Critical language awareness part I: A critical review of three current approaches to language awareness
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Language and Education
- Vol. 4 (4) , 249-260
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09500789009541291
Abstract
We assume that the development of a critical awareness of the world ought to be the main objective of all education, including language education. Language awareness programmes ought therefore to help children develop not only operational and descriptive knowledge of the linguistic practices of their world, but also a critical awareness of how these practices are shaped by, and shape, social relationships and relationships of power. In this, the first of a two‐part paper, we show that a range of existing language awareness proposals and materials are not ‘critical’ in this sense. On the contrary, with a few exceptions, they present the naturalised domain of linguistic practices as a natural domain, a given and common sense reality whose social origins are out of sight. This is true for bilingual, dialectal and diatypic variation. Most current approaches to language awareness present the domain of linguistic practices as a pluralistically harmonious domain; no attention is given to ideological differences or ideological struggles in language, and, in fact, the nexus of language‐power‐ideology is ignored. Despite their admirable attempts to heighten cross‐cultural undertanding and harmony, they appear to underscore the legitimacy of the already legitimated set of existing linguistic practices, and therefore indirectly of the existing power relations which underpin these practices. We end with a detailed critical evaluation of an extract from currently available language awareness teaching materials.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Whose Language?Published by John Benjamins Publishing Company ,1985