Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching

This article argues in favour of using picturebooks to extend the limited view of cultural learning that is entailed in textbooks for teaching English at primary school. A critical view looking into textbooks for primary English education reveals that despite the general recognition of postcolonial...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Grit Alter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: CLELEjournal 2018
Subjects:
ELT
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05 2023-05-15T16:55:12+02:00 Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching Grit Alter 2018-05-01 https://doaj.org/article/65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05 en eng CLELEjournal 2195-5212 https://doaj.org/article/65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05 undefined CLELEjournal, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 22-44 (2018) picturebooks postcolonial literatures and cultures ELT critical literacy litt hisphilso Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2018 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:46:57Z This article argues in favour of using picturebooks to extend the limited view of cultural learning that is entailed in textbooks for teaching English at primary school. A critical view looking into textbooks for primary English education reveals that despite the general recognition of postcolonial literatures and cultures, target culture input almost only refers to the UK and the USA. Furthermore, the information students receive is over-generalising and stereotypical and does not pay tribute to the diversity of postcolonial cultures. This paper suggests that postcolonial literatures can be shared with primary English learners to broaden their perception of the English-speaking world. In view of the marginalized representation of these literatures and thus their respective cultures in ELT, this paper suggests closing the gap by using picturebooks from the Inuit and from Kenya and India. A comparison of two picturebooks from each geographical area reveals that one of these needs to be seen critically for its representation of cultural identity, whereas the other can be recommended for enhancing intercultural learning. As a conclusion, the article offers guiding questions of how to select postcolonial literature picturebooks to afford access to diverse cultures. Article in Journal/Newspaper inuit Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic picturebooks
postcolonial literatures and cultures
ELT
critical literacy
litt
hisphilso
spellingShingle picturebooks
postcolonial literatures and cultures
ELT
critical literacy
litt
hisphilso
Grit Alter
Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
topic_facet picturebooks
postcolonial literatures and cultures
ELT
critical literacy
litt
hisphilso
description This article argues in favour of using picturebooks to extend the limited view of cultural learning that is entailed in textbooks for teaching English at primary school. A critical view looking into textbooks for primary English education reveals that despite the general recognition of postcolonial literatures and cultures, target culture input almost only refers to the UK and the USA. Furthermore, the information students receive is over-generalising and stereotypical and does not pay tribute to the diversity of postcolonial cultures. This paper suggests that postcolonial literatures can be shared with primary English learners to broaden their perception of the English-speaking world. In view of the marginalized representation of these literatures and thus their respective cultures in ELT, this paper suggests closing the gap by using picturebooks from the Inuit and from Kenya and India. A comparison of two picturebooks from each geographical area reveals that one of these needs to be seen critically for its representation of cultural identity, whereas the other can be recommended for enhancing intercultural learning. As a conclusion, the article offers guiding questions of how to select postcolonial literature picturebooks to afford access to diverse cultures.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Grit Alter
author_facet Grit Alter
author_sort Grit Alter
title Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
title_short Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
title_full Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
title_fullStr Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
title_full_unstemmed Integrating Postcolonial Culture(s) into Primary English Language Teaching
title_sort integrating postcolonial culture(s) into primary english language teaching
publisher CLELEjournal
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_source CLELEjournal, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 22-44 (2018)
op_relation 2195-5212
https://doaj.org/article/65e0767bf1e44dbab10c8c487ba48f05
op_rights undefined
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