Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach

The implementation of the Department of Education’s Special Program in Foreign Language (SPFL) marked the beginnings of the nationwide institutionalization of a range of foreign languages (FL) in the Philippines, stimulating new sites of inquiry for the field of critical language studies. Many of th...

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Main Authors: Cabling, Kristine, Bautista, Naidyl Isis, Sibayan-Sarmiento, Anna Marie, Phd, Cruz, Frances Antoinette, Melchor, Jillian Loise
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2020
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/socialtransformations/vol8/iss2/8
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/socialtransformations/article/1150/viewcontent/ST_208.2_208_20Article_20__20Cabling.pdf
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.socialtransformations-11502024-11-06T16:18:03Z Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach Cabling, Kristine Bautista, Naidyl Isis Sibayan-Sarmiento, Anna Marie, Phd Cruz, Frances Antoinette Melchor, Jillian Loise The implementation of the Department of Education’s Special Program in Foreign Language (SPFL) marked the beginnings of the nationwide institutionalization of a range of foreign languages (FL) in the Philippines, stimulating new sites of inquiry for the field of critical language studies. Many of the languages offered under the SPFL do not share the historical and social grounding of the country’s official languages. However, they find common ground with English in the extant colonial framings of language teaching and learning, which have often impeded local agency in structuring or reimagining encounters with the “foreign.” As such, this paper aims to explore decolonial approaches to issues that have emerged alongside the promotion and teaching of foreign language classes across all levels of education in the Philippines by drawing inspiration from the decoloniality movement in Latin America and related efforts to de-center knowledge and digress from extant canons. First, it problematizes the implicit reinforcement of the one-nation one-language habitus, paying particular attention to assumptions that guide foreign language policies, materials, and teaching methods that reinforce global linguistic hierarchies and assumptions in favor of “competitiveness.” Second, considerations for alternative foreign language teaching approaches and materials are put forward, factoring in the Philippines’ sociolinguistic and historical features that have guided its framing of the “foreign,” as well as extant challenges in promoting intercultural reflection in an increasingly neoliberal educational setting. Challenges in integrating a decolonial perspective in institutional conceptualizations and policies on foreign language teaching in the Philippines conclude this paper to stimulate reflection on how language teaching may offer opportunities to rethink our relationship to language and interlingual/intercultural encounters. 2020-11-30T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/socialtransformations/vol8/iss2/8 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/socialtransformations/article/1150/viewcontent/ST_208.2_208_20Article_20__20Cabling.pdf Social Transformations Journal of the Global South Archīum Ateneo decolonial studies decolonizing foreign languages foreign languages foreign language instructional materials foreign language policy foreign language teaching approaches
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic decolonial studies
decolonizing foreign languages
foreign languages
foreign language instructional materials
foreign language policy
foreign language teaching approaches
spellingShingle decolonial studies
decolonizing foreign languages
foreign languages
foreign language instructional materials
foreign language policy
foreign language teaching approaches
Cabling, Kristine
Bautista, Naidyl Isis
Sibayan-Sarmiento, Anna Marie, Phd
Cruz, Frances Antoinette
Melchor, Jillian Loise
Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
description The implementation of the Department of Education’s Special Program in Foreign Language (SPFL) marked the beginnings of the nationwide institutionalization of a range of foreign languages (FL) in the Philippines, stimulating new sites of inquiry for the field of critical language studies. Many of the languages offered under the SPFL do not share the historical and social grounding of the country’s official languages. However, they find common ground with English in the extant colonial framings of language teaching and learning, which have often impeded local agency in structuring or reimagining encounters with the “foreign.” As such, this paper aims to explore decolonial approaches to issues that have emerged alongside the promotion and teaching of foreign language classes across all levels of education in the Philippines by drawing inspiration from the decoloniality movement in Latin America and related efforts to de-center knowledge and digress from extant canons. First, it problematizes the implicit reinforcement of the one-nation one-language habitus, paying particular attention to assumptions that guide foreign language policies, materials, and teaching methods that reinforce global linguistic hierarchies and assumptions in favor of “competitiveness.” Second, considerations for alternative foreign language teaching approaches and materials are put forward, factoring in the Philippines’ sociolinguistic and historical features that have guided its framing of the “foreign,” as well as extant challenges in promoting intercultural reflection in an increasingly neoliberal educational setting. Challenges in integrating a decolonial perspective in institutional conceptualizations and policies on foreign language teaching in the Philippines conclude this paper to stimulate reflection on how language teaching may offer opportunities to rethink our relationship to language and interlingual/intercultural encounters.
format text
author Cabling, Kristine
Bautista, Naidyl Isis
Sibayan-Sarmiento, Anna Marie, Phd
Cruz, Frances Antoinette
Melchor, Jillian Loise
author_facet Cabling, Kristine
Bautista, Naidyl Isis
Sibayan-Sarmiento, Anna Marie, Phd
Cruz, Frances Antoinette
Melchor, Jillian Loise
author_sort Cabling, Kristine
title Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
title_short Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
title_full Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
title_fullStr Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
title_full_unstemmed Foreign Language Policy and Pedagogy in the Philippines: Potentials for a Decolonial Approach
title_sort foreign language policy and pedagogy in the philippines: potentials for a decolonial approach
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2020
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/socialtransformations/vol8/iss2/8
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/socialtransformations/article/1150/viewcontent/ST_208.2_208_20Article_20__20Cabling.pdf
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