Failing interventions to harness English fever infiltrating early childhood education in South Korea: politics of distraction
Failing interventions to harness English fever infiltrating early childhood education in South Korea: politics of distraction
As English is recognised as an influential language in the globalised world and social and economic capital for individuals, Koreans put tremendous effort and financial resources into learning English, instigating a social malady called ‘English fever.’ The fever has recently infiltrated early childhood education, leading to the expansion of exorbitant, half-day English immersion programmes for preschoolers, called English-medium kindergartens (EKs). Despite the recent policies to minimise the influence of English in Early Childhood English education and enhance students’ well-being and whole-person development, English fever is still prevalent, causing detrimental effects on children. Using the notion of politics of distraction and the ethics in language planning and policy as theoretical and analytical frameworks, this paper examines how and why the education policy fails to address English fever. Drawing on a qualitative case study at three EKs, this study reveals the perceptions, dynamics and processes in early childhood English education that are disregarded and remain invisible in relevant policies. The study sheds light on the harm of distractive policy, asking policy researchers and designers to refocus their effort on what truly matters, through integrating language ethics into policymaking, thus, refocusing on children's holistic development and emotional well-being.
early childhood education, English fever, English-medium education, language ethics, policy distraction, shadow education
Kim, Jee Hee
bcb9bf0f-b46e-4987-9745-2fdc6c7aae14
Choi, Tae Hee
3cec7c93-92cd-4329-b0a7-3b208c65dcb7
3 July 2024
Kim, Jee Hee
bcb9bf0f-b46e-4987-9745-2fdc6c7aae14
Choi, Tae Hee
3cec7c93-92cd-4329-b0a7-3b208c65dcb7
Kim, Jee Hee and Choi, Tae Hee
(2024)
Failing interventions to harness English fever infiltrating early childhood education in South Korea: politics of distraction.
Current Issues in Language Planning.
(doi:10.1080/14664208.2024.2368371).
Abstract
As English is recognised as an influential language in the globalised world and social and economic capital for individuals, Koreans put tremendous effort and financial resources into learning English, instigating a social malady called ‘English fever.’ The fever has recently infiltrated early childhood education, leading to the expansion of exorbitant, half-day English immersion programmes for preschoolers, called English-medium kindergartens (EKs). Despite the recent policies to minimise the influence of English in Early Childhood English education and enhance students’ well-being and whole-person development, English fever is still prevalent, causing detrimental effects on children. Using the notion of politics of distraction and the ethics in language planning and policy as theoretical and analytical frameworks, this paper examines how and why the education policy fails to address English fever. Drawing on a qualitative case study at three EKs, this study reveals the perceptions, dynamics and processes in early childhood English education that are disregarded and remain invisible in relevant policies. The study sheds light on the harm of distractive policy, asking policy researchers and designers to refocus their effort on what truly matters, through integrating language ethics into policymaking, thus, refocusing on children's holistic development and emotional well-being.
Text
Failing interventions to harness English fever infiltrating early childhood education in South Korea politics of distraction
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 July 2024
Published date: 3 July 2024
Keywords:
early childhood education, English fever, English-medium education, language ethics, policy distraction, shadow education
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492617
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492617
ISSN: 1466-4208
PURE UUID: e2dc3271-e6b9-4e6b-8712-ca6dae242780
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Date deposited: 08 Aug 2024 16:30
Last modified: 19 Dec 2024 03:03
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Author:
Jee Hee Kim
Author:
Tae Hee Choi
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