Some common fallacies about learning and teaching English as a Lingua Franca


Autoria(s): Guerra, Luís
Data(s)

30/01/2017

30/01/2017

2016

28/01/2017

Resumo

Over the past decades, English language teachers have become familiar with several terms which attempt to describe the role of English as a language of international communication. Presently, the term English as a lingua franca (ELF) seems to be one of the most favoured and adopted to depict the global use of English in the 21st century. Basically, the concept of ELF im-plies cross-cultural, cross-linguistic interactions involving native and non-native speakers. Conse-quently, the ELF paradigm suggests some changes in the language classroom concerning teachers’ and students’ goals as far as native speaker norms and cultures are concerned. Based on Kachru’s (1992) fallacies, this article identifies thirteen misconceptions in ELT regarding learning and teach-ing English varieties and cultures, suggesting that an ethnocentred and linguacentred approach to English should be replaced by an ELF perspective which recognizes the diversity of communicative situations involving different native and non-native cultures and varieties of English

Identificador

2176- 4182

Guerra, Luís. Some common fallacies about learning and teaching English as a Lingua Franca, Fólio – Revista de Letras, 8, 1, 367-382, 2016.

http://hdl.handle.net/10174/20230

nd

Idioma(s)

por

Direitos

openAccess

Tipo

article