Non-Native Language Teachers Perceptions

PDF #119 – Maria del Pilar Garcia Mayo – in Enric Llurda – Non-Native Language Teachers, Perceptions, Challenges and Contributions to the Profession, 2005

Research on the perceptions of non-native speaker (NNS) English teachers, those held by themselves, by their students, or by native speakers (NS), is an issue relatively recent in the academic arena. In fact, and as mentioned throughout the volume under review, there seems to have been a surge of such studies since the establishment of the Non-native English Speakers’ Caucus in the TESOL organization in 1999 and the seminal work by Braine (1999) that same year.

Non-Native Language Teachers Perceptions

Non-native language teachers have often been viewed as an unavoidable fate of the profession, rather than an asset worth exploring and investigating. Now that non-natives are increasingly found teaching languages, and particularly English, both in ESL and EFL contexts, the identification of their specific contributions and their main strengths has become more relevant than ever.

As a result, there has recently been a surge of interest in the role of non-native teachers but little empirical research has been published so far. This volume is particularly rich in providing different approaches to the study of non-native teachers: NNS teachers as seen by students, teachers, graduate supervisors, and by themselves. It also contributes little explored perspectives, like classroom discourse analysis, or a social-psychological framework to discuss conceptions of NNS teachers.

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