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Journal ArticleDOI

ELF and the inconvenience of established concepts

Henry Widdowson
- 22 Mar 2012 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 5-26
TLDR
The authors put ELF in broader perspective and speculated on how it raises general epistemological and practical issues in (socio)linguistics and language pedagogy, and pointed out the need to review the distinctions that have become conventionally established in the description and the teaching of English.
Abstract
Abstract The purpose of this article is to put ELF in broader perspective and to speculate on how it raises general epistemological and practical issues in (socio)linguistics and language pedagogy. Such issues have not escaped the notice of ELF researchers, of course, and so this paper will have nothing to offer in the way of revelation. My intention is not to argue for the legitimacy of ELF study as such but to consider its effect as a catalyst for change in established ways of thinking. We can only make sense of the world by imposing our own order on it by devising abstract constructs so as to bring it under conceptual control. This is as true of linguistics and language pedagogy as of everything else: both of them necessarily disconnect the continuum of actual experience to make simplifying distinctions so as to come to terms with reality – distinctions between languages and varieties, for example, between competence and performance, between language learners and users. Making abstract distinctions of one kind or another is a necessary convenience and cannot be avoided, but having made them, we need also to consider how they are related and how far they remain convenient. What ELF research reveals so clearly is the need to review the distinctions that have become conventionally established in the description and the teaching of English.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

ELF Awareness in English Language Teaching: Principles and Processes

TL;DR: In this article, a framework for integrating English as a lingua franca (ELF) research in English language teaching (ELT), predominantly pedagogy, but also teacher education, materials development and evaluation, policy design and planning, assessment and testing, is proposed.
BookDOI

The Routledge Handbook of English Language Teacher Education

TL;DR: The Routledge Handbook of English Language Teacher Education as discussed by the authors provides an accessible, authoritative, comprehensive and up-to-date resource of English language teacher education with an overview of historical issues, theoretical frameworks and current debates.
Journal ArticleDOI

ELF awareness as an opportunity for change: a transformative perspective for ESOL teacher education

TL;DR: The authors argue that one of the prominent implications of the ELF paradigm for ESOL teachers is the need to review and ultimately change their convictions about key aspects of foreign language teaching, such as normativity, the role of native/non-native speakers, and the function of teacher feedback in the foreign language classroom.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Aspects of the Theory of Syntax

TL;DR: Methodological preliminaries of generative grammars as theories of linguistic competence; theory of performance; organization of a generative grammar; justification of grammar; descriptive and explanatory theories; evaluation procedures; linguistic theory and language learning.

THE FORUM EIL, ESL, EFL: global issues and local interests

TL;DR: The fact that English is an international language is often taken as a reason for national self-satisfaction as discussed by the authors, a fact which is a matter of pride, and profit, for those who come from the country of its origin.
Book ChapterDOI

Standard english: what it isn’t

TL;DR: There is a reasonably clear consensus in the sociolinguistics literature about the notion of standardised languages as mentioned in this paper, which is defined as "consisting of the processes of language determination, codification and stabilisation".