학술논문

Rethinking the 'ideal native speaker' teacher in early childhood education.
Document Type
Article
Source
Language, Culture & Curriculum. Mar2022, Vol. 35 Issue 1, p1-17. 17p.
Subject
*NATIVE language
*EARLY childhood education
*ENGLISH as a foreign language
*TEACHER training
*TEACHER attitudes
Language
ISSN
0790-8318
Abstract
Current foreign language education policies advocate plurilingual approaches to learning and teaching languages and call into question the 'ideal native speaker' as the ultimate model. Observations within a teacher training context indicate that this ideal still holds considerable weight among pre-service teachers. A study was carried out with students enrolled on the degree programme in Early Childhood Education at a university in Catalonia to explore the extent to which the 'ideal native speaker' model prevails within this community. The study analysed data from different instruments applied within the context of a core module which includes an innovative approach to embedding English as a foreign language in the early years. Findings confirm the prevalence of the model and reveal beliefs and assumptions which not only perpetuate the ideal itself, but also reinforce disempowering and discriminatory attitudes which are incongruent with current policies regarding language education. Changes reported in post-intervention findings highlight the need to develop reflective skills alongside linguistic and didactic competences in Early Childhood EFL Education. One of the main contributions of the study is its identification of deficit views of non-specialist teachers and its call for collaborative practice in which all linguistic abilities have a place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]