Part One: The Context of Language Teaching |
Language
Policy
One definition of Policy: “A definite course or method selected from among alternatives and in
light of given conditions to guide and determine present and future decisions.”
Language Policy has
to do with decisions (rules, regulations, guidelines) about the status, use, and domains of language(s) and the right of speakers
of the language(s) in question.
Many
countries have a language policy designed to favor or discourage the use of a particular language or set of languages. Although nations historically have used language policies most often to
promote one official language at the expense of others, many countries now have policies designed to protect and promote regional
and ethnic languages whose existence is threatened.
Overview
Language planning refers
to deliberate efforts to influence the behavior of others with respect to the acquisition, structure, or functional distribution
of language. Typically it will involve the development of goals, objectives and strategies to change the way language is used.
At a governmental level, language planning takes the form of language policy. Many nations have language regulatory bodies which are specifically charged with formulating and implementing language planning policies.
The term 'language planning' has often been identified with a third world context, being seen as a tool for the establishment
of standardized national languages as a part of modernisation and nation building. On the other hand, generally speaking,
language planning in what relates to education takes the form of Curriculum design at the level of ministries of education.
(see slide 3)
Curriculum Design (see slide 4)
1. Government’s decisions regarding teaching English e.g. number of hours/years or starting year.
2. A whole department in the ministry dealing with program
planning.
3. Books, tapes, CDs…
Giving information, methods, classroom management, evaluation, etc.
Dimensions of language planning
Language
planning can be divided into three sub-dimensions:
² Corpus planning refers
to intervention in the forms of a language. This may be achieved by creating new words or expressions, modifying old ones,
or selecting among alternative forms. Corpus planning aims to develop the resources of a language so that it becomes an appropriate
medium of communication for modern topics and forms of discourse, which caters for the terminology needed for use in administration, education, etc. Corpus planning is often related to the standardization of a language, involving the preparation of a normative orthography, grammar, and dictionary for the guidance of writers and speakers in a speech community. Efforts at linguistic purism
and the exclusion of foreign words (linguistic protectionism) also belong to corpus planning.
² Status planning refers
to deliberate efforts to allocate the functions of languages within a speech community. It involves status choices, making
a particular language or variety an 'official language', a 'national language', etc. Often it will involve elevating a language or dialect into a prestige variety, which may be at the expense of competing dialects.
² Acquisition planning concerns the teaching and learning of languages, whether national languages or second and foreign languages. It involves efforts to influence the number of users and the distribution of languages, achieved
by creating opportunities or incentives to learn them. Acquisition planning is directly related to language spread. While
acquisition planning is normally the area of national, regional, or local governments, bodies such as the British Council, and Alliance Française are also very active internationally promoting education in their respective languages.
An official language is a
language that is designated as "official" by a government/state, usually by legislation.