ABSTRACT

Designed for ESL and ELT pedagogy courses around the world, this text describes English grammar from a World Englishes perspective. It is distinguished by its focus on the social setting for English as a global language, the latest thinking about grammatical theory, and new theories of how first and second languages are learned and taught. The fundamental premise is that teaching and learning grammar cannot be isolated from the local, regional, and global sociocultural contexts in which the teaching and learning take place. Part I presents different attitudes toward English as a global language and some challenges that learners of English share no matter where they are in the world. Part II is about the features of English that educated speakers consider the most likely and probable in Academic English. Part III describes the flexible and fluid features of English that might be susceptible to change or modification over time. Each chapter includes engaging Study, Discussion, and Essay Questions and Activities.

part I|78 pages

Global Trends in English Grammar Pedagogy

chapter 1|18 pages

Global Perspectives on English

chapter 2|20 pages

New Trends in Grammatical Theory

chapter 3|18 pages

New Trends in Second Language Acquisition

chapter 4|20 pages

New Trends in Post-method Grammar Pedagogy

part II|190 pages

Consensus Grammatical Features

chapter 5|20 pages

Morphemes

chapter 6|19 pages

Words

chapter 7|24 pages

Major Phrases

chapter 8|23 pages

Noun Phrases

chapter 9|23 pages

Modifiers

chapter 10|18 pages

Verbal Constructions

chapter 11|23 pages

Sentences

chapter 12|19 pages

Complex Sentences

chapter 13|19 pages

Discourse

part III|38 pages

Unstable Grammatical Features

chapter 14|20 pages

Unstable System Elements

chapter 15|16 pages

Collocations and the Idiomatic Paradox