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Bridging Contexts, Making Connections - Featured
Speaker
The Future of Foreign Language Educators:
Are We on Our Way to Becoming Dodos?
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Timothy G. Reagan, Central Connecticut State
University
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Abstract
Language teachers – whether we call ourselves foreign
language educators, second language educators, world language
educators, modern or classical language educators, bilingual educators,
or teachers of English to speakers of other languages, share a
difficult position in the contemporary world. Some of us, of course,
are in worse shape than others – the market for TESOL instructors
remains strong, as does that for Spanish teachers here in United
States, while locally the market for teachers of German and Russian
is, to put it mildly, not good. However, we are, in a number of
ways, all in this together. I am concerned that language education
continues to be marginalized in important ways – marginalized
not only by students, but also by parents, colleagues in other
disciplines, and policy-makers. I will divide my comments in this
presentation into two broad sections: those dealing explicitly
with the issues of second language education in the United States
(and, to a lesser extent, in other essentially Anglophone countries),
and then to the challenges being faced by TESOL educators, especially
in non-Anglophone contexts. The underlying argument presented
will be that there are very compelling arguments for language
study, though not necessarily those which have been historically
offered by language educators. The perspective taken will be informed
by critical studies in general, and by critical applied linguistics
in particular.
Timothy G. Reagan
Professor,
School of Education and Professional Studies
Central Connecticut State University
Timothy G. Reagan, Ph.D., is currently Professor of Educational
Leadership at Central Connecticut State University. He has also
served on the faculty of Gallaudet University, as the Executive
Associate Dean of the Neag School of Education at the University
of Connecticut, as the Dean of the School of Education at Roger
Williams University, and as the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities
at the University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. His research
interests are focused primarily on issues of language and culture
in education. He has published over 125 articles and book chapters.
In addition, he has authored a number of books in the field, including
The foreign language educator in society: Toward a critical
pedagogy
(Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, with T. Osborn), Language, education
and ideology: Mapping the linguistic landscape of U.S. schools (Praeger), Non-western
educational traditions: Indigenous approaches to educational thought
and practice (three editions, Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates), and Critical questions, critical perspectives:
Language and the second language educator (Information Age Publishers).
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