Spotlight - 11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

16 Spotlight 11/2019 LANGUAGE SPECIAL


Technology in the classroom
Technology is driving changes to the way
English is taught and learned. Chia says
trends include blended learning (com-
bining digital media with more tradition-
al forms of teaching), mobile learning
and “gamification” (use of apps, games
and phone-friendly language software).
Embodied learning, based on the idea
that learning is not just about memory,
but also involves active learning through
collaborating, discussing and exploring, is
increasing in importance, too. “Learners,”
says Chia, “need to be emotionally, intel-
lectually, physically and socially engaged.”

English for your career
Relating English studies
to learners’ career develop-
ment is an important trend
in English language teach-
ing (ELT), says Andy John-
son of the London School
Online. He notes that most
students learning English
in the UK, and an increas-
ing proportion of those
teaching it, are millennials. Born since the
1980s, they have grown up with the inter-
net, social media and mobile technology.
English learning, therefore, tends to incor-
porate technology and encourage social
connectivity and peer feedback.

A question of character(s)
Another interesting development is the
use of images in online language. June
2019 marked a milestone for the Oxford
English Dictionary (OED), when for the
first time it incorporated pictorial emojis
from social media as a source of illustra-
tive quotations. Examples included emo-
jis for “love” ( ) and “pride” ( ).
“Some have questioned whether the
increasing development and adoption of
emoji pictograms, which allow speakers
to communicate without the need for
language, mean that we will cease to com-
municate in English at all ;-)” suggests
Simon Horobin, professor of English lan-
guage and literature at the University of
Oxford. He also points to the increasingly
abbreviated forms of online English.
“Whether you or h8 such words, think
they are NBD or meh, they are undoubt-
edly here to stay,” he says.
The evolution of the English language
sees a constant movement of words in

and out of common use. The meanings of
words are changing, too. “Less” has come
to replace “fewer”; “literally” now means
anything but its original definition; and
“fantastic” no longer lies in the realms of
fantasy. LOL and YOLO are in; “ought”,
“whom” and “shall” are out, while “can”
and “should” survive.

How does the future look?
English as an international asset
“The English language is perhaps the
United Kingdom’s greatest and yet
least-recognised international asset,”
wrote Mark Robson, director of English
and exams for the British
Council, back in 2013.
English-language learn-
ers worldwide are divided
largely into two groups:
speakers of English as a
foreign language (EFL)
and learners of English as
a second language (ESL).
Generally, EFL speakers
use English now and again
for business or pleasure
purposes, while ESL speakers use English
on a daily basis. English is frequently used
as a common tongue for business and cul-
tural exchanges between nations where
it is not the primary language. China, for
example, currently has more speakers of
English as a second language than any
other country.
Will English keep its global domi-
nance? Possibly not, suggests Simon
Horobin. He believes that automatic
translation software, such as Google
Translate, will eventually replace Eng-
lish as the means of communication em-
ployed in the boardrooms of international
corporations as well as government agen-
cies.
Gaston Dorren, author of Babel: Around
the World in 20 Languages, thinks that ad-
vances in technology are likely to lead to
the development of a “Babel chip” which
could translate and transcribe without the
user ever having to learn the language.
“[Learning languages] will still be valu-
able for all sorts of cultural and psycholog-
ical reasons, but the majority won’t both-
er,” Dorren told news.com.au. He believes
that English could develop into so-called
“Globish”: a more simplistic form of glob-
al Anglo-American English.
(Continued on page 19)

abbreviated
[E(bri:vieItId]
, abgekürzt, Kurz-
asset [(Äset]
, Gut, Stärke
boardroom [(bO:dru:m]
, Vorstandsetage
cease [si:s]
, aufhören
embodied learning
[Im(bQdid (l§:nIN]
, ganzheitliches und
lebenslanges Lernen
eventually [I(ventSuEli]
, irgendwann
illustrative [(IlEstrEtIv]
, anschaulich
literally [(lIt&rEli]
, buchstäblich

LOL [lQl] ifml.
, Abkürzung für
„laughing out loud“
meh [me] ifml.
, (völlig) egal-
NBD [)en bi: di:] ifml.
, Abkürzung für
„no big deal“
peer [pIE]
, Kollegen-
quotation [kwEU(teIS&n]
, Zitat
realm [relm]
, Reich
YOLO [jQlQ] ifml.
, Abkürzung für „you
only live once“

Will
English
keep
its global
dominance?
Free download pdf