Martin / Martinez | The Routledge Handbook of English Language Education in the Philippines | Buch | 978-1-032-62136-4 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm

Martin / Martinez

The Routledge Handbook of English Language Education in the Philippines


1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-032-62136-4
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 174 mm x 246 mm

ISBN: 978-1-032-62136-4
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd


This handbook serves as a comprehensive resource on English language education in the Philippines, addressing a wide range of issues including ideologies, multilingualism, identities, policies, methodologies, assessment, teacher education, and curriculum.

Chapters cover a range of educational contexts – from Luzon to Mindanao islands, from basic to higher education, and from formal to non-formal schooling. This book upholds the think and do otherwise perspective by problematizing contemporary paradigms and practices that operate from naturalized ideas inherited from the American colonizers. This includes repairing pedagogies that redress injustices experienced by historically marginalized groups, and hoping for possibilities and approaches to teaching and learning English that are just, equitable, and inclusive. The six sections in the Handbook bring up conditions for thinking and doing otherwise, pointing to ways in which genuine changes can start to happen. Scholars from diverse backgrounds come together in this handbook to take collective ownership of English language education in the Philippines. This ownership does not mean ignoring and disposing of the country’s colonial past but reclaiming English language education as an ongoing project instead. This handbook likewise demonstrates that such a project makes it possible for wider audiences to see that Global South scholars from and in the Philippines also have much to teach the rest of the world about thinking and doing otherwise and, by extension, problematizing, repairing, and hoping.

Given its scope and breadth, the handbook is an invaluable reference for students, pre-service and in- service teachers, teacher educators, researchers, and policy makers interested in English language, language education, TESOL, sociolinguistics and applied linguistics.

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Zielgruppe


Postgraduate

Weitere Infos & Material


CONTENTS

Lists of figures
List of tables
List of contributors

Prologue: the journey of English language education in multilingual Philippines

Isabel Pefianco Martin

1 Introduction: thinking and doing otherwise
Julius C. Martinez

PART I
Coming to grips with English and multilingualism

2 Punctuated Dominance: MTB-MLE and the Temporary Displacement of English in

Philippine Education
Jose Abelardo Torio and Anne Lan K. Candelaria

3 MTB-MLE Policy Enactments and the English-Speaking People in the Cordillera: An

Historico-Ethnographic Analysis
Maria Mercedes E. Arzadon and Eufracio C. Abaya

4 English Proficiency versus Ethnolinguistic Identity: MTB-MLE in Mindanao
Nelia G. Balgoa

5 Cultural Models, English and Local Languages in Southern Philippines
Abdul-Baqui A. Berik

PART II

Traversing the political economy of English language teaching

6 Entanglements of Post-colonial, Racial and (Non-)Native-Speaker Logics: Non-Native

Bifurcation and the ‘Dual’ Filipino Listening Subject
Rowland Anthony Imperial

7 Emotional Geographies of Koreans Studying English

Kyung Min Bae

8 Desires for English and Emotions as a Decolonial Option

Julius C. Martinez

9 The Unfreedom of Philippine English and English Language Education from Global

Neoliberal Capitalism
Rendell M. Sanchez

PART III
Grasping the marginalized and vulnerable

10 Identity and Investment in English Language Learning: A Case Study of an Internally Displaced Multilingual Student
Maria Clara P. Palisuc

11 Muted Identities: Non-Dominant Language Speakers’ Investments on Monolingual and “Native Speaker” English

Grace Anne N. Tadaya

12 Androcentrism in Learning Modules and English Language Education in the Philippines: Rethinking Texts and Teachers’ Perceptions and Practices
Christian Go and Jonna Marie Lim

13 Teaching and Learning Print English among the Filipino Deaf
May T. Cabutihan and Marie Therese Angeline P. Bustos

PART IV
Confronting oppressive language ideologies

14 Parents as English Language ‘Police’: Investigating Family Language Policy in the Philippines
Susan Mila P. Alvarez-Tosalem, Maria Rita Geezel T. Basmayor, Julius C. Martinez, Elaine L. Monserate, and Ersweetcel C. Servano

15 Innovations of Defiance Against Native-Speakerism in Oral Communication Courses
Myrel M. Santiago

16 Teacher Ideologies in Isabel Pefianco Martin’s How, How the Carabao: Tales of Teaching English in the Philippines
Grace M. Saqueton

17 Language Teacher Identity (Trans)Formation in a Community of Practice: The Case of Pre-Service English Teachers in a Multilingual Context
John Paul C. Vallente

18 The School as a Site of Conflicting Language Ideologies: A Linguistic Schoolscape Perspective
Susan F. Astillero

19 Challenging the Monolingual Paradigm: English Language Assessment Practices in Philippine Private Schools
Dan Henry Gonzales

PART V

Reclaiming linguistic diversity

20 Students as Co-creators of Course Design: A Global Englishes Perspective
Alejandro S. Bernardo

21 Facilitating Students’ Ownership of Englishes: A Critical Look at Past and Present Pedagogical Practices of Filipino Teachers
Maria Luz Elena N. Canilao

22 Perspectives, Practices, and Issues in Teaching Multiliteracies in the Philippines
Joel C. Meniado

23 Multimodal Creations - The Influence of Semiotic Resources on Students’ Writing

Ramil Jhon P. Magno

24 Translanguaging and Teacher Perceptions: Possibilities for the Future of English Literacy Instruction
Michelle G. Paterno

PART VI
Intervening through criticality

25 From Critical Reflection to Theorizing Pedagogy: Understanding Pre-Service English Teachers’ Sensemaking
Maria Teresa L. Manicio

26 Critical Consciousness in English Subjects and the Imperative for Transformative Intellectuals in Mindanao Schools
Kloyde A. Caday

27 Contextualizing in English Language Education: Insights from Teaching in a Time of Crisis
Marianne Rachel G. Perfecto

28 Reframing Digital Literacy: Criticality and the English Language Teaching in the Philippines
Gina Ugalingan and Paolo Niño Valdez

29 Un-making the Filipino Literate in English: Criticality in Self-Learning Modules in Philippine Public Schools
Gladys S. Matias

Afterword
Ruanni Tupas

Index


Julius C. Martinez is an Associate Professor in the Department of International Studies at Niigata University of International and Information Studies, Japan. They have published works on applied linguistics, language education, World Englishes, and TESOL.

Isabel Pefianco Martin is Professor and Chair of the Department of Educational Leadership and Management at Ateneo de Manila University. She is also Coordinator for Research at the Gokongwei Brothers School of Education and Learning Design in the same university.



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