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‘A more inclusive mind towards the world’: English language teaching and study abroad in China from Intercultural citizenship and English as a lingua franca perspectives

‘A more inclusive mind towards the world’: English language teaching and study abroad in China from Intercultural citizenship and English as a lingua franca perspectives
‘A more inclusive mind towards the world’: English language teaching and study abroad in China from Intercultural citizenship and English as a lingua franca perspectives
With the status of English as a global lingua franca (ELF), English is no longer the sole property of its Anglophone native English speakers (NES) problematising the current dominance of Anglophone cultures and NES in the field of English language teaching (ELT). The notion of intercultural citizenship education offers a critical alternative model in language education. To investigate how ELF, intercultural approaches and the concept of intercultural citizenship might be integrated within the field of ELT, a study was conducted in a university located in southeast China. Due to the large number of ELT learners and high degree of student mobility in China these are issue of much relevance in this setting. The research collected qualitative data through face-to-face interviews, email interviews and focus groups with students on study abroad programmes who have both ELT and first hand intercultural experiences. Many students spoke positively about aspects of intercultural citizenship, but classroom instruction offered only limited channels for students to experience and understand intercultural communication and citizenship. In contrast, most of their understanding and experiences were gained outside the classroom during study abroad. Furthermore, many students spoke about the importance of English in their development of intercultural connections and citizenship. We conclude that more in-depth and critical approaches to teaching language, culture and intercultural communication in ELT are needed which foster and cultivate students’ sense of intercultural citizenship.
1362-1688
608-624
Fang, Fan
3901fbe2-4423-47da-ac54-dee74f68c216
Baker, William
9f1b758c-e6e0-43ca-b7bf-a0d5e1387d10
Fang, Fan
3901fbe2-4423-47da-ac54-dee74f68c216
Baker, William
9f1b758c-e6e0-43ca-b7bf-a0d5e1387d10

Fang, Fan and Baker, William (2018) ‘A more inclusive mind towards the world’: English language teaching and study abroad in China from Intercultural citizenship and English as a lingua franca perspectives. Language Teaching Research, 22 (5), 608-624. (doi:10.1177/1362168817718574).

Record type: Article

Abstract

With the status of English as a global lingua franca (ELF), English is no longer the sole property of its Anglophone native English speakers (NES) problematising the current dominance of Anglophone cultures and NES in the field of English language teaching (ELT). The notion of intercultural citizenship education offers a critical alternative model in language education. To investigate how ELF, intercultural approaches and the concept of intercultural citizenship might be integrated within the field of ELT, a study was conducted in a university located in southeast China. Due to the large number of ELT learners and high degree of student mobility in China these are issue of much relevance in this setting. The research collected qualitative data through face-to-face interviews, email interviews and focus groups with students on study abroad programmes who have both ELT and first hand intercultural experiences. Many students spoke positively about aspects of intercultural citizenship, but classroom instruction offered only limited channels for students to experience and understand intercultural communication and citizenship. In contrast, most of their understanding and experiences were gained outside the classroom during study abroad. Furthermore, many students spoke about the importance of English in their development of intercultural connections and citizenship. We conclude that more in-depth and critical approaches to teaching language, culture and intercultural communication in ELT are needed which foster and cultivate students’ sense of intercultural citizenship.

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1.Baker et al Jan 2017 - with comments_revisedv2clean - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 23 April 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 July 2017
Published date: 1 September 2018
Organisations: Modern Languages and Linguistics

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Local EPrints ID: 408650
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408650
ISSN: 1362-1688
PURE UUID: efb27b22-6e35-4373-a564-2945b759fcd2
ORCID for William Baker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0533-2795

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Date deposited: 25 May 2017 04:03
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:17

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Author: Fan Fang
Author: William Baker ORCID iD

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