of
information when these are needed. - 4. At present English dominates the making of the
databases and the processes of retrieval and
transfer.
178Summary
- 1. The end of the 20th century is often called
the Age of Rapid Communications or the Age of
Information Technology. - 2. IT has already many applications to everyday
life, and their number increases all the time.
Very few people foresaw present developments
twenty years ago. - 3. The development of IT has reinforced and
extended the position of English as an
international language. - 4. IT lets you store, retrieve, and transfer
information. Such collections are called
databases. - 5. IT makes possible very much larger collections
and much quicker retrieval of items of
information when these are needed. At present
English dominates databases. The position of
English could change as the technology develops.
179- Activity 5Meeting the Worldwide Demand for ELT
180Task 1
- ELT English language teaching
- Developments in (1) science and technology, (2)
travel and transport, (3) entertainment and (4)
the storage, retrieval and transfer of
information, since they were heavily dependent on
the global use of English, hugely increased
demand for opportunities to learn the language,
both for children and adults.
181Advantages Limitations
Native-speaker EL teacher
Has native fluency May have limited understanding of difficulties
Has extensive vocabulary Usually gives explanations in English
At once perceives mistakes May not understand students or parents expectations
Bilingual teacher
Has a close understanding of learners May not offer a good model of pronunciation
Can offer explanations in learners language Has a limited vocabulary
Understands learners expectations May not perceive errors made by learners
Understand the school system
182Task 2
- Technology cannot only assist the bilingual
teacher by providing native speakers as models of
pronunciation for example, and it can almost
replace the teacher.
183Task 3
- Three things have contributed to the development
of ELT from an occupation to an academic
profession since the Second World War - 1. The great strides in linguistics provided a
theoretical framework for the profession of ELT. - 2. New institutions were set up, notably the
British Council. - 3. University departments were set up, which
served to focus research, and to offer training
of a good standard and at a variety of levels.
184- Pattern practice learning by constantly
repeating correct English sentences. - Language laboratory a classroom equipped with
tape recorders and a control desk for the
teacher. - Communicative approach a view of ELT that puts
first understanding and being understood by
another person. - Error analysis teaching in the belief that
mistakes are necessary to learning and useful to
teachers. - English for Specific Purposes courses designed
to match the future work of and needs of groups
of learners, very often groups with different
occupations.
185Summary
- 1. In the last fifty years the increased
importance of English as a global language has
led to an increased demand for English Language
Teaching. - 2. Very large numbers of teachers are needed.
Most students must be taught by teachers who are
not native speakers. - 3. Native speakers and bilingual teachers have
different strengths and limitations. - 4. Technology provides useful assistance for
teachers and replaces teachers in some
circumstances. - 5. In the last fifty years ELT has developed as
an academic profession. There are a number of
different approaches and methodologies to match
increasingly varied needs.
186Unit 7 Emerging "New Englishes"A Focus for Debate
- When you have completed the activities of this
unit you will - Understand the current,and at present
unresolved,debate about whether local standards
are varieties,requiring recognition,or are
essentially,inter-languages - Know how this debate bears on a number questions
about - (1) the purpose which learners have for an
additionalor auxiliary language
187- (2)the practicalities of teaching an auxiliary
language to every large numbers of learners - (3) the role of Standard English a norm, and as a
target - Understand why the position of Standard English
is controversial, complicated, important
and,almost certainly,important to you
188Unit Seven Emerging New Englishes A Focus for
Debate
- Difficult Points
- Exam the significance of New Standards
- Find out about international literature in
English - Contrast roles of English feedback in
mono-lingual and in multi-lingual societies
189- Activity 1What Is Meant by Emerging and New
Englishes?
190Task 1
- English is studied, learned and taught in all
three circles, but not in the same way.
191Term Abb. Official Language? Chances of informal learning?
English as a mother tongue E1L Yes, for virtually all purposes taught in schools medium of learning Yes, everywhere in the environment
English as a Second Language ESL Yes, one of several taught in schools medium of some learning Yes, some
English as a Foreign Language EFL Not taught in schools not usually a learning medium No, only in the classroom
192- Varieties of English are varieties in use and
user.
193Task 2
- Emerging Englishes or New Englishes are not just
regional varieties.
194Task 3
- 1. Where local written standards are emerging in
use, the question of local or international
standards may arise. - 2. The advantages of teaching a local standard
are - a. They are easier and quicker to learn.
- b. There are useful where there are many
languages in use in a country and no common
language. - c. Only a minority of people need a language
for international use. - 3. The disadvantages of teaching a local standard
are - a. Local standards change quickly and are not
well regarded internationally. - b. If they are used internationally, they
dont do justice to the user or his ideas. - c. Local Standards are emerging and changing,
so there may not be enough suitable teachers, or
teaching materials.
195- 4. The advantages of teaching Standard English
are - a. Standard English is stable and has prestige
worldwide. - b. It opens up an immense quantity of
literature on all topics and, increasingly, it
makes electronically stored material available. - 5. The disadvantages of teaching Standard English
are - a. It may take longer to learn than a local
standard. - b. Fewer people will succeed.
- 6. Standard English offers much in return to
those who do, and is the best choice except where
the need for a common language has to come before
everything else. That is not the case in Hong
Kong.
196- Activity 2International Voices in English
197Task 1
- Considering Another Function of Languagethe
Making of Imaginative Fiction
198Task 2
- Finding out about International Literature in
English
199Task 3
- Discovering Your Own English Voice
200Summary
- 1. The international use of English means that
there can be an international literature written
in one part of the English-using world, and
available everywhere that English is used. - 2. New Englishes developed and produced in one
region but widely understood, have a role in this
literature. They can make possible an imaginative
understanding of what it is like to live in that
place and to share its culture. - 3. Anyone who has English as an additional
language can have an English voice in addition to
the voice that belongs to the mother tongue and
its culture. - 4. That user can now reach very scattered, varied
and distant readers. It is much easier to do this
than most people think provided you are not too
ambitious at the start.
201- Activity 3Emerging Englishes
202Task 1
- An authoritative statement is one that is
complete, considerate, and based on extensive and
detailed knowledge.
203Task 2
- There is a major debate in the study of English