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LANGUAGE

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LANGUAGE & CULTURE ISSUES IN ASIAN ENGLISH-MEDIUM UNIVERSITIES Joseph Lo Bianco Prof. Language and Literacy Education The University of Melbourne – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LANGUAGE


1
LANGUAGE CULTURE ISSUES IN ASIAN
ENGLISH-MEDIUM UNIVERSITIES
  • Joseph Lo Bianco
  • Prof. Language and Literacy Education
  • The University of Melbourne

2
OUTLINE OF PAPER
  • i) Settings history variations deeply
    shaping
  • ii) English and global communication
  • iii) Identity National Personal
  • iv) Positions
  • a) Accept improve
  • b) Challenge problematise.

3
i) UNESCO 1953
  • Iconic declaration post-colonial context
  • The Use of Vernacular Languages in Education
  • It is axiomatic that the best medium for
    teaching a child is his MT
  • Psychologically ... meaningful signs, expression
    understanding
  • Sociologically...means of identification with
    community
  • Educationally...efficiency of knowledge gain.
  • Recommended MT be used to as late in education
    as possible, beginning as early as possible

4
i) UNESCO 2003
  • 3 PRINCIPLES
  • MT instruction for improving educational
    quality by building on knowledge experience
    of learners teachers
  • Bi-lingual or multi-lingual education at all
    levels for promoting social gender equality
  • Mother tongue an essential component of
    inter-cultural education connected to
    understanding between different population
    groups respect for fundamental rights.

5
i) DUAL ROLE OF TEACHER INPUT
  • In content programs lecturers linguistic input
    to learners (lesson classroom talk) serves three
    roles
  • it is the
  • ..model of English that learners acquire (TL
    model)
  • vehicle for content (message-conveying talk)
  • .. content-constituting register for knowledge.

6
i) OBJECT AND MEDIUM
  • OBJECT
  • Lecturer teaches
  • ENGLISH through English
  • Talk is about English, (grammar, communication,
    expressions etc)
  • MEDIUM
  • Lecturer teaches
  • SUBJECT through English
  • Talk is about subject matter, (geography,
    maths, history)

7
i) ROYAL UNIVERSITY OF PHNOM PENH
  • Teaching Languages Since 13 January 1960
  • 1960s mostly French
  • 1970s mostly French, gradual Khmerisation
  • 1975-1978 closure killings
  • 1980s initially Russian later also Vietnamese
    still later also Khmer
  • Late 80s early 90s first French then English,
    some Khmer
  • Early 2000s, largely Khmer, booming English,
    residual French

8
i) SRI LANKA
  • LANGUAGE POLICY PHASES
  • in
  • TraditionalgtColonialgtModern Education
  • Official English
  • Official Sinhala
  • Restoration of Tamil
  • Restoration of English

9
i) KOREA
  • CONTEXT OFFICIAL ENGLISH DEBATESgt PRIVATE
    SECTOR FINANCING, DISCOURSE OF UNIS SCHOOLS
    DONT DELIVER
  • School students, Undergraduates, Business People
    and Public Officials, Military
  • ENGLISH AS LOCAL SOCIAL MEDIUM
  • Based on communicative, task-specified, intensity
    and frequency

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13
i) MALAYSIA
  • FIRST OCCASION FOR BM
  • Razak Education Commission 1956 gtNational
    Education Policy stipulated BM as MOI, ?
    educational inequalities ? national unity,
    remove association of English with privilege
    (Asmah 1997). 1958 primary school BM as MOI by
    1983 transition to University achieved
  • SECOND OCCASION FOR ENGLISH
  • Employers perception of ? English proficiency,
    also government academics (Asmah 1987, Gill
    1993, 1999)gt international marketplace English
    medium credentials
  • gt Education Development Plan 2001-2010
    (Blueprint for the Future, 2001) Higher Education
    for human resource needs to meet national
    industrialisation goals, Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir
    Mohamad announced meritocracy instead of ethnic
    quotas, from 2002. ltltltNew identity for English,
    new national identity through Englishgtgtgt

14
i) CORPUS ISSUES
  • Terminology research translation efforts of
    Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka effective but rapid pace
    of new knowledge required students to read
    English issues of international economic
    competitiveness
  • Asmah H. O. (1994) Nationalism exoglossia
    English in Malaysia, pp 65-85 in H. Abdullah, ed,
    Language planning in SE Asia. KL Dewan Bahasa
    dan Pustaka Ministry of Education.

15
ii) ENGLISH ASLINGUA MUNDI
  • 2 billion people 1/3 of human race learning
    English by 2010-2015.
  • .the world is about to be hit by a tidal wave
    of English and that as many as 3 billion
    people or 1/2 worlds population could be
    speaking the language .
  • By 2050
  • English learners ? to a mere 500 million
    ceasing to be a languagegt a basic skill,
    English as transactional.

16
ii) ENGLISH AND SUCCESSION
  • English only lingua franca in history to have
    been maintained though a global power succession
    in which one dominant world power succeeded
    another but both used the same language.
  • Umberto Eco (1997)

17
ii) COMMUNICATION FUTURES
  • EU/COE
  • expectation of plurilingual individuals
  • comprising gt
  • Languages of Identity National Languages
  • LWC English (-es)
  • multiple, partial and temporary language
    competencies
  • Multiple Literacies

18
ii) PRAGUE MANIFESTO
  • DemocracyEffective educationMultilingualism
    Language RightsLanguage diversity Human
    Emancipation
  • see how English is positioned in identity termsgtgt
  • Esperanto promotes Global education unlike
    ethnic languages (such as English)b/c Esperanto
    not bound to cultures nations a language
    without borders

19
ii) CAPITAL THEORISATIONS
  • i Physical Capital Language Irrelevant
  • ii Human Capital (embodied market) trade,
    exchange or investment
  • iii Social Capital Bridging and Building Links
  • iv Cultural Capital Central quality, eloquence,
    position, discursive
  • UNESCO-UNICEFgtHuman Rights (cultural capital)
  • OECD/WB/IMFgtHuman Capital (embodied economic)
    Capital

20
iii) NATION STATE
  • Nation
  • horizontal axis
  • identity, attachment, sentiment, belonging,
    loyalty etc
  • State
  • vertical axis
  • administration and formal authority etc

21
iii) COMPONENTS of NATIONALISM
  • Theoretically limitless
  • language (code narration)
  • the past (incl. dead their continuing life)
  • culture (high mass), religion ethnicity

22
iii) NATION IDENTITY
  • Every nation speaksaccording to the way it
    thinks and thinks according to the way it speaks
  • Johan Herder 1772

23
iii) CULTURE, RELATIVITY,LANGUAGE
  • Wilhelm von Humboldts introduction to study of
    Kawi language of Javagt The Heterogeneity of
    Language and its Influence on the Intellectual
    Development of Mankind (Berlin 1836) gt languages
    differ in essential ways gt Sapir-Whorf RELATIVISM
    (weak or strong versions)
  • to
  • . relativity shifts focus from static concepts
    (language, thought, and culture) to dynamic
    notions (speakers/writers, thinkers, discourse
    communities)

24
iii) IDENTITY ENGLISH LEARNING IN CHINA
  • identity is a notion that is not self-evident but
    ambiguous
  • Asked about cultural identities informants made
    clear and strong claim of Chinese identity, but
    this got broadened and enriched in the process of
    L2 learning (Gao, 2002 15)
  • I feel terrific when I find my command of English
    is better than that of others
  • English learning has a great impact on my
    self-confidence
  • When I have difficulties in English learning, I
    begin to doubt my own ability
  • Whenever I have overcome a difficulty in learning
    English, I can feel my own growth (Gao, 2005 45
  • After learning English, I'm often caught between
    contradicting values and beliefs (Gao, 200546

25
iii) IS ENGLISH A POST-IDENTITY LANGUAGE ?
  • Hashimoto and others in Korea who show how
    nationalist placation is involved in promoting
    English China Ministry of Education English and
    FLs in separate compartments Tun Mahathir
    reassuring nationalists that Malaysians sense of
    nationality can be realised through more and
    instrumental English

26
iii) WORLD CALAMITY
  • 1956 All Party Report on Chinese Educationgt
    Singapore's strategy "equal treatment" policy.
    Said the new nations education system was
    unnatural because 85 of children taught in
    English Mandarin neither a MT.
  • If because of a world calamity children in
    England were taught Russian and Mandarin but
    continued to speak English at home, the British
    educational system would run into some of (our)
    problems.

27
iii) CHINESE VIEWS OF ENGLISHS IDENTITY EFFECTS
  • TENTATIVE
  • i) Keep Chinese essence separate from English
  • ii) Adds needed individuality and
    assertiveness
  • iii) Produce an English invested with
    Chineseness
  • iv) Identity formed in childhood linguistic
    socialization adult process unclear.

28
iii) SUBJECTIVITY IDENTITY
  • Writing on identity is often oriented to a
    primary assumption about human subjectivity and
    identity from either an essentialist framework or
    a constructivist alternative grounded in concrete
    settings of language use and behaviour.

29
iii) MULTI-FACETED SELVES
  • Both essentialist (enduring) and contingent
    (situated) interacting selves and identities
    interact with an endangered self.
  • Individuals often overcome cultural divergence
    by separating permanent self and ethnic/language
    identity from locally situated self for
    adjustment purposes
  • Enduring selfgt lifelong concept of me deeply
    rooted in language, heritage, memory, educational
    and socio-cultural practices. Situated self
    develops during adjustment to new context without
    harming the enduring self.
  • Spindler and Spindler (1992, 1993), Hall (1996),
    Ryan (1999), Norton (2000)

30
iii) SEMIOTIC RELATIVITY
  • how the use of a symbolic system affects thought

31
iii) LINGUISTIC RELATIVITY
  • linguistic relativity, or how speakers of
    different languages think differently when
    speaking

32
iii) DISCURSIVE RELATIVITY
  • how speakers of different discourses (across
    languages or in the same languages) have
    different cultural worldviews

33
iv) POSITIONS
  • i) ACCEPT IMPROVE
  • ii) CHALLENGE PROBLEMATISE

34
iv) ACCEPT AND IMPROVE
  • Questions which follow from this positiongt
  • Pedagogical
  • i) How improve effectiveness of content area
    instruction?
  • ii) How organise/sequence and assess delivery of
    EAP support?
  • iii) Attitude to sociolinguistic context
    communicative norms practices of learners

35
iv) ACCEPT AND IMPROVE
  • Questions which follow from this positiongt
  • Policy and Politics
  • i) How to deal w cultural consequences of
    becoming ESL not EFL society?
  • ii) How to minimise concerns?
  • iii) How to compensate or placate opposition?

36
iv) CHALLENGE AND PROBLEMATISE
  • Questions which follow from this positiongt
  • Social Equity of EMI choice
  • i) Class distribution of standard academic
    English
  • ii) Ethnicity/regional distribution of
    standard and academic English

37
iv) CHALLENGE AND PROBLEMATISE
  • Questions which follow from this positiongt
  • Cultural and Identity Consequences of EMI choice
  • iii) Nationalist discourse of indignity
  • iv) Linguistic discourse of National Language
    domain attrition
  • v) Personalist discourse of individual learner
    identities

38
OUTLINE OF PAPER
  • i) Settings history variations deeply
    shaping
  • ii) English multiple characterisations
  • iii) Identity National Personal
  • iv) Positions
  • a) Accept Improve
  • b) Challenge Problematise.
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