학술논문

New English cultures and learner autonomy for intrinsic motivation and democratic empowerment in the Chilean context.
Document Type
Article
Source
English Teaching: Practice & Critique (University of Waikato); Dec2013, Vol. 12 Issue 3, p23-40, 18p, 5 Charts
Subject
Learner autonomy
Intrinsic motivation
English language education
English as a foreign language
Blogs
Language
ISSN
11758708
Abstract
Chilean youth are currently demanding access to better-quality education for all: greater democracy and curricula that respect the country's indigenous cultural roots form part of their petitions. This article puts forward a twofold pedagogical proposal for English Language Teaching intended to foster intrinsic motivation and democratic empowerment through a combination of meaningful cultural content taken from the New English cultures and autonomous learning, including technology-supported student participation and self-reflection. Rather than alienating learners by presenting "traditional" English-speaking cultural content, emphasis is placed on cultural expressions originating from indigenous and postcolonial contexts, many of which parallel the Latin American experience. A case study based on a first-year course of an Initial English Teacher Education program at a Chilean university shows that learners participate actively, make immediate connections to their own country's reality and arrive at powerful conclusions for their own future as teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]