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Language Planning and policy (Singapore (Language Politicking (Finding…
Language Planning and policy
Language Planning and politicking
Language Politicking
The political activity that is done in order to win support or gain an advantage. In language, the support of one and the ideological nature behind it
Language planning versus language policy
Language Policy
"Refers to the more general linguistic, political and social goals underlying the actual language planning process" Deumert (200)
Language Planning
"Refers to all conscious efforts that aim at changing the linguistic behavior of a speech community" Haugen (In the late 1950's)
Status Planning
Makes languages official languages for a territory
Corpus planning
Is involved with creating standards for a language, like spelling and grammar
Acquisition planning
It looks for methods to make learning attractive
Singapore
Language Politicking
Finding balance in a huge multilingual
society
Linguistic Ecology
None of the languages exist in isolation
English in a multilingual context
Multiple cultural languages
The united States
English only movement
A pushed ideology behind using english only
People needed to learn English as to avoid being
social outcasts
Bilingual Education
Bilingual programs began dwindling as lack of support
Language Politicking and the bilingual classroom
Necessary push for non-english speakers to learn english
Language Politicking and the nativization of English
Singapore
Singish
Language Politicking, Singish and the english classroom
The United States
Ebonics
Black people wanted to be recognized
The english variant for black communities
The status as a legitimate language was not clear
Language politicking, Ebonics and the English classroom
Difficulties to reach an agreement to "one english"
Localization of english in the expanding circle: China and Korea
China
English is integrated in economic, political and social development of the country
There's a big resistance against the language
English is stigmatized
Korea
English is associated with globalization and international competitiveness
English is a mandatory subject
An English variant named "Konglish"
Fears that Korean language will lose value over english
Language politicking and EIL pedagogy
English is used as an international language
Issues with accepting English variant around the world
English is seen as an "imperial tool" in some countries
McKay & Bokhorst (2008); Ch. 4 International English in its sociolinguistic contexts
Jonathan Gutierrez Garcia
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