Menu Expand
Context and Culture in Language Teaching and Learning

Context and Culture in Language Teaching and Learning

Prof. Michael Byram | Dr. Peter Grundy

(2003)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

The now familiar forces of globalisation and internationalisation are influencing the role and significance of language teaching and learning in contemporary classrooms. This affects the ways in which English is taught and learnt in particular but is also an inevitable factor in all language teaching and learning. The authors of the chapters in this book all share a concern to explore the ways in which the contexts in which language teaching takes place impact on the aims and the methods of language teaching. Some do so by discussing the implications for what research we do and how we do it; Kramsch, for example, explains in detail how her own research evolves from issues which arise in the classroom. In other chapters the changing nature of the teaching of English is presented from empirical research; Decke-Cornill, for example, identifies different philosophies of language teaching among different kinds of English teacher in Germany. Other authors present studies of the ways in which what learners bring to the learning process from their own contexts and languages has to be taken into consideration if we are to understand language learning; Holme shows this from close analysis of the acquisition of metaphorical language, and Wendt argues for the importance of a social constructivist theory of language learning. Our common purpose is to take a fresh look at teaching and research through the perspective of the inevitable connections between contexts, cultures and classrooms. 


Michael Byram and Peter Grundy have both worked in language teaching for many years at the University of Durham. Their interests in foreign language teaching in Britain and Europe, and in the teaching of English worldwide, complement each other and bridge the gap which often exists between ELT and other languages. They have cooperated to bring together researchers from several European countries and the USA in an endeavour to raise the awareness of the profession concerning the socio-political, cultural and psychological contexts in which language teaching and learning takes place; classrooms are not insulated from the world.

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents v
Introduction: Context and Culture in Language Teaching and Learning 1
From Practice to Theory and Back Again 4
Carrying a Baby in the Back: Teaching with an Awareness of the Cultural Construction of Language 18
Autobiographical Contexts of Mono-Cultural and Bi-Cultural Students and their Significance in Foreign Language Literature Courses 32
Learning Culture by Communicating: Native–Non-Native Speaker Telephone Interactions 43
Exporting Methodologies: The Reflective Approach in Teacher Training 51
‘We Would Have to Invent the Language we are Supposed to Teach’: The Issue of English as Lingua Franca in Language Education in Germany 59
Teaching India in the EFL-Classroom: A Cultural or an Intercultural Approach? 72
European Communicative Integration: The Function of Foreign Language Teaching for the Development of a European Public Sphere 81
Context, Culture and Construction: Research Implications of Theory Formation in Foreign Language Methodology 92