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Can you

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'Somethin ain't right, hit the brake lights. Case of the stage ... Other fashionable initialisms: BP / BCE WYSIWYG MBWA. Scottish Qualifications Authority ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Can you


1
  • Can you
  • do RP?
  • think PC?
  • podcast on MP5?
  • follow EMINEM?
  • fit the CEF?
  • speak ELF?
  • BWMF?

2
  • Are we teaching what our students want to hear?

3
What do our
students want?
  • real life
    language

  • relative to them

  • stimulating activities
  • functional language
  • Internet-speak
  • World English

4
What do our
students need?
  • grammar rules
  • linkers
  • phrasal verbs
  • exams
  • text books
  • controlled input

5
What do our
students really need?
  • guided fluency
  • linguistic flexibility
  • confidence-buiding
  • coherent interaction
  • ability to express themselves
  • ability to understand main ideas

6
Where does this
lead us?

  • ability to understand main ideas
  • real life language
    Internet-speak
  • linguistic flexibility
    relative to them
  • World English
    functional language


  • ability
    to express themselves

English
7
Ability to understand main ideas
  • EMINEM 8 Mile Road (extract)
  • Somethin ain't right, hit the brake
    lightsCase of the stage fright, drawin a blank
    like
  • Something is not right, I step on the brakes
  • It is a case of stage fright, I am drawing a
    blank
  • There is a problem, I stop what I am doing
  • I am scared, I do not know what to do
  • Somethin correcto, golpeó las luces del
    freno Caso del fright
  • de la etapa, drawin que un espacio en
    blanco tiene gusto
  • Can demonstrate a very basic repertoire of words
    and phrases A1



8
Real life language
  • The Church of England is struggling to find a
    polite word for the worlds oldest profession
    sex worker is deemed unsuitable, one
    possibility is people involved in prostitution.
  • The TUC has advised Members to avoid using
    ageist terms such as Granddad.
  • Teachers are being urged to stop using the work
    failure to describe pupils work in favour of
    deferred success.
  • The NHS have instructed staff that patients
    are only the people in hospital, out-patients are
    now clients.
  • Church of England warning in guidelines to
    bishops and vicars that calling God He
    encourages wife-beating.
  • Police officers have been banned from using the
    word yob in case it offends delinquents.
  • Can recognise implicit meaning C1



9
Internet-speak
  • 1 There's a bridge called "Covert's Crossing" or
    "Covert's Bridge" up in
  • 2 New Castle. A young couple had gotten married
    on Halloween. Around
  • 3 midnight, they were riding in a horse drawn
    carriage across the bridge
  • 4 at the same time a car. The bridge was only one
    lane, so by the time
  • 5 they saw each other it was too late. Story has
    it that they crashed and
  • 6the hubcap of the car flew off, decapitating the
    bride. The police never ?
  • 7 found her head or the body of the groom. Its
    been said that if you sit on
  • 8 the bridge on Halloween night around midnight,
    you can sees the
  • 9 headless bride standing on some rocks of the
    river. However they don't

10

Linguistic flexibility
  • 1. Smirt (v)
  • 2. Muggle (n)
  • 3. Zorbing (n)
  • 4. Blamestorm (v)
  • 5. Chav (n)
  • 6. Moob (n)
  • 7. Peppièr (n)
  • 8. Smooze (v)
  • Has a good command of idiomatic expressions and
    colloquialisms C2



11
Relative to them
  • The human linguistic faculty seems to be
    in good shapeThe arrival of
  • Netspeak is showing us homo loquens
    at its best David Crystal
  • Chat Room Initialisms
  • JAM KIT KISS SWIM
  • Dangers of initialisms Chat room codes
  • PRW LMIRL TYKO
  • Problems with initialisms
  • PTO
  • Other fashionable initialisms
  • BP / BCE WYSIWYG MBWA
  • Scottish Qualifications Authority
  • 2 B r nt 2 B
  • Can interact with a degree of fluency and
    spontaneity that makes interaction with native
    speakers possible without strain for either party
    B2

12
World English
  • Are these examples of real English?
  • Is it a question of context? or are they wrong?
  • a) Actually he wants a particular teacher.
  • b) She was a single child and now shes a
    single mother.
  • c) Were doing up a loft on the ground floor.
  • d) They arrived at the camping at tea-time
    5 oclock!
  • e) I asked her to resume the plot in 100
    words or less.
  • f) How comes youve gotten so fat?

  • Can make themselves understood in short turns
    A2


13
Functional language
  • To God I speak Spanish, to women Italian, to
    men French and to my horse German.
  • Charles V
  • French to my ambassadores, English to my
    accountant, Italian to my mistress, Latin to my
    gods, German to my horse
  • Frederick the Great of Prussia
  • We should speak French for Molière, Italian
    for Dante, German for Göethe, Spanish for
    Cervantes, English for Shakespeare and Globish to
    discuss the price of steel in China.
  • Jean-Paul Nerrièr
  • Can use language flexibly, for social, academic
    and professional purposes C1

14
Ability to express themselves
  • Four score and seven years ago our
    fathers brought forth on this continent a new
    nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to
    the proposition that all men are created equal.
  • Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln
    1863
  • Our fathers came to this land
    eighty-seven years ago. Theybrought to this land
    a new nation, it was formed in freedom, and was
    committed to the belief that all men are created
    equal.
  • Gettysburg Address, Globish 2007
  • Can understand and use basic everyday phrases
    A1


15

Mouth-Water In Menus(a selection from the finest
tables)
  • Egg crocket
  • or
  • Fried wantons
  • Unfrozen beef-rips
  • or
  • Veal knee
  • or
  • Chilly chicken
  • Crape with fruit
  • or
  • Orange,s
  • or
  • Bananas
  • ? We want your back! ?
  • Can understand sentences and frequently used
    expressions related to immediately relevant
    areas A2


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