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Values in English Language Teaching (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,365
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Values in English Language Teaching (Hardcover)
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This book offers a new perspective on language teaching by placing
moral issues--that is, questions of values--at the core of what it
is to be a teacher. The teacher-student relation is central to this
view, rather than the concept of language teaching as merely a
technical matter of managing students' acquisition of language. The
message is that all language teaching involves an interplay of
deeply held values, but in each teaching situation these values are
played out in different ways. Johnston does not tell readers "what"
to think, but only suggests what to think "about."
"Values in English Language Teaching" explores the complex and
often contradictory moral landscape of the language classroom,
gradually revealing how teaching is not a matter of clear-cut
choices but of wrestling with dilemmas and making difficult
decisions in situations often riven with conflict. It examines the
underlying values that teachers hold as individuals and as members
of their profession, and demonstrates how those values are played
out in the real world of language classrooms. Matters addressed
include connections between the moral and political dimensions in
English language teaching, and between values and religious
beliefs; relationship(s) between teacher identity and values; the
meaning of professionalism and how it is associated with morality
and values; the ways in which teacher development is a moral issue;
and the marginality of English language teaching.
All the examples are taken from real-life teaching situations--the
complexity and messiness of these situations is always
acknowledged, including both individual influences and broader
social, cultural, and political forces at play in English language
classrooms. By using actual situations as the starting point for
analysis, Johnston offers a philosophy based in practice, and
recognizes the primacy of lived experience as a basis for moral
analysis. Examples come from teaching contexts around the world,
including Brazil, Thailand, Poland, Japan, Central African
Republic, Turkey, and Taiwan, as well as various settings in the
United States.
This book will change the way teachers see language
classrooms--their own or those of others. It is a valuable resource
for teachers of ESL and EFL and all those who work with them,
especially teacher educators, researchers, and
administrators.
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