1st Edition

Globalization and Language Teaching

Edited By David Block, Deborah Cameron Copyright 2002
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book considers the issues globalization raises for second language learning and teaching. Block and Cameron's collection shows how, in an economy based on services and information, the linguistic skills of workers becomes increasingly important. New technologies make possible new kinds of language teaching, and language becomes an economic commodity with a value in the global marketplace. This has implications for how and why people learn languages, and for which languages they learn.
    Drawing together the various strands of the globalization debate, this rich and varied collection of contributions explores issues such as:
    *The commodification of language(s) and language skills
    *The use of new media and new technologies in language learning and teaching
    *The effects of globalization on the language teaching industry
    *New forms of power and resistance.

    PART I The global and the local 1 The impact of globalization on language teaching in Japan 2 Globalization, diaspora and language education in England 3 Globalization and the commodification of bilingualism in Canada PART II Zones of contact 4 Globalization and the teaching of ‘communication skills’ 5 Foreign language learning as global communicative practice 6 Local literacies and global literacy PART III Methods and materials 7 ‘McCommunication’: a problem in the frame for SLA 8 Globalization, methods, and practice in periphery classrooms A. SURESH CANAGARAJAH 9 The global coursebook in English Language Teaching

    Biography

    David Block is Lecturer in Languages in Education at the Institute of Education, University of London. Deborah Cameron is Professor of Languages in Education at the Institute of Education, University of London