Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik Chapter 15. Collaboration between NESTs and NNESTs
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Chapter 15. Collaboration between NESTs and NNESTs

  • Luciana C. de Oliveira und Beth Clark-Gareca
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Abstract

In multilingual contexts, most educators recognize the benefits of working with other colleagues, but many may not be aware of the numerous advantages that collaboration between native and non-native-English-speaking teachers (NESTs and NNESTs). In this chapter, we explore and complicate the labels native and non-native, and consider the ways in which collaborations between Native English Speakers (NESs) and Non-native English Speakers (NNESs) can be configured through relationship or context-dependent models. Using examples from various aspects of their own practice, the authors discuss their teacher education experiences in China, Indonesia, Brazil, and the United States and how engagement with NES-NNES issues have helped them become better teacher educators. The chapter concludes with recommendations for how others can establish and maintain lasting collaborative relationships in their profession as well as identifying areas for future research related to NNEST and NEST collaboration.

Abstract

In multilingual contexts, most educators recognize the benefits of working with other colleagues, but many may not be aware of the numerous advantages that collaboration between native and non-native-English-speaking teachers (NESTs and NNESTs). In this chapter, we explore and complicate the labels native and non-native, and consider the ways in which collaborations between Native English Speakers (NESs) and Non-native English Speakers (NNESs) can be configured through relationship or context-dependent models. Using examples from various aspects of their own practice, the authors discuss their teacher education experiences in China, Indonesia, Brazil, and the United States and how engagement with NES-NNES issues have helped them become better teacher educators. The chapter concludes with recommendations for how others can establish and maintain lasting collaborative relationships in their profession as well as identifying areas for future research related to NNEST and NEST collaboration.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part I. Overall issues and perspectives on (non) nativeness in second language teaching
  6. Chapter 1. Understanding language variation: Implications of the NNEST lens for TESOL teacher education programs 13
  7. Chapter 2. Beyond symbolic violence in ELT in France 33
  8. Chapter 3. Perspectives on L2 teacher’s nearnativeness: Linguistic, psycholinguistic, contact linguistics and pedagogical approaches 53
  9. Chapter 4. Non-native teachers’ code-switching in L2 classroom discourse 75
  10. Chapter 5. Native-Speakerism and the roles of mass media in ELT 99
  11. Part II. Non-native L2 teachers’ emotions and perceptions and implications for teacher education
  12. Chapter 6. Non-native English-speaking teachers’ anxieties and insecurities: Self-perceptions of their communicative limitations 119
  13. Chapter 7. Non-native English language teachers’ perceptions of culture in English language classrooms in a post-EFL era 139
  14. Chapter 8. The potential for non-native teachers to effectively teach speaking in a Japanese EFL context 161
  15. Part III. L2 students’ beliefs and expectations of native and non-native teachers
  16. Chapter 9. Students’ perceptions and expectations of native and non-native speaking teachers 183
  17. Chapter 10. Students’ beliefs about native vs. non-native pronunciation teachers 205
  18. Chapter 11. Native and non-native teachers’ sensitivity to language learning difficulties from a learner’s perspective: Implications and challenges for teacher education 239
  19. Part IV. Construction of professional identity: Professional challenges faced by both native and non-native speaker teachers
  20. Chapter 12. Teachers and the negotiation of identity: Implications and challenges for second language teacher education 257
  21. Chapter 13. Professional challenges faced by non-native CLIL teachers 273
  22. Chapter 14. English language teaching in South African multicultural schools: Challenges faced by both native and non-native teachers 295
  23. Chapter 15. Collaboration between NESTs and NNESTs 317
  24. Critical Afterword 337
  25. Notes on contributors 341
  26. Subject index 347
Heruntergeladen am 13.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9781501504143-016/html
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