Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught?
The growing economic interdependence of many countries and the huge development in the means of communication and transportation compel almost all countries to teach at least one foreign lan-guage. The need for teaching a foreign language produced sizeable research on many aspects of this fieldsuch...
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King Saud University
1989-01-01
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doaj-6d35718374f947fb90b5db7b46920c152020-11-24T21:09:41ZaraKing Saud UniversityJournal of Islamic Studies1658-63011658-63011989-01-0111,2171194Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught?Eid A.S. Al-ShammaryThe growing economic interdependence of many countries and the huge development in the means of communication and transportation compel almost all countries to teach at least one foreign lan-guage. The need for teaching a foreign language produced sizeable research on many aspects of this fieldsuch as leamers' characteristics, timing of instruction, curriculum contents, the effects of foreign language learning on the mother language and culture, and other related issues. The teaching of English was and still is the topic of debate among concerned Saudi educators. This debate has produced two distinct trends. The proponents of the first trend suggest to extend the English instruction to the elementary stage. They justify their proposition by the realistic growing need for English in many sectors of Saudi society. They also have some educational justifications for their suggestions. The preponents of the second trend suggest to eliminate the English instruction. As an alternative they prop- ose establishing a national agency for translation and arabization from all languages into Arabic. They also call for the arabization of university education. They justify their prOposition by the weakness of Saudi stu- dents in English despite the long time and high expenses allocated for English instruction. They also justify their proposition by some linguistic, cultural and religious considerations. http://jes.ksu.edu.sa/sites/jes.ksu.edu.sa/files/8_7.pdfTeaching EnglishTeaching language |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
Arabic |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eid A.S. Al-Shammary |
spellingShingle |
Eid A.S. Al-Shammary Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? Journal of Islamic Studies Teaching English Teaching language |
author_facet |
Eid A.S. Al-Shammary |
author_sort |
Eid A.S. Al-Shammary |
title |
Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? |
title_short |
Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? |
title_full |
Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? |
title_fullStr |
Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Teaching English in Saudi Arabia: To Whom, When and How Should English Be Taught? |
title_sort |
teaching english in saudi arabia: to whom, when and how should english be taught? |
publisher |
King Saud University |
series |
Journal of Islamic Studies |
issn |
1658-6301 1658-6301 |
publishDate |
1989-01-01 |
description |
The growing economic interdependence of many countries and the huge development in the means of communication and transportation compel almost all countries to teach at least one foreign lan-guage. The need for teaching a foreign language produced sizeable research on many aspects of this fieldsuch as leamers' characteristics, timing of instruction, curriculum contents, the effects of foreign language learning on the mother language and culture, and other related issues.
The teaching of English was and still is the topic of debate among concerned Saudi educators. This debate has produced two distinct trends. The proponents of the first trend suggest to extend the English instruction to the elementary stage. They justify their proposition by the realistic growing need for English in many sectors of Saudi society. They also have some educational justifications for their suggestions. The preponents of the second trend suggest to eliminate the English instruction. As an alternative they prop- ose establishing a national agency for translation and arabization from all languages into Arabic. They also call for the arabization of university education. They justify their prOposition by the weakness of Saudi stu- dents in English despite the long time and high expenses allocated for English instruction. They also justify their proposition by some linguistic, cultural and religious considerations.
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topic |
Teaching English Teaching language |
url |
http://jes.ksu.edu.sa/sites/jes.ksu.edu.sa/files/8_7.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT eidasalshammary teachingenglishinsaudiarabiatowhomwhenandhowshouldenglishbetaught |
_version_ |
1716757796729389056 |