New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?

It is now widely accepted that English does not belong to the traditional native speaker countries such as the UK or the USA, and that English across the world has diversified and established roots in different parts of the world. Given this, studies have emerged, that focus on New Englishes being s...

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Main Authors: Chandrik Balasubramanian, Adel AbuRadwan
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Sultan Qaboos University 2018-02-01
Series:Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/2465
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spelling doaj-16e2bc49a2a24c0295b53f312125e4b12020-11-25T00:10:01ZaraSultan Qaboos UniversityJournal of Arts and Social Sciences2312-12702522-22792018-02-0183273910.24200/jass.vol8iss3pp27-392314New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?Chandrik Balasubramanian0Adel AbuRadwan1Department of English Language and Literature College of Arts and Social Sciences Sultan Qaboos UniversityDepartment of English Language and Literature College of Arts and Social Sciences Sultan Qaboos UniversityIt is now widely accepted that English does not belong to the traditional native speaker countries such as the UK or the USA, and that English across the world has diversified and established roots in different parts of the world. Given this, studies have emerged, that focus on New Englishes being systems unto themselves, and not merely erroneous versions of more traditional “native” Englishes (Rajagopalan, 2012). Scholars today are calling for descriptions of New Englishes to form the bases of New English handbooks, which, they claim, could serve as pedagogical models. Linguists like Lange (2011) and Kachru (1994) and literary figures such as Salman Rushdie alike have called for the recognition of New Englishes to be accepted and used in order to better reflect the global nature of the language The aim of this study is to determine whether new international varieties of English are acceptable among language teachers. Specifically, the paper investigates how acceptable certain well-documented New Englishes structures are among English language professionals working at the tertiary level in the Arab world and North America. The results show that while participants are, in general, more tolerant of New English structures in students’ spoken forms than in both students and their own written forms, they stated that they would not use any of the structures in their own writing. Results also show that the respondents’ native language, specialization and educational qualifications are factors that impact their acceptance of these forms.https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/2465new Englishestertiary classroomsregistersattitudes
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chandrik Balasubramanian
Adel AbuRadwan
spellingShingle Chandrik Balasubramanian
Adel AbuRadwan
New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
new Englishes
tertiary classrooms
registers
attitudes
author_facet Chandrik Balasubramanian
Adel AbuRadwan
author_sort Chandrik Balasubramanian
title New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
title_short New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
title_full New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
title_fullStr New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
title_full_unstemmed New Englishes Norms: A Reality or an Intellectual Ideal?
title_sort new englishes norms: a reality or an intellectual ideal?
publisher Sultan Qaboos University
series Journal of Arts and Social Sciences
issn 2312-1270
2522-2279
publishDate 2018-02-01
description It is now widely accepted that English does not belong to the traditional native speaker countries such as the UK or the USA, and that English across the world has diversified and established roots in different parts of the world. Given this, studies have emerged, that focus on New Englishes being systems unto themselves, and not merely erroneous versions of more traditional “native” Englishes (Rajagopalan, 2012). Scholars today are calling for descriptions of New Englishes to form the bases of New English handbooks, which, they claim, could serve as pedagogical models. Linguists like Lange (2011) and Kachru (1994) and literary figures such as Salman Rushdie alike have called for the recognition of New Englishes to be accepted and used in order to better reflect the global nature of the language The aim of this study is to determine whether new international varieties of English are acceptable among language teachers. Specifically, the paper investigates how acceptable certain well-documented New Englishes structures are among English language professionals working at the tertiary level in the Arab world and North America. The results show that while participants are, in general, more tolerant of New English structures in students’ spoken forms than in both students and their own written forms, they stated that they would not use any of the structures in their own writing. Results also show that the respondents’ native language, specialization and educational qualifications are factors that impact their acceptance of these forms.
topic new Englishes
tertiary classrooms
registers
attitudes
url https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/2465
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