【預告】4/1起,頁面上方功能列以及下方資訊全面更換新版。 前往查看

教甄◆英文科題庫下載題庫

上一題
English Language Teaching (ELT) has been with us for many years and its significance continues to grow, fuelled, partially at least, by the Internet. Graddol's study (2000) suggests that there were about a billion English learners in the year 2000 - but a decade later, the numbers will have doubled. The forecast points to a surge in English learning, which could peak in 2010. The same study indicates that over 80% of information stored on the Internet is in English. For the first time in history there are more non-native than native users of the language and diversity of context in terms of learners' age, nationality, learning background etcetera has become a defining characteristic of ELT today. What does this imply? Technological innovations have gone hand-in-hand with the growth of English and are changing the way in which we communicate, work, trade, entertain and learn. And it is non-native users of English, frequently from Asian countries, who are arguably, at the heart of this. It is fair to assert that the growth of the Internet has facilitated the growth of the English language and that this has occurred at a time when computers are no longer the exclusive domain of the dedicated few, but rather widely available to many. Warchauer (2002) has discussed this change in terms of conflicts between local identities and the globalization of the English language; while others have suggested that the Internet may be a contributory factor in shifting away from a communicative towards a context-based approach to language teaching pedagogy. The notion of widespread availability requires some qualification as there are clearly important issues of a 'digital divide' and 'electronic literacy'. This issue is frequently presented as being between nations and it is clearly the case that the most powerful economies dominate Internet activity; but such a perspective explains unequal power relations purely from the influence of external factors and the picture is surely more complex than this. The same type of economic power relations also exist within nations, and divisions of social classes within are equally important here. In short, it is the middle and upper classes in virtually every country who have much greater access to computers, it is the Asian countries which are experiencing massive growth as their economies develop and change. Change of this magnitude clearly raises a number of issues for ELT and, it is argued, necessitates a revision of traditional definitions of what constitutes the English language as well as a move away from the established EFL/ESL classifications and towards a less culturally loaded view of English as a global or international language (EGL/EIL). This in turn has implications for language pedagogy and approaches to syllabus design.
【題組】47. Which of the followings may lead to a change from a communicative towards a context-based approach to language teaching pedagogy, according to the reading passage?
(A)Technological advances.
(B)Digital literacy.
(C)Internet access.
(D)Economic power.


答案:C
難度: 適中
1F
艾游 高一下 (2012/04/23)
原為閱讀測驗 見文章中倒數第12行

English Language Teaching (ELT) has been..-阿摩線上測驗