Shifting from Native-Speakerism to Trans-Speakerism: A Trioethnography of Language Teachers in Japan

Takaaki Hiratsuka, Matthew Nall, Joachim Castellano
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Native-speakerism is an ideology that endows those classified as native English-speaking teachers (NESTs) the owners of the English language, the ideal models of its use, and the pedagogical experts in language teaching. These endowments, in turn, intrinsically devalue those classified as non-native English-speaking teachers (NNESTs) (Holliday, 2006, 2017). In this study, a trioethnographic approach was adopted to investigate native-speakerism as it related to the lived experiences of two NESTs (Matt and Joachim) and one NNEST (Takaaki) in an EFL context of Japan. Counterintuitively, this exploration found that, in our Japanese context, native-speakerism had adverse effects on the academic lives and professional trajectories not for the NNEST, but rather for the two NESTs, linguistically, culturally, and institutionally speaking. Based on the findings, we explain and compare what we term classical, inversed, and nuanced native-speakerism, and introduce a new empowering concept—trans-speakerism—an ideological stance committed to advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion for all language teachers, irrespective of their first languages or cultures. The article ends with a call for research that encompasses a variety of contexts and approaches on trans-speakerism in language education.
从母语主义到跨语言主义:日本语言教师的三重民族志
母语主义是一种意识形态,它赋予那些被归类为英语母语教师(nest)的人英语语言的主人,英语使用的理想模式,以及语言教学的教学专家。反过来,这些禀赋从本质上贬低了那些被归类为非母语英语教师(nnest)的人(Holliday, 2006, 2017)。在本研究中,采用三民族志的方法来调查在日本的英语语境下,两个NNEST (Matt和Joachim)和一个NNEST (Takaaki)的生活经历与本族语的关系。与我们的直觉相反,这项研究发现,在我们的日本背景下,母语主义对学术生活和职业轨迹产生了不利影响,而不是对NNEST,而是对两个nest,从语言、文化和制度上讲。基于这些发现,我们解释并比较了我们所谓的经典、反向和微妙的母语主义,并引入了一个新的赋权概念——跨语言主义——一种致力于促进所有语言教师的多样性、公平和包容性的意识形态立场,无论他们的母语或文化如何。文章最后呼吁对跨语主义在语言教育中的应用进行多种语境和方法的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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