Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds

Teaching English Foundation courses at the undergraduate level by teachers from literature background is a common scenario in the private universities of Bangladesh. Though there have been debates regarding the appropriateness and eligibility of literature teachers teaching language courses, one mus...

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Hlavní autoři: Karim, Shuchi, Zaman, Tabassum
Médium: Článek
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: BRAC University 2010
On-line přístup:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/554
id 10361-554
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-5542019-09-29T05:46:35Z Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds Karim, Shuchi Zaman, Tabassum Teaching English Foundation courses at the undergraduate level by teachers from literature background is a common scenario in the private universities of Bangladesh. Though there have been debates regarding the appropriateness and eligibility of literature teachers teaching language courses, one must recognize the fact that the basic problem is that of high demand and low supply of good language teachers. This paper addresses some of these much-debated issues, and also explores the possibilities of a more integrated teaching approach, which not only allows a literature-to-language shift but also makes the best use of the skills of teachers from a literature background, and investigates whether this exchange is salubrious enough to complement the purpose of language teaching.1 Because of the limited scope of this paper, we will limit our discussion within the boundaries of private universities and will base it on our own teaching experience within a similar background. 2010-10-18T09:08:39Z 2010-10-18T09:08:39Z 2006 Article http://hdl.handle.net/10361/554 en BRAC University Journal, BRAC University;Vol.3. No. 1 pp. 75-81 application/pdf BRAC University
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
description Teaching English Foundation courses at the undergraduate level by teachers from literature background is a common scenario in the private universities of Bangladesh. Though there have been debates regarding the appropriateness and eligibility of literature teachers teaching language courses, one must recognize the fact that the basic problem is that of high demand and low supply of good language teachers. This paper addresses some of these much-debated issues, and also explores the possibilities of a more integrated teaching approach, which not only allows a literature-to-language shift but also makes the best use of the skills of teachers from a literature background, and investigates whether this exchange is salubrious enough to complement the purpose of language teaching.1 Because of the limited scope of this paper, we will limit our discussion within the boundaries of private universities and will base it on our own teaching experience within a similar background.
format Article
author Karim, Shuchi
Zaman, Tabassum
spellingShingle Karim, Shuchi
Zaman, Tabassum
Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
author_facet Karim, Shuchi
Zaman, Tabassum
author_sort Karim, Shuchi
title Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
title_short Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
title_full Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
title_fullStr Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
title_full_unstemmed Teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
title_sort teaching language from literature background: bringing the best of two worlds
publisher BRAC University
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/554
work_keys_str_mv AT karimshuchi teachinglanguagefromliteraturebackgroundbringingthebestoftwoworlds
AT zamantabassum teachinglanguagefromliteraturebackgroundbringingthebestoftwoworlds
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