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Why ESL teachers should study about Gender

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Why ESL teachers should study about Gender & Language 1. we need to be aware of findings concerning the differences between men s and women s speech so that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why ESL teachers should study about Gender


1
Why ESL teachers should study about Gender
Language
  • 1. we need to be aware of findings concerning
    the differences between mens and womens speech
    so that we will not teach inappropriate forms to
    our students.
  • 2. research on speech patterns of men and
    women who are native speakers of American English
    constitutes an important source of information
    regarding rules of speaking in these
    communities.

Wolfson, Nessa. 1889. Perspectives
Sociolinguistics and TESOL. Boston Heinle
Heinle Publishers, p. 162.
1/16
2
Differences in Mens and Womens Language
  • ? Exogamous Amazon tribe
  • languages
  • ? Gros Ventre American Indian Tribe (Montana)
  • pronunciation
  • ? Yana (N. American Indian language)
  • morphologyaffixes
  • ? Chiquita (S. American Indian language)
  • morphology
  • ? Japanese
  • lexisvocabulary
  • pronouns

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 159-161.
2/16
3
Factors in Gender Differentiation in Language
  • HierarchyGender differences in language are
    often just one aspect of more pervasive
    linguistic differences in the society reflecting
    SOCIAL STATUS or POWER differences. my
    emphasis
  • Gender-Exclusive Social RolesThe
    responsibilities of women and men are different
    in such communities, and everyone knows that, and
    knows what they are.
  • Cultural Practiceslike EXOGAMOUS Amazon Indians.
    Spouses speak different languages because they
    must marry out of tribe and each tribe has its
    own language.

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 159, 162-163.
3/16
4
Gender Differences 1
  • In many speech communities, when women use more
    of a linguistic form than men, it is generally
    the standard formthe overtly prestigious
    formthat women favour. When men use a form more
    often than women, it is usually a vernacular
    form, one which is not admired overtly by the
    society as a whole, and which is not cited as the
    correct form.

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
p. 166.
4/16
5
Gender Differences 2
  • Concerning Western speech communities, Holmes
    says when women use more of a linguistic form
    than men, it is generally the standard formthe
    overtly prestigious formthat women favor. When
    men use a form more often than women, it is
    usually a vernacular form, one which is not
    admired overtly by the society as a whole and
    which is not cited as the correct form. In
    1983 Sociolinguist Peter Trudgill said this is
    the single most consistent finding to emerge
    from sociolinguistic studies over the past 20
    years.

Holmes, Janet. 2001. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 2nd edition. London Longman,
p. 156.
5/16
6
  • Preference for Vernacular
  • In over IN

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
p. 164.
6/16
7
Explanations for Differences between Women's and
Men's Language
  • 1. Social status explanation
  • 2. Womens role as guardians of societys values
  • 3. Womens status as a subordinate group
  • 4. Vernacular forms express masculinity
  • 5. Alternative explanations

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 167-174.
7/165
8
Lakoffs Features of Womens Language 1
  • (a) Lexical hedges or fillers
  • (you know, sort of, well, you see)
  • (b) Tag questions
  • (shes very nice, isnt she?)
  • (c) Rising intonation on declaratives
  • (its really good)
  • (d) Empty adjectives
  • (divine, charming, cute)

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 302-303.
8/168
9
Lakoffs Features of Womens Language 2
  • (e) Precise color terms
  • (magenta, aquamarine)
  • (f) Intensifiers
  • (just, so I like him so much.)
  • (g) Hypercorrect grammar
  • (consistent use of standard verb forms)

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 302-303.
9/166
10
Lakoffs Features of Womens Language 3
  • (h) Superpolite forms
  • (indirect requests, euphemisms)
  • (i) Avoidance of strong swear words
  • (fudge, my goodness)
  • (j) Emphatic stress
  • (it was a BRILLIANT performance)

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
pp. 302-303.
10/166
11
Distribution of Tag Questions by Function and Sex
of Speaker1
  • Function of tag Women Men
  • Expressing uncertainty 35 61
  • Facilitative 59 26
  • Softening 6 13
  • Confrontational
  • Total 100 100
  • N2 51 39
  • (Source Based on Holmes 1984a 54)

1 Based on a 60,000 word corpus containing equal
amounts of female and male speech collected in a
range of matched contexts. 2 N is presumably the
number of tags found in the sample.
Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
p. 307.
11/16
12
Women's and Men's Idle Talk 1
  • Women
  • Its overall function for women is to affirm
    solidarity and maintain the social relationships
    between the women involved.
  • Women's gossip focuses predominantly on personal
    experiences and personal relationships, on
    personal problems and feelings. It may include
    criticism of the behaviour of others, but women
    tend to avoid criticizing people directly because
    this would cause discomfort.

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
p. 316.
12/16
13
Women's and Men's Idle Talk 2
  • Men
  • The male equivalent of women's gossip is
    difficult to identify. In parallel situations
    the topics men discuss tend to focus on things
    and activities, rather than personal experiences
    and feelings. Topics like sport, cars, and
    possessions turn up regularly. The focus is on
    information and facts rather than on feelings and
    reactions.

Holmes, Janet. 2013. An Introduction to
Sociolinguistics, 4th edition. London Pearson,
p. 317.
13/16
14
Language Teachers Responsibility
  • It is not the responsibility of the language
    teacher qua linguist to enforce Anglo-Saxon
    standards of behavior, linguistic or otherwise.
    Rather, it is the teachers job to equip the
    student to express her/himself in exactly the way
    s/he chooses to do sorudely, tactfully, or in an
    elaborately polite manner. What we want to
    prevent is her/his being unintentionally rude or
    subservient. It may, of course, behoove the
    teacher to point out the likely consequences of
    certain types of linguistic behavior.

Thomas, Jenny (1983 96) cited in Nessa Wolfson.
Perspectives Sociolinguistics and TESOL. Boston
Heinle Heinle Publishers, 1989, p. 31.
14/16
15
What ESL Learners Should Know about Sexist
Language 1
  • 1. Teach how to use appropriate generic
    pronouns, especially in writing. (165)
  • 2. Promote use of generic "they" (especially in
    speech)
  • 3. Remind students that even if they know that
    some English speakers use "terms of endearment"
    that this is probably useful only as
    PASSIVE/RECEPTIVE knowledge. Do not do it
    yourself. (170)

Wolfson, Nessa. 1989. Perspectives
Sociolinguistics and TESOL. Boston Heinle
Heinle Publishers, Chapter 8 Language and Sex,
pp. 162-187.
15/16
16
What ESL Learners Should Know about Sexist
Language 2
  • 4. Terms degrading women exist and are
    offensive. (174)
  • 5. Be aware that references to men or women
    using terms for the other sex may have
    connotations the learner does not know or
    understand. (175)
  • 6. Point out "appropriately sex-linked forms of
    speech". (185)

Wolfson, Nessa. 1989. Perspectives
Sociolinguistics and TESOL. Boston Heinle
Heinle Publishers, Chapter 8 Language and Sex,
pp. 162-187.
16/16
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