english as a foreign language

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    English as an additional language refers to the use of English languageEnglish by speakers of other languages. The term is commonly abbreviated to EAL amongst educationalists. EAL covers both ESL (English as a second language), and EFL (English as a foreign language). In British usage, ESOL (English for speakers of other languages) is now used instead of ESL in recognition of the fact that many users already speak more than one language. In Canada, the term ESD (English as a second dialect) is also used.These terms are most commonly used in relation to teaching and learning English, but they may also be used in relation to demographic information.

    Types of EAL - ''ESL'' refers to the use of English within an AnglosphereEnglish-speaking region, generally by refugees, immigrants and students. (The term has been criticised on the grounds that English might not in fact be the learner's second language, though the word "a" in the phrase "a second language" means that there is no presumption that English is ''the'' second acquired language.) ''TESL'' is the teaching of English as a second language. In Britain, the normal terms are ''ESOL'' (instead of ESL) and ''TESOL'' (instead of TESL).''EFL'' indicates the use of English in a non-English-speaking region. Study can occur either in the student's home country or, for the more privileged minority, in an anglophone country which they visit as a sort of educational tourist, e.g. after graduating from university. ''Teaching English as a Foreign LanguageTEFL'' is the teaching of English as a foreign language.The term ''TESOL'' (teaching English to speakers of other languages) is widely used to include both TEFL and TESL. In United KingdomBritish usage, this is also simply called ''English language teaching'' or ''ELT''. If the many Acronym and initialismacronyms are confusing, it may help to simplify. ESL programmes tend to concentrate on English for daily needs and for living in an English-speaking community, particularly for those newcomers who are immigrants or refugees. EFL programmes tend to concentrate on English for academic success (whether in the local school exam system or in post-graduate study abroad), or for professional success, i.e. within an office where English is sometimes needed.Part of the confusion is created by the funding structure. Again, as a gross generalisation, in English-speaking countries such as Canada, United KingdomBritain, and the United States, the government pays for ESL to integrate newcomers into the wider society, while the individual student or his/her sponsor (parents, boss) pays for EFL, often at an intensive English language institute.It is worth noting that EAL programs also differ depending on the variant of English being spoken; "English" is a term that can refer to various dialectdialects, including British English, American EnglishNorth American English, and other dialects. For example, students studying EFL in Hong Kong are more likely to learn British English, especially British idioms, which may make travel to the United States marginally more difficult for them, as North American English uses very different idioms and slang. For this reason, many teachers of English as a foreign language now emphasize teaching English as an international language (EIL), also known as English as a ­''lingua franca'' (ELF).

    Difficulties for learners - Learners with a specific first language usually experience similar difficulties which result from their mother tongue. This is known as language interferenceL1 interference.Although English is not intrinsically any more or less difficult to learn than any other language, the degree and manner in which a student's native language differs from English also strongly affects their ease in mastering it. Nonetheless, English does have some distinctive features that separate it from the native tongues of the bulk of its second language learners.
  • Sounds – English does not have more individual consonant sounds than most languages, but the "th" sounds, common in English (the, this, that, etc.; and thin, thing, etc.) are not sounds in most other languages, even others in the Germanic languagesGermanic family (eg, English "thousand" = German languageGerman "tausend"). Although natural for native speakers, many learners substitute a "d" or "t" sound that is more natural for them. Even practised second language speakers, like many francophone Canadian politicians, carry this habit long after mastering vocabulary and grammar. Another sound that is uncommon in some other languages - particularly Spanish - is the "ng" sound (as in "singing") – even some native speakers of English substitute an "n" sound instead. English also has a relatively large number of distinct vowel sounds and diphthongs (double vowel combinations) - twelve compared to five in most Romance languages, for example.
  • Consonant clusters – Most languages alternate consonant and vowel sounds. Many have some double consonant clusters. However, English commonly has double and often triple consonant clusters (eg, "desks") that pose a great problem for many learners, particularly when they occur over two words (eg, "milk shake"). Learners, especially those from Japan, often try to force vowels in between the consonants (for the two examples above "desukusu" or "mirukusheku"). Learners from languages that always end words in vowels (eg, Italian languageItalian) try to end all English words in vowels – "make" comes out as "make-a". But, these difficulties are not so problematic for German languageGermanic and Slavic language speakers.
  • Unstressed vowels – English speakers frequently replace a long or short vowel with a schwa in a word's unstressed syllables. For example, inform has a distinctly pronounced short 'o' sound in its stressed syllable, but when the stress shifts in the derived word informa'tion, the short 'o' reduces to a schwa or a syllabic 'r' (depending on the dialect spoken). Stress in English more strongly determines vowel quality than it does in most other world languages (although, here too, there are notable exceptions like Russian). To a learner, this means that the syllables "an", "en-", "in", "on" and "un" often sound exactly alike. A native speaker can usually distinguish "an able", "enable", and "unable" because of their position in a sentence, but this is more difficult for inexperienced English speakers. Moreover, learners tend to overpronounce English vowels in the same situation, which makes the speech sound strained and out of rhythm – "An AbEl", "EnAbEl" and "UnAbEl", where most native speakers would say "nAbl" in all three cases.
  • Stress timing – In English, stressed syllables are roughly equi-distant in time, no matter how many syllables come in between. Although it is not the only stressed timed language (German and Russian languageRussian are stress-timed as well), most of the world's other major languages are syllable-timed, with each syllable coming at an equal time after the previous one. Commonly, Romance language learners develop a staccato rhythm when speaking English that is disconcerting to a native speaker.
  • Dialectal variation – English is spoken natively by a large and diverse population on every continent, and consequently has some acutely differing pronunciations, vocabulary and syntax from country to country and across different social strata. Most languages are spoken in geographically more compact areas, usually included in a small number of countries or even a single state, and are often to some degree symbolically managed by a specific organisation that determines the most prestigious form of the language. This means that most languages have a single form that is perceived as more correct than others, while English does not have a particularly favoured dialect in modern times. Because many students of English study it because they perceive it to enable them to communicate internationally, this lack of a uniform international standard poses serious barriers to meeting that goal.
  • Shortening and informal speech – When an ESL teacher stresses enunciation, they are often doing their students a disservice, as English speakers commonly combine consonant and vowel sounds. For example, a teacher may consistently use "going to" and stress that their students do the same. However, most native English speakers would not pronounce it that way – native speakers say "gonna", as well as "shoulda", "coulda" and "woulda". As such, learner's speech sounds too formal, tends not to have a natural rhythm, and the learner has difficulty listening to natural English. For example, no native speaker of English would have difficulty understanding what a native of Manchester, England meant by "yallright?" although this may totally confound a non-native speaker.
  • Spelling – Although as a spoken language, English is not objectively any more complicated than other languages, its spelling scheme is difficult for even native speakers to master, and involves a larger amount of rote learning than most languages do. For adult learners, to whom literacy is often as important or more important a goal than fluent speech, this poses a considerable barrier to acquiring English.

    EAL exams and the Common European Framework - Between 1998 and 2000, the Council of Europe's language policy division developed its Common European Framework of Reference for Languages. The aim of this framework was to have a common system for foreign language testing and certification, to cover all European languages and countries.The Common European Framework divides language learners into three levels:
    A. Basic User
    B. Independent User
    C. Proficient User
    Each of these levels is divided into two sections, resulting in a total of six levels for testing (A1, A2, B1, etc).This table compares EFL exams according to the CEF levels:& lt;tr>&l t;td>C2& lt;td>CPEC1< td>Level? 4&l t;td>Level? 3&l t;td>Level? 2&l t;td>Level? !1< td>KET&l t;td>Breakthrough1-2-< ;td>-
    CEF? levelALTE !levelIELT S? !examBusin ess? English CertificateBEC & CELS !examsUniv ersity? of Cambridge ESOL examinationCambridge !examPitma n? !ESOLTOEIC TOEFL< /td>
    7.5+< /td>-276 +
    6.5 - !7Higher&l t;/td>CAEHigher? !Intermediate236 - !275
    B25 - !6Vantage& lt;/td>FCEIntermediate< /td>541? - 700176 - !235
    B13.5 - !4.5Prelim inaryPET& lt;/td>-381? - 540126 - !175
    A23- Elementary96 - !125
    A1-&l t;/td>Basic-


    EAL professional associations -
  • TESOL Inc. is Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages, a professional organization based in the United States.
  • IATEFL is the International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language, a professional organization based in Britain.
  • Several other professional organisations for teachers of English exist at local and regional levels such as the 'Society of Pakistan English Language Teachers' (SPELT) in Pakistan, BELTA in Bangladesh, SLELTA in Sri Lanka, NELTA in Nepal, MELTA in Malaysia, and TESOL Arabia in the Gulf states, just to name a few.
  • NATECLA is the National Association for Teaching English and other Community Languages to Adults, a British-based organisation which is focused on teaching ESOL in Britain

    Acronyms and abbreviations - ''See also Language education for information on general language teaching acronyms and abbreviations.
  • CELTA - Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults
  • DELTA - Diploma in English Language Teaching to Adults
  • EAL - English as an additional language
  • EAP - English for academic purposes
  • EFL - English as a foreign language::The study or learning of English in an environment where English is not the predominant language, such as in a non-English-speaking region, by someone whose first language is not English.
  • ELL - English Language Learner
  • ELT - English language teaching
  • ESD - English as a second dialect
  • ESL - English as a second language::The study or learning of English in an environment where English is the predominant language, such as in an English-speaking region, by someone whose first language is not English.
  • ESOL - English for speakers of other languages
  • ESP - English for Special Purposes or English for Specific Purposes (e.g. technical English, scientific English)
  • IELTS - International English Language Testing System
  • TEFL - Teaching English as a Foreign Language::The teaching of English in an environment where English is not already the predominant language, such as in a non-English-speaking country, to someone whose first language is not English.
  • TESL - Teaching English as a Second Language::The teaching of English in an environment where English ''is'' the predominant language, to someone whose first language is not English.
  • TESOL - Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (or) Teaching English as a Second or Other Language::This acronym might be a substitute for TESL more than for TEFL. It is sometimes preferred over TESL because English can be a third, fourth or fifth, etc. language to a student.
  • TOEFL - Test of English as a Foreign Language
  • TOEIC - Test of English for International Communication
  • UCLES - University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate

    See also -
  • Language education
  • Second language acquisition
  • Applied linguistics
  • Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL)
  • Blended learning This is a method of combining face-to-face and electronic (online) learning techniques in ESL and EFL.
  • Ruth Hayman ESL pioneer
  • IELTS (International English Language Testing System), the IELTS tests are accepted by most tertiary academic institutions in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada, and by many in the USA.
  • TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language), an Educational Testing Service test of English language proficiency for academic purposes, accepted primarily in the USA.
  • TOEIC (Test of English for International Communication), an Educational Testing Service test of English language proficiency for business purposes.
  • University of Cambridge ESOL examinations
  • Writing with constraints
  • Idiom dictionary
  • Initial-stress-derived noun This page could be very useful to those learning English as an additional language.

    External links -
  • eslbase.com - ESL resources for teachers
  • dmoz.org - Directory of EAL sites at the Open Directory Project
  • iteslj.org - Internet ESL Journal
  • esl-lounge.com - Teacher Resources
  • alte.org - Association of Language testers in Europe, ALTE
  • speakoz.com - English Language Learning DirectoryCategory:English languageCategory:Language educationsimple:English as an additional language DEBUG REDIRECT (english as an additional language)
  • Websites


    TOEFL
    Official site of the Test of English as a Foreign Language. Includes tutorials, practice questions, downloads, and information on both the computer-based and paper-based versions of the test. Also markets test preparation materials.
    http://www.toefl.org/

    EFLWeb.com
    Offers a CV/resume board, job vacancies and other information and resources.
    http://www.eflweb.com/

    Traduk-Vortaroj de Travlang
    Travlang disponigas grandan nombron da vortaroj kiuj tradukas inter multaj malsamaj lingvoj.
    http://dictionaries.travlang.com/

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