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Stephens, Meredith – Babel, 2010
Due to the global momentum of English as a Lingua Franca (ELF), Anglophones may perceive that there is less urgency for them to learn other languages than for speakers of other languages to learn English. The monolingual expectations of English speakers are evidenced not only in Anglophone countries but also abroad. This study reports on the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Oral Language, Asian Culture, English
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Crozet, Chantal – Babel, 2008
This article examines, from a broad historical perspective, how Australia's negative "linguistic culture" has shaped languages education in our country. Language teachers' pre- and inservice training does not often address this topic. Yet to be able to anchor one's profession within a historical, sociocultural, and political perspective,…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Inservice Education, Sociolinguistics, Foreign Countries
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Quinn, Terence – Babel, 1974
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Guides, English (Second Language), French
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Rado, Marta – Babel, 1974
Urges the broadening of language study by looking beyond an exclusively literary training. (Author/LG)
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Foreign Language Films, Language Styles, Second Language Learning
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Motluk, Alison – Babel, 2003
Does the language one speaks influence the way he thinks? Does it help define his world view? Anyone who has tried to master a foreign tongue has at least considered the possibility. Little linguistic peculiarities, though amusing, don't change the objective world people are describing. So how can they alter the way they think? Scientists and…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Genetics, Brain, Scientists
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Gatt-Rutter, John – Babel, 1988
Australia has a language paradox: great richness and great poverty of language resources. Despite its many cultures and immigrant groups, Australia emphasizes English-language assimilation and thereby endangers its chances for durable multilingualism. (MSE)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cultural Pluralism, English, Foreign Countries
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Ritchie, Annabelle – Babel, 2004
Language ecology, a term developed by Haugen (2001), describes the relationship between languages and the environment in which they exist; that is, how they grow, change, interact and adapt in a Darwinian-like quest for survival. Of the 6000 or so languages in existence today, some are spoken by vast numbers of people, but others are used by very…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Pluralism, Sociolinguistics, Language Maintenance