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English as an International Language in Asia: Implications for language education
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83 |
Language choice as an index of identity: linguistic landscape in Dili, Timor-Leste
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84 |
The effects of geographic location and picture support on children's story retelling performance
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85 |
Timor-Leste: Sustaining and maintaining the national languages in education
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86 |
Mother tongue-based multilingual education: A new direction for Timor-Leste
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87 |
At the intersection of language assessment and academic advising: Communicating results of a large-scale diagnostic academic English writing assessment to student and other stakeholders
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88 |
Exlamatives and exclamatory acts in English and Vietnamese
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To, VT. - : Australia - Asia Research and Education Foundation, 2012
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89 |
Pedagogy, Citizenship and the EU: Practitioners' Perspectives on the Teaching of European Citizenship through Modern Foreign Languages
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90 |
Differing perspectives of non-native speaker students' linguistic experiences on higher degree courses
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91 |
Sampling and analysis of children's spontaneous language. From research to practice
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92 |
Shaping socialist ideology through language education policy for primary schools in the PRC
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Abstract:
This paper, drawing on the theoretical framework of critical discourse analysis, examines the general goals and objectives of the national curriculum reform launched by the Ministry of Education in 2001 for Chinese primary schools. Four policy documents relevant to the curriculum reform are analyzed, including Chinese curriculum and English curriculum for compulsory education, with a focus on education policy for English language instruction in Chinese primary schools. The analysis explores how language works in policy texts in helping to shape and control the ideology of the readers at various levels - an ideology that, in turn, could be transmitted to primary school students. The power relations and equity implications reflected in the policy texts are also explored. ; Arts, Education & Law Group, School of Education and Professional Studies ; No Full Text
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics; Education Policy; ESL and TESOL Curriculum and Pedagogy (excl. Maori); LOTE
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/44007 https://doi.org/10.1080/14664208.2011.592132
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95 |
Analyzing Students' Multimodal Texts: The product and the process
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96 |
Intercultural competence through language education in Australian higher education: Mission (im)possible?
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97 |
Timor-Leste: Sustaining and maintaining the national languages in education
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99 |
“Now my hope is clear for building my future”: How two young refugees build social connectedness
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