Online Journals Home   Publisher Information   Journals Info   Subscription information 

Language Culture and Curriculum
Editor and Book Reviews Editor: Eoghan Mac Aogain (St Patrick's College)


Volume: 20  Number: 2  Page: 140–154  doi:10.2167/lcc331.0

Losing Strangeness: Using Culture to Mediate ESL Teaching
Jennifer Rowsella, Vannina Sztainbokb and Judy Blaneyc
aGraduate School of Education, Rutgers, The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA, bOntario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada and cFaculty of Education, York University, Toronto, Canada

This paper explores ways of using culture and cultural practices as an informing principle in ESL teaching. To research culture and ESL teaching, we conducted focus groups with teachers in an urban ethnically diverse school in Toronto, Canada and their student teachers during their month-long practica in the school as a part of a Bachelor of Education programme. As instructors in the teacher education programme, we set out to find ways of infusing culture and cultural awareness into our coursework on ESL teaching and learning. The implications for the study show that culture should not be viewed as a ‘discrete’ or ‘bounded’ entity and that teacher education programmes need to do a better job of bridging the divide between theory and practice.

Keywords: culture, teacher education, literacy teaching, second language/ESL learners, anti-racist education

© 2007 J. Rowsell et al.

Access this article


Quick search...