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Understanding English as a Lingua Franca

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TLDR
This book argues that ELF needs to be understood as an adaptable and creative use of language in its own right, and not as a deviant or erroneous version of native speaker English, which is of particular relevance to the sociolinguistic study of language variation in general.
Abstract
The spread of English as the international lingua franca (ELF), like other aspects of globalization, calls for a reconsideration of conventional ways of thinking. As the language is taken over and put to effective communicative use by non-native speakers on a global scale, assumptions that native speakers have exclusive property rights, and are the arbiters of its proper use, are obviously no longer tenable. ELF typically departs from native speaker usage in a variety of ways, but in ways which are consistent with the kind of variation that is evident in any natural language. This book argues that ELF needs to be understood as an adaptable and creative use of language in its own right, and not as a deviant or erroneous version of native speaker English. It demonstrates how its 'non-conformist' formal features are functionally motivated by the dynamics of communicative interaction. In this respect, ELF is of particular relevance to the sociolinguistic study of language variation in general. But as the book points out, this reconceptualization of 'English' also has important pedagogic implications since it raises questions about what kind of language content and what kind of communicative capability it is appropriate and realistic to teach as a subject.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of developments in research into English as a lingua franca

TL;DR: English as a Lingua Franca (henceforth ELF) fits in with the older notion of lingua francas in general as well as with older versions of ELF.
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Own-language use in language teaching and learning

TL;DR: The authors surveys the developing English language literature on the role of students' own language(s) in the language classroom and examines the support for own-language use that a range of theoretical frameworks provide, including psycholinguistic and cognitive approaches, general learning theory and sociocultural approaches.
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The Multi/Plural Turn, Postcolonial Theory, and Neoliberal Multiculturalism: Complicities and Implications for Applied Linguistics

TL;DR: The authors examines the multi-plural trend by drawing on some critiques of postcolonial theory and neoliberal ideologies and proposes an increased attention to power and inequalities as well as collective efforts to resist the neoliberal academic culture underlying the multiplural turn.
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Accommodating (to) ELF in the international university

TL;DR: The authors argue that despite the diverse international composition of university student populations, university language policies and practices are still grounded in largely national (British and North American) English norms, and argue that as ELF gains acceptance, particularly among younger multilingual speakers, and as multilingualism becomes the global academic norm, native English speakers especially the monolingual majority are at risk of becoming disadvantaged when communicating in international settings.
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English as a Lingua Franca from the classroom to the classroom

Jennifer Jenkins
- 01 Oct 2012 - 
TL;DR: English has served as a means of communication among speakers of different first languages (i.e. a lingua franca) for many centuries as mentioned in this paper. Yet its present spread and use are so new that English as a Lingua Franca (ELF) in its current global manifestation did not exist as recently as 1946 when this Journal was launched.