Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore

Despite the prevalence of Singlish use among the Singaporean public, the vernacular is often seen as “bad English” without rules and grammar, or cast as an impediment to learning the standard register (Wee, 2005). This rhetoric is reproduced by the state (Chang, 2016), often involving the fear that...

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Main Author: Lu, Luke
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161728
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1617282023-03-11T20:07:00Z Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore Lu, Luke School of Humanities Humanities::Language::English Singlish Singapore Despite the prevalence of Singlish use among the Singaporean public, the vernacular is often seen as “bad English” without rules and grammar, or cast as an impediment to learning the standard register (Wee, 2005). This rhetoric is reproduced by the state (Chang, 2016), often involving the fear that speakers are unable to distinguish and deploy the two varieties appropriately. It is therefore unsurprising that bidialectal strategies involving Standard English and Singlish have never been officially endorsed by the state in its ELT classrooms. This is despite the suggestion for intervention in schools the last 20 years (Alsagoff, 2016; Fong, Lim & Wee, 2002; Tupas, 2018). This study presents findings from a definitive attempt at implementing such bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore in a mainstream secondary school. The study involved strategies for teaching Standard English and Singlish as two separate registers appropriate for specific contexts. Lessons were 1 hour per week, over 8 weeks, and were taught to two classes of 13-year-old Secondary One students. In the study, students were able to negotiate and contest the appropriateness of Singlish in specific situations, while deploying Singlish and Standard English features appropriately in written tasks (i.e., designing advertisements for various products). This suggests that Singlish can be a useful pedagogical resource in the development of critical language awareness (Alim, 2005), and that prevalent discourses surrounding the use of Singlish and Standard English by Singaporean students severely underestimate the proficiencies that they possess. Ministry of Education (MOE) Submitted/Accepted version This study (with ethical approval number IRB-2018-05-045) was funded by theMOE AcRF Tier 1 Grant. 2022-09-16T08:26:08Z 2022-09-16T08:26:08Z 2022 Journal Article Lu, L. (2022). Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore. TESOL Quarterly. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/tesq.3148 1545-7249 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161728 10.1002/tesq.3148 2-s2.0-85128769316 en IRB-2018-05-045 TESOL Quarterly © 2022 TESOL International Association. All rights reserved. This paper was published by Wiley in TESOL Quarterly and is made available with permission of TESOL International Association. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Language::English
Singlish
Singapore
spellingShingle Humanities::Language::English
Singlish
Singapore
Lu, Luke
Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
description Despite the prevalence of Singlish use among the Singaporean public, the vernacular is often seen as “bad English” without rules and grammar, or cast as an impediment to learning the standard register (Wee, 2005). This rhetoric is reproduced by the state (Chang, 2016), often involving the fear that speakers are unable to distinguish and deploy the two varieties appropriately. It is therefore unsurprising that bidialectal strategies involving Standard English and Singlish have never been officially endorsed by the state in its ELT classrooms. This is despite the suggestion for intervention in schools the last 20 years (Alsagoff, 2016; Fong, Lim & Wee, 2002; Tupas, 2018). This study presents findings from a definitive attempt at implementing such bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore in a mainstream secondary school. The study involved strategies for teaching Standard English and Singlish as two separate registers appropriate for specific contexts. Lessons were 1 hour per week, over 8 weeks, and were taught to two classes of 13-year-old Secondary One students. In the study, students were able to negotiate and contest the appropriateness of Singlish in specific situations, while deploying Singlish and Standard English features appropriately in written tasks (i.e., designing advertisements for various products). This suggests that Singlish can be a useful pedagogical resource in the development of critical language awareness (Alim, 2005), and that prevalent discourses surrounding the use of Singlish and Standard English by Singaporean students severely underestimate the proficiencies that they possess.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Lu, Luke
format Article
author Lu, Luke
author_sort Lu, Luke
title Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
title_short Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
title_full Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
title_fullStr Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Singlish as a pedagogical resource in the ELT classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in Singapore
title_sort exploring singlish as a pedagogical resource in the elt classroom: implementing bidialectal pedagogy in singapore
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/161728
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