English Language Teaching Today pp 3-11 | Cite as
English Language Teaching Today: An Introduction
Abstract
This introductory chapter provides a broad overview of the edited volume by describing the rationales, aims, theoretical underpinnings and organization of the book. The chapter first presents key changes that have had a major impact on the way English is used and learned by geographically diverse groups of people in the world today. It then outlines a set of research-based principles that could be used as a basis for critically examining our curriculum, for selecting and adapting our teaching materials to suit the local contexts, for designing our lessons for the teaching of listening, speaking, reading, writing and other language skills and for developing tasks and activities that meet the linguistic, cognitive and affective needs of our students. The last part of the chapter provides a brief synopsis of each of the 20 chapters.
Keywords
ELT EIL principles SLA principles L2 teaching methodologyReferences
- Kubota, Y. (2015, June 30). Honda to set English as official language. The Wall Street Journal. From http://blogs.wsj.com/japanrealtime/2015/06/30/honda-sets-english-as-official-language/
- Mckay, S. L. (2012). Principles of teaching English as an international language. In L. Alsagoff, G. Hu, S. L. Mckay, & W. A. Renandya (Eds.), Principles and practices for teaching English as an international language (pp. 28–46). New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
- Renandya, W. A. (2012). Teacher roles in EIL. The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL, 1(2), 65–80.Google Scholar
- Richards, J. C., & Renandya, W. A. (2002). Methodology in language teaching: An anthology of current practice. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar