EFL vs. ELF
"Communication works for those who work at it" /John Powel
Abstract
The study explores whether or not the Swedish syllabus of English would allow the teaching of
English as a Lingua Franca (ELF). Furthermore, the study investigates the attitudes towards the
teaching of ELF among Swedish teachers of English.
A questionnaire of ten questions was answered by fifteen respondents, all teachers in Swedish
compulsory schools in the Gothenburg area. The questionnaire was divided into three parts, where
the first part was designed to obtain information about the teachers (gender, number of years of
teaching experience) as well as information about their attitudes regarding their own English. The purpose of the second and third parts of the questionnaire was to find out the teachers’ towards their students’ receptive and productive skills in terms of the variety of English they would find acceptable. The final part involved interpreting quotes from the syllabus.
The study shows that while the syllabus would allow for the teaching of ELF, the teachers’ attitudes towards ELF are ambiguous. Native English still appears to have a prominent compared to non--‐native varieties of English. However, the concept `native English´ has widened, and instead of only including British and American English, it seems to include all native Englishes. The final chapter discusses some of the implications for teaching English in Sweden, based on the results of the study.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2012-04-27Author
Karlsson, Emma
Keywords
teaching
English as a lingua franca (ELF)
English as a foreign language
Series/Report no.
kandidatuppsats i engelska
SPL 2011-092
Language
eng