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Encuentros con la escritura en el ingreso a la educación superior: representaciones sociales de los estudiantes en seis áreas de conocimiento
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Humour loss in the Indonesian translation of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
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Language learning motivation of students from a special educational school in Hong Kong
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Autonomy in teaching practice: Insights from Vietnamese English language teachers trained in Inner-Circle countries
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On evaluating the effectiveness of university-wide credit-bearing English language enhancement courses
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Supporting online L2 academic reading comprehension with computer-mediated synchronous discussion and elaborative feedback
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Bown, A. - : The Reading Matrix, Inc, 2018
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Constructing identities online- an exploratory study of Saudi youths' strategies
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Language Outcomes at 7 Years: Early Predictors and Co-Occurring Difficulties
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Language education policy among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
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Language education policy and practice in East and Southeast Asia
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The Languages of Higher Education in East and Southeast Asia: Will EMI Lead to Englishisation?
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Direct teaching of vocabulary after listening: is it worth the effort and what method is best?
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Elaborative feedback to enhance online second language reading comprehension
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Bown, A. - : Canadian Center of Science and Education, 2017
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English as a lingua franca and its educational impact in Asia
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Abstract:
This chapter will begin with a brief historical review of languages which have operated as lingua francas across East and Southeast Asia. It will then review the development of English in selected Asian countries and its role in those countries today. It will be argued that the role of English in Asia has now extended beyond operating at intranational level, as evidenced by the existence of established varieties of English such as Malaysian and Filipino, to becoming an interregional lingua franca. That is to say, a major Asian role of English is as a medium of interregional communication for Asian multilinguals for whom English is an additional language. Evidence for this comes, for example, from the legislation of English as the sole working language of the ten countries which make up the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Drawing on research based on a study of which languages are currently being used as languages of education in school curricula in selected Asian countries, using the Philippines and Indonesia as case studies, the chapter will consider the educational impacts of the role of English as a lingua franca in Asia. This section of the chapter will include tentative predictions for the respective roles of English and Asian languages. The chapter will conclude with suggestions for a ‘Communicating with Asia’ skill-set which Europeans might find useful. ; Arts, Education & Law Group, School of Languages and Linguistics ; Full Text
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781107477186.019 http://hdl.handle.net/10072/142050
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