Back to the future (revisiting – again – the practice of English language teaching)

Teens watch JohnThe photograph is a still from ‘Teachers at Work’, a video which accompanies the 2015 (fifth) edition of  The Practice of English Language Teaching. We filmed primary, secondarytertiary and adult classes in Mexico, Turkey and the UK.


‘PELT’ was first published in 1983.  That first edition was written while I was involved in teacher training in Mexico. It came about because on returning to that country after completing an MA in Applied Linguistics my brain was so addled with undigested applied linguistics my trainees couldn’t understand anything I said. But they could understand the written notes I gave them after my mixed-up input sessions! Those notes became the first edition of the book.


In 32 years the book has become something of a standard and because of this it has become absolutely necessary to update/upgrade it over the years (1991, 2001, 2007, 2015). Speaking personally it has been a kind of self-willed CPD (continuing professional development).


So what is new in 2015? What are the issues in today’s English language teaching world?  How has the ‘ELT world changed in 32 years. It seems to me theatre about three big areas to think about:


1 The world off English and English language teaching has changed out of all recognition. First speakers of English as a second or additional language outnumber first-language speakers (‘native speakers’) but a factor of maybe 2:1 (Rajagapolan)4:1 (Crystal) or 5:1 (Graddol). Which means that the varieties of properly functioning English that are spoken have multiplied enormously. Furthermore the majority of English-language conversations in the world take place between people, neither of whom have English as a first language. And so all the discussions about what variety to teach, about ELF (or English as an international language) are absolutely vital – and the raise concerns about the mean of accuracy as Scott Thornbury articulated so well recently.


2 Technology is the big game changer I guess. Is Adaptive (teacher-less) learning the way forward? If you want to know about that read Philip Kerr’s informed and somewhat chilling blog. Do we believe in the ‘technology can solve everything’  SOLEs world of people like Sugata Mitra? Is the course book doomed – with access to the internet and the ubiquity of mobile devices (but careful! Remember that 60% of the world’s population have no access to the internet according to Sir Tim Berners Lee a few months ago)?


3 And leading on from that, are any materials necessary? What ARE the best ways to learn a language? Is the mind a computer (e.g. Chomsky, Krashen etc)? Does explicit knowledge about language help learners? Is communication the key – and, leading on from that, is interactive group work the way forward? Is dialogue necessary (pace Dogme or unplugged teaching)? And what about CLIL (content and language integrated learning?


There are other issues too: modern digitally delivered tests – with free speaking and writing marked by computers, not humans – threaten to break an essential student-teacher link; ‘western’ language teaching is not universally exportable. We (people brought up on western-style methodology) have to learn to be importers too; the whole learning styles discussion has been enliven by people who question its lack of evidence base.


etc


But what do YOU think are the pressing issues for language teaching today?


PELT 2015


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Published on June 06, 2015 17:28
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Bonaventure Agbo I like your books.you are very knowledgeable


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