Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
373715 System 2009 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

This article contends that, in spite of a recent upsurge in writing on non-native English-speaking teachers (NNESTs) in the global discourse of English language teaching (ELT), the experiences of NNESTSs working within their own state educational systems remain seriously under-investigated. To help to redress this, the article explores, from their own perspectives, how a group of NNESTs experience English teaching in Thailand, where English is taught as a foreign language. Though the article only has space to consider two aspects of the teachers’ lives and careers – classroom methods and commitment to teaching – it is hoped that it will contribute to an understanding of the many and varied locally-based practices of ELT, as well as helping to correct a monolithic view of ELT based on western conceptions of practice. The importance of NNESTs of English being ‘native’ in terms of their situational teaching competence is, accordingly, given due weight.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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