Learning English by walking down the street
Data(s) |
01/04/2014
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Resumo |
With internationalisation and globalisation, English has proliferated in urban spaces around the world. This creates new opportunities for EFL learning and teaching. An English literacy walk is one activity that can be used productively to capitalise on this potential. The activity has roots in: (i) long-established approaches to emergent literacy education for young children; and (ii) pedagogic projects inspired by recent research on linguistic landscapes. Drawing on these traditions, teachers can target reading outcomes involving code, semantic, pragmatic and critical knowledge and skills. We use the four resources model of literate practices to systematically map some of the potential of literacy walks in multilingual, multimodal linguistic landscapes. We suggest tasks and teacher questions that might be used for purposes of explicit teaching of reading during and after literacy walks. Although grounded in Taipei, our ideas might be of interest to EFL teachers in other globalised cities around the world. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Oxford University Press |
Relação |
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63299/1/Pre-printVersionLearning_English_by_Walking_down_the_Street.pdf DOI:10.1093/elt/cct067 Chern, Chiou-lan & Dooley, Karen (2014) Learning English by walking down the street. ELT Journal, 68(2), pp. 113-123. |
Direitos |
Copyright 2014 The Author(s) |
Fonte |
Children & Youth Research Centre; School of Curriculum; Faculty of Education |
Palavras-Chave | #130207 LOTE ESL and TESOL Curriculum and Pedagogy (excl. Maori) #EFL #linguistic landscape #environmental print #four resources model |
Tipo |
Journal Article |